THE REIGN OF THE EMPEROR CHARLES V
BOOK
VI.
FRANCIS
I AND HIS ZEAL FOR RELIGION
UNFORTUNATELY
for the reputation of Francis I among his contemporaries, his conduct at this
juncture appeared a perfect contrast to that of his rival, as he laid hold on
the opportunity afforded him, by the emperor’s having turned his whole force
against the common enemy of Christendom, to revive his pretensions in Italy,
and to plunge Europe into a new war.
The
treaty of Cambray, as has been observed, did not remove the causes of enmity
between the two contending princes; it covered up, but did not extinguish the
flames of discord. Francis in particular, who waited with impatience for a
proper occasion of recovering the reputation as well as the territories which
he had lost, continued to carry on his negotiations in different courts against
the emperor, taking the utmost pains to heighten the jealousy which many
princes entertained of his power or designs, and to inspire the rest with the
same suspicion and fear: among others, he applied to Francis Sforza, who, though
indebted to Charles for the possession of the duchy of Milan, had received it
on such hard conditions, as rendered him not only a vassal of the empire, but a
tributary dependant upon the emperor.
The
honor of having married the emperor’s niece did not reconcile him to this
ignominious state of subjection, which became so intolerable even to Sforza,
though a weak and poor-spirited prince, that he listened with eagerness to the
first proposals Francis made of rescuing him from the yoke. These proposals
were conveyed to him by Maraviglia, or Merveille, as he is called by the French historians, a
Milanese gentleman residing at Paris; and soon after, in order to carry on the
negotiation with greater advantage, Merveille was
sent to Milan, on pretence of visiting his relations,
but with secret credentials from Francis as his envoy. In this character he was
received by Sforza. But, notwithstanding his care to keep that circumstance
concealed, Charles suspecting, or having received information of it, remonstrated
and threatened in such a high tone, that the duke and his ministers, equally
intimidated, gave the world immediately a most infamous proof of their servile
fear of offending the emperor. As Merveille had
neither the prudence nor the temper which the function wherein he was employed
required, they artfully decoyed him into a quarrel, in which he happened to
kill his antagonist, one of the duke’s domestics, and having instantly seized
him, they ordered him to be tried for that crime, and to be beheaded [Dec.
1533]. Francis, no less astonished at this violation of a character held sacred
among the most uncivilized nations than enraged at the insult offered to the
dignity of his crown, threatened Sforza with the effects of his indignation,
and complained to the emperor, whom he considered as the real author of that
unexampled outrage. But receiving no satisfaction from either, he appealed to
all the princes of Europe, and thought himself now entitled to take vengeance
for an injury, which it would have been, indecent and pusillanimous to let pass
with impunity.
Being
thus furnished with a pretext for beginning a war, on which he had already
resolved, he multiplied his efforts in order to draw in other princes to take
part in the quarrel. But all his measures for this purpose were disconcerted by
unforeseen events. After having sacrificed the honor of the royal family of
France by the marriage of his son with Catherine of Medici, in order to gain
Clement the death of that pontiff had deprived him of all the advantages which
he expected to derive from his friendship. Paul, his successor, though attached
by inclination to the Imperial interest, seemed determined to maintain the
neutrality suitable to his character as the common father of the contending
princes.
The
king of England, occupied with domestic cares and projects, declined, for once,
engaging in the affairs of the continent, and refused to assist Francis, unless
he would imitate his example, in throwing off the papal supremacy. These
disappointments led him to solicit, with greater earnestness, the aid of the
protestant princes associated by the league of Smalkalde.
That he might the more easily acquire their confidence, he endeavored to
accommodate himself to their predominant passion, zeal for their religious
tenets. He affected a wonderful moderation with regard to the points in
dispute; he permitted Bellay, his envoy in Germany, to explain his sentiments
concerning some of the most important articles, in terms not far different from
those used by the protestants: he even condescended to invite Melanchthon,
whose gentle manners and pacific spirit distinguished him among the reformers,
to visit Paris, that by his assistance he might concert the most proper
measures for reconciling the contending sects which so unhappily divided the
church. These concessions must be considered rather as arts of policy, than the
result of conviction; for whatever impression the new opinions in religion had
made on his sisters, the queen of Navarre and duchess of Ferrara, the gayety of
Francis’s own temper, and his love of pleasure, allowed him little leisure to
examine theological controversies.
But
soon after he lost all the fruits of this disingenuous artifice, by a step very
inconsistent with his declarations to the German princes. This step, however,
the prejudices of the age, and the religious sentiments of his own subjects,
rendered it necessary for him to take. His close union with the king of
England, an excommunicated heretic; his frequent negotiations with the German
protestants; but above all, his giving public audience to an envoy from sultan
Solyman, had excited violent suspicions concerning the sincerity of his
attachment to religion.
To
have attacked the emperor, who, on all occasions, made high pretensions to zeal
in defence of the catholic faith, and at the very
juncture when he was preparing for his expedition against Barbarossa, which was
then considered as a pious enterprise, could not have failed to confirm such
unfavorable sentiments with regard to Francis, and called on him to vindicate
himself by some extraordinary demonstration of his reverence for the
established doctrines of the church. The indiscreet zeal of some of his
subjects, who had imbibed the protestant opinions, furnished him with such an
occasion as he desired. They had affixed to the gates of the Louvre, and other
public places, papers containing indecent reflections on the doctrines and
rites of the popish church. Six of the persons concerned in this rash action
were discovered and seized. The king, in order to avert the judgments which it
was supposed their blasphemies might draw down upon the nation, appointed a
solemn procession.
The
holy sacrament was carried through the city in great pomp; Francis walked
uncovered before it, bearing a torch in his hand; the princes of the blood
supported the canopy over it; the nobles marched in order behind. In the
presence of this numerous assembly, the king, accustomed to express himself on
every subject in strong and animated language, declared, that if one of his
hands were infected with heresy, he would cut it off with the other, and would
not spare even his own children, if found guilty of that crime. As a dreadful
proof of his being in earnest, the six unhappy persons were publicly burnt
before the procession was finished, with circumstances of the most shocking
barbarity attending their execution.
The
princes of the league of Smalkalde, filled with
resentment and indignation at the cruelty with which their brethren were
treated, could not conceive Francis to be sincere, when he offered to protect
in Germany those very tenets, which he persecuted with such rigor in his own
dominions; so that all Bellay’s art and eloquence in vindicating his master, or
apologizing for his conduct, made but little impression upon them. They
considered likewise, that the emperor, who hitherto had never employed violence
against the doctrines of the reformers, nor even given them much molestation in
their progress, was now bound by the agreement at Ratisbon, not to disturb such
as had embraced the new opinions; and the Protestants wisely regarded this as a
more certain and immediate security, than the precarious and distant hopes with
which Francis endeavored to allure them. Besides, the manner in which he had
behaved to his allies at the peace of Cambray, was too recent to be forgotten,
and did not encourage others to rely much on his friendship or generosity. Upon
all these accounts, the protestant princes refused to assist the French king in
any hostile attempt against the emperor. The elector of Saxony, the most
zealous among them, in order to avoid giving any umbrage to Charles, would not
permit Melanchthon to visit the court of France, although that reformer,
flattered perhaps by the invitation of so great a monarch, or hoping that his
presence there might be of signal advantage to the protestant cause, discovered
a strong inclination to undertake the journey.
But
though none of the many princes who envied or dreaded the power of Charles,
would second Francis’s efforts in order to reduce and circumscribe it, he,
nevertheless, commanded his army to advance towards the frontiers of Italy. As
his sole pretext for taking arms was that he might chastise the duke of Milan
for his insolent and cruel breach of the law of nations, it might have been
expected that the whole weight of his vengeance was to have fallen on his
territories. But on a sudden, and at their very commencement, the operations of
war took another direction.
Charles
duke of Savoy, one of the least active and able princes of the line from which
he descended, had married Beatrix of Portugal, the sister of the empress. By
her great talents, she soon acquired an absolute ascendant over her husband;
and proud of her affinity to the emperor, or allured by the magnificent
promises with which he flattered her ambition, she formed a union between the
duke and the Imperial court, extremely inconsistent with that neutrality which
wise policy as well as the situation of his dominions had hitherto induced him
to observe in all the quarrels between the contending monarchs.
Francis
was abundantly sensible of the distress to which he might be exposed, if, when
he entered Italy, he should leave behind him the territories of a prince,
devoted so obsequiously to the emperor, that he had sent his eldest son to be
educated in the court of Spain, as a kind of hostage for his fidelity. Clement
the Seventh, who had represented this danger in a strong light during his
interview with Francis at Marseilles, suggested to him, at the same time, the
proper method of guarding against it, having advised him to begin his
operations against the Milanese, by taking possession of Savoy and Piedmont, as
the only certain way of securing a communication with his own dominions.
Francis,
highly irritated at the duke on many accounts, particularly for having supplied
the constable Bourbon with the money that enabled him to levy the body of
troops which ruined the French army in the fatal battle of Pavia, was not
unwilling to let him now feel both how deeply he resented, and how severely he
could punish these injuries. Nor did he want several pretexts which gave some
color of equity to the violence he intended. The territories of France and
Savoy lying contiguous to each other, and intermingled in many places, various
disputes, unavoidable in such a situation, subsisted between the two sovereigns
concerning the limits of their respective property; and besides, Francis, in
right of his mother, Louise of Savoy, had large claims upon the duke her
brother, for her share in their father's succession.
Being
unwilling, however, to begin hostilities without some cause of quarrel more
specious than these pretensions, many of which were obsolete, and others dubious,
he demanded permission to march through Piedmont in his way to the Milanese,
hoping that the duke, from an excess of attachment to the Imperial interest,
might refuse this request, and thus give a greater appearance of justice to all
his operations against him. But, if we may believe the historians of Savoy, who
appear to be better informed with regard to this particular than those of
France, the duke readily, and with a good grace, granted what it was not in his
power to deny, promising free passage to the French troops as was desired; so
that Francis, as the only method now left of justifying the measures which he
determined to take, was obliged to insist for full satisfaction with regard to
everything that either the crown of France or his mother Louise could demand of
the house of Savoy. Such an evasive answer, as might have been expected, being
made to this requisition, the French army under the admiral Brion poured at once into the duke’s territories at different places. The countries
of Bresse and Bugey, united
at that time to Savoy, were overrun in a moment. Most of the towns in the duchy
of Savoy opened their gates at the approach of the enemy; a few which attempted
to make resistance were easily taken; and before the end of the campaign the duke
saw himself stripped of all his dominions, but the province of Piedmont, in
which there were not many places in a condition to be defended.
To
complete the duke’s misfortunes, the city of Geneva, the sovereignty of which
he claimed, and in some degree possessed, threw off his yoke, and its revolt
drew along with it the loss of the adjacent territories.
Geneva
was, at that time, an Imperial city, and though under the direct dominion of
its own bishops, and the remote sovereignty of the dukes of Savoy, the form of
its internal constitution was purely republican, being governed by syndics and
a council chosen by the citizens. From these distinct and often clashing
jurisdictions, two opposite parties took their rise, and had long subsisted in
the state; the one, composed of the advocates for the privileges of the
community, assumed the name of Eignotz, or
confederates in defence of liberty; and branded the
other, which supported the episcopal or ducal prerogatives, with the name of Mammelukes, or slaves. At length [1532], the protestant
opinions beginning to spread among the citizens, inspired such as embraced them
with that bold enterprising spirit which always accompanied or was naturally
produced by them in their first operations. As both the duke and bishop were
from interest, from prejudice, and from political considerations, violent
enemies of the reformation, all the new converts joined with warmth the party
of the Eignotz; and zeal for religion, mingling with
the love of liberty, added strength to that generous passion. The rage and
animosity of two factions, shut up within the same walls, occasioned frequent
insurrections, which terminating mostly to the advantage of the friends of
liberty, they daily became more powerful.
The
duke and bishop, forgetting their ancient contests about jurisdiction, had
united against their common enemies, and each attacked them with his proper
weapons. The bishop excommunicated the people of Geneva as guilty of a double
crime; of impiety, in apostatizing from the established religion; and of
sacrilege, in invading the rights of his see. The duke attacked them as rebels
against their lawful prince, and attempted to render himself master of the
city, first by surprise, and then by open force [1534]. The citizens, despising
the thunder of the bishop’s censures, boldly asserted their independence
against the duke; and partly by their valor, partly by the powerful assistance
which they received from the canton of Berne; together with some small supplies
both of men and money, secretly furnished by the king of France, they defeated
all his attempts.
Not
satisfied with having repulsed him, or with remaining always upon the defensive
themselves, they now took advantage of the duke’s inability to resist them,
while overwhelmed by the armies of France, and seized several castles and places
of strength which he possessed in the neighborhood of Geneva: thus delivering
the city from those odious monuments of its former subjection, and rendering
the public liberty more secure for the future. At the same time the canton of
Berne invaded and conquered the Pays de Vaud, to which it had some pretensions.
The canton of Freiburg, though zealously attached to the catholic religion, and
having no subject of contest with the duke, laid hold on part of the spoils of
that unfortunate prince. A great portion of these conquests or usurpations
being still retained by the two cantons, add considerably to their power, and
have become the most valuable part of their territories. Geneva,
notwithstanding many schemes and enterprises of the dukes of Savoy to reestablish
their dominion over it, still keeps possession of its independence; and in
consequence of that blessing, has attained a degree of consideration, wealth,
and elegance, which it could not otherwise have reached.
Amidst
such a succession of disastrous events, the duke of Savoy had no other resource
but the emperor’s protection, which, upon his return from Tunis, he demanded
with the most earnest importunity; and as his misfortunes were occasioned
chiefly by his attachment to the Imperial interest, he had a just title to
immediate assistance. Charles, however, was not in a condition to support him
with that vigour and dispatch which the exigency of
his affairs called for. Most of the troops employed in the African expedition,
having been raised for that service alone, were disbanded as soon as it was
finished; the veteran forces under Antonio de Leyva were hardly sufficient for
the defence of the Milanese; and the emperor's
treasury was entirely drained by his extraordinary efforts against the
Infidels.
But
the death of Francis Sforza [Oct. 24], occasioned, according to some
historians, by the terror of a French invasion, which had twice been fatal to
his family, afforded the emperor full leisure to prepare for action.
By
this unexpected event, the nature of the war, and the causes of discord, were
totally changed. Francis’s first pretext for taking arms, in order to chastise
Sforza for the insult offered to the dignity of his crown, was at once cut off;
but as that prince died without issue, all Francis’s rights to the duchy of
Milan, which he had yielded only to Sforza and his posterity, returned back to
him in full force.
As
the recovery of the Milanese was the favorite object of that monarch, he instantly
renewed his claim to it; and if he had supported his pretensions by ordering
the powerful army quartered in Savoy to advance without loser; a moment towards
Milan, he could hardly have failed to secure the important point of possession.
But Francis, who became less enterprising as he advanced in years, and who was
overawed at some times into an excess of caution by
the remembrance of his past misfortunes, endeavored to establish his rights by
negotiation, not by arms; and from a timid moderation, fatal in all great
affairs, neglected to improve the favorable opportunity which presented itself.
Charles
was more decisive in his operations, and in quality of sovereign, took
possession of the duchy, as a vacant fief of the empire. While Francis endeavored
to explain and assert his title to it by arguments and memorials, or employed
various arts in order to reconcile the Italian powers to the thoughts of his
regaining footing in Italy, his rival was silently taking effectual steps to
prevent it. The emperor, however, was very careful not to discover too early any
intention of this kind; but seeming to admit the equity of Francis’s claim, he
appeared solicitous only about giving him possession in such a manner as might
not disturb the peace of Europe, or overturn the balance of power in Italy,
which the politicians of that country were so desirous of preserving. By this
artifice he deceived Francis, and gained so much confidence with the rest of
Europe, that almost without incurring any suspicion, he involved the affair in
new difficulties, and protracted the negotiations at pleasure. Sometimes he
proposed to grant the investiture of Milan to the duke of Orleans, Francis’s
second son, sometimes to the duke of Angouleme, his third son; as the views and
inclinations of the French court varied, he transferred his choice alternately
from the one to the other, with such profound and well-conducted dissimulation,
that neither Francis nor his ministers seem to have penetrated his real
intention; and all military operations were entirely suspended, as if nothing
had remained but to enter quietly into possession of what they demanded.
1536.
STATE OF EUROPE: THE FOLY OF THE KINGS
During
the interval of leisure gained in this manner, Charles, on his return from Tunis,
assembled the states both of Sicily and Naples, and as they thought themselves
greatly honored by the presence of their sovereign, and were no less pleased
with the apparent disinterestedness of his expedition into Africa, than dazzled
by the success which had attended his arms, he prevailed on them to vote him
such liberal subsidies as were seldom granted in that age. This enabled him to
recruit his veteran troops, to levy a body of Germans, and to take every other
proper precaution for executing or supporting the measures on which he had
determined. Bellay, the French envoy in Germany, having discovered the
Intention of raising troops in that country, notwithstanding all the pretexts
employed in order to conceal it, first alarmed his master with this evident
proof of the emperor’s insincerity.
But
Francis was so possessed at that time with the rage of negotiation, in all the
artifices and refinements of which his rival far surpassed him, that instead of
beginning his military operations, and pushing them with vigour,
or seizing the Milanese before the Imperial army was assembled, he satisfied
himself with making new offers to the emperor, in order to procure the
investiture by his voluntary deed. His offers were, indeed, so liberal and
advantageous, that if ever Charles had intended to grant his demand, he could
not have rejected them with decency. He dexterously eluded them by declaring
that until he consulted the pope in person, he could not take his final
resolution with regard to a point which so nearly concerned the peace of Italy.
By this evasion he gained some farther time for ripening the schemes which he
had in view.
The
emperor at last advanced towards Rome, and made his public entry into that city
with extraordinary pomp [April 6]; but it being found necessary to remove the
ruins of an ancient temple of peace, in order to widen one of the streets
through which the cavalcade had to pass, all the historians take notice of this
trivial circumstance, and they are fond to interpret it as an omen of the
bloody war that followed. Charles, it is certain, had by this time banished all
thoughts of peace; and at last threw off the mask, with which he had so long
covered his designs from the court of France, by a declaration of his
sentiments no less singular than explicit.
The
French ambassadors having in their master’s name demanded a definitive reply to
his propositions concerning the investiture of Milan, Charles promised to give
it next day in presence of the pope and cardinals assembled in full consistory.
These being accordingly met, and all the foreign ambassadors invited to attend,
the emperor stood up, and addressing himself to the pope, expatiated for some
time on the sincerity of his own wishes for the peace of Christendom, as well
as his abhorrence of war, the miseries of which he enumerated at great length,
with studied and elaborate oratory; he complained that all his endeavors to
preserve the tranquility of Europe had hitherto been defeated by the restless
and unjust ambition of the French king; that even during his minority he had
proofs of the unfriendly and hostile intentions of that monarch; that,
afterwards, he had openly attempted to wrest from him the Imperial crown which
belonged to him by a title no less just than natural; that he had next invaded
his kingdom of Navarre; that not satisfied with this, he had attacked his
territories, as well as those of his allies, both in Italy and the
Low-Countries; that when the valor of the Imperial troops, rendered
irresistible by the protection of the Almighty, had checked his progress,
ruined his armies, and seized his person, he continued to pursue by deceit what
he had undertaken with injustice; that he had violated every article in the
treaty of Madrid to which he owed his liberty, and as soon as he returned to
his dominions took measures for rekindling the war which that pacification had
happily extinguished; that when new misfortunes compelled him to sue again for
peace at Cambray, he concluded and observed it with equal insincerity; that
soon after he had formed dangerous connections with the heretical princes in
Germany, and incited them to disturb the tranquility of the empire; that now he
had driven the duke of Savoy, a prince married to a sister of the empress, and
joined in close alliance with Spain, out of the greater part of his
territories; that after injuries so often repeated, and amidst so many sources
of discord, all hope of amity or concord became desperate, and though he
himself was still willing to grant the investiture of Milan to one of the
princes of France, there was little probability of that event taking place, as
Francis, on the one hand, would not consent to what was necessary for securing
the tranquility of Europe, nor, on the other, could he think it reasonable or
safe to give a rival the unconditional possession of all that he demanded.
“Let
us not, however”, added he, “continue wantonly to shed the blood of our
innocent subjects; let us decide the quarrel man to man, with what arms he
pleases to choose, in our shirts, on an island, a bridge, or aboard a galley
moored in a river; let the duchy of Burgundy be put in deposite on his part, and that of Milan on mine; these shall be the prize of the
conqueror; and after that, let the united forces of Germany, Spain, and France
be employed to humble the rower of the Turk, and to extirpate heresy out of
Christendom. But if he, by declining this method of terminating our
differences, renders war inevitable, nothing shall divert me from prosecuting
it to such extremity, as shall reduce one of us to be the poorest gentleman in
his own dominions. Nor do I fear that it will be on me this misfortune shall
fall; I enter upon action with the fairest prospect of success; the justness of
my cause, the union of my subjects, the number and valor of my troops, the
experience and fidelity of my generals, all combine to ensure it. Of all these
advantages, the king of France is destitute, and were my resources no more
certain, and my hopes of victory no better founded than his, I would instantly throw
myself at his feet, and with folded hands, and a rope about my neck, implore
his mercy”.
This
long harangue the emperor delivered with an elevated voice, a haughty tone, and
the greatest vehemence of expression and gesture. The French ambassadors, who
did not fully comprehend his meaning, as he snake in the Spanish tongue, were
totally disconcerted, and at a loss how they should answer such an unexpected
invective; when one of them began to vindicate his master’s conduct, Charles
interposed abruptly, and would not permit him to proceed.
The
pope, without entering into any particular detail, satisfied himself with a
short but pathetic recommendation of peace, together with an offer of employing
his sincere endeavors in order to procure that blessing to Christendom; and the
assembly broke up in the greatest astonishment at the extraordinary scene which
had been exhibited. In no part of his conduct, indeed, did Charles ever deviate
so widely from his general character.
Instead
of that prudent recollection, that composed and regular deportment so strictly
attentive to decorum, and so admirably adapted to conceal his own passions, for
which he was at all other times conspicuous, he appears on this occasion before
one of the most august assemblies in Europe, boasting of his own power and
exploits with insolence; inveighing against his enemy with indecency; and
challenging him to combat with an ostentatious valor, more becoming a champion
in romance, than the first monarch in Christendom. But the well-known and
powerful operation of continued prosperity, as well as of exaggerated praise,
even upon the firmest minds, sufficiently account for this seeming
inconsistency. After having compelled Solyman to retreat, and having stripped
Barbarossa of a kingdom, Charles began to consider his arms as invincible. He
had been entertained, ever since his return from Africa, with repeated scenes
of triumphs and public rejoicings; the orators and poets of Italy, the most
elegant at that time in Europe, had exhausted their genius in panegyric on his
conduct and merit, to which the astrologers added magnificent promises of a
more splendid fortune still in store. Intoxicated with all these, he forgot his
usual reserve and moderation, and was unable to restrain this extravagant sally
of vanity, which became the more remarkable, by being both so uncommon and so
public.
He
himself seems to have been immediately sensible of the impropriety of his
behavior; and when the French ambassadors demanded next day a more clear
explanation of what he had said concerning the combat, he told them that they
were not to consider his proposal as a formal challenge to their master, but as
an expedient for preventing bloodshed; he endeavored to soften several
expressions in his discourse; and spoke in terms full of respect towards
Francis. But though this slight apology was far from being sufficient to remove
the offence which had been given, Francis, by an unaccountable infatuation,
continued to negotiate, as if it had still been possible to bring their
differences to a period by an amicable composition. Charles, finding him so
eager to run into the snare, favored the deception, and, by seeming to listen
to his proposals, gained farther time to prepare for the execution of his own
designs.
THE
RETREAT OF THE INVINCIBLE ARMY
At
last, the Imperial army assembled on the frontiers of the Milanese, to the
amount of forty thousand foot and ten thousand horse, while that of France
encamped near Vercelli in Piedmont, being greatly inferior in number, and
weakened by the departure of a body of Swiss, whom Charles artfully persuaded
the popish cantons to recall, that they might not serve against the duke of
Savoy, their ancient ally. The French general not daring to risk a battle,
retired as soon as the Imperialists advanced.
The
emperor put himself at the head of his forces [May 6], which the marquis del Guasto, the duke of Alva, and Ferdinand de Gonzago commanded under him, though the supreme direction
of the whole was committed to Antonio de Leyva, whose abilities and experience
justly entitled him to that distinction. Charles soon discovered his intention
not to confine his operations to the recovery of Piedmont and Savoy, but to
push forward and invade the southern provinces of France. This scheme he had
long meditated, and had long been taking measures for executing it with such
vigor as might ensure success. He had remitted large sums to his sister, the
governess of the Low-Countries, and to his brother, the king of the Romans,
instructing them to levy all the forces in their power, in order to form two
separate bodies, the one to enter France on the side of Picardy, the other on
the side of Champagne; while he, with the main army, fell upon the opposite
frontier of the kingdom. Trusting to these vast preparations, he thought it
impossible that Francis could resist so many unexpected attacks on such
different quarters; and began his enterprise with such confidence of its happy
issue, that he desired Jovius the historian, to make
a large provision of paper sufficient to record the victories which he was
going to obtain.
His
ministers and generals, instead of entertaining the same sanguine hopes,
represented to him in the strongest terms the danger of leading his troops so
far from his own territories, to such a distance from his magazines, and into
provinces which did not yield sufficient subsistence for their own inhabitants.
They entreated him to consider the inexhaustible resources of France in
maintaining a defensive war, and the active zeal with which a gallant nobility
would serve a prince whom they loved, in repelling the enemies of their
country; they recalled to his remembrance the fatal miscarriage of Bourbon and
Pescara, when they ventured upon the same enterprise under circumstances which
seemed as certainly to promise success; the marquis del Guasto in particular fell on his knees, and conjured him to abandon the undertaking as
desperate.
But
many circumstances combined in leading Charles to disregard all their
remonstrances. He could seldom be brought, on any occasion, to depart from a
resolution which he had once taken; he was too apt to underrate and despise the
talents of his rival the king of France, because they differed so widely from
his own; he was blinded by the presumption which accompanies prosperity; and
relied, perhaps, in some degree, on the prophecies which predicted the increase
of his own grandeur. He not only adhered obstinately to his own plan, but
determined to advance towards France without waiting for the reduction of any part
of Piedmont, except such towns as were absolutely necessary for preserving his
communication with the Milanese.
The
marquis de Saluces, to whom Francis had entrusted the
command of a small body of troops left for the defence of Piedmont, rendered this more easy than Charles had any reason to expect.
That nobleman, educated in the court of France, distinguished by continual
marks of the king's favor, and honored so lately with a charge of such
importance, suddenly, and without any provocation or pretext of disgust
revolted from his benefactor. His motives to this treacherous action were as
childish as the deed itself was base. Being strongly possessed with a
superstitious faith in divination and astrology, he believed with full
assurance, that the fatal period of the French nation was at hand; that on its
ruins the emperor would establish a universal monarchy; that therefore he ought
to follow the dictates of prudence, in attaching himself to his rising fortune,
and could incur no blame for deserting a prince whom Heaven had devoted to
destruction. His treason became still more odious, by his employing that very
authority, with which Francis had invested him, in order to open the kingdom to
his enemies. Whatever measures were proposed or undertaken by the officers
under his command for the defence of their conquests,
he rejected or defeated. Whatever properly belonged to himself, as commander in
chief, to provide or perform for that purpose, he totally neglected. In this
manner, he rendered towns even of the greatest consequence, untenable, by
leaving them destitute either of provisions, ammunition, artillery, or a
sufficient garrison; and the Imperialists must have reduced Piedmont in as
short a time as was necessary to march through it, if Montpezat,
the governor of Fossano, had not, by an extraordinary
effort of courage and military conduct, detained them almost a month before
that inconsiderable place.
By
this meritorious and seasonable service, he gained his master sufficient time
for assembling his forces, and for concerting a system of defence against a danger which he now saw to be inevitable. Francis fixed on the only
proper and effectual plan for defeating the invasion of a powerful enemy; and
his prudence in choosing this plan, as well as his perseverance in executing
it, deserve the greater praise, as it was equally contrary to his own natural
temper, and to the genius of the French nation. He determined to remain
altogether upon the defensive; never to hazard a battle, or even a great
skirmish without certainty of success; to fortify his camps in a regular
manner; to throw garrisons only into towns of great strength; to deprive the
enemy of subsistence, by laying waste the country before them; and to save the
whole kingdom, by sacrificing one of its provinces. The execution of this plan
he committed entirely to the marechal Montmorency,
who was the author of it; a man wonderfully fitted by nature for such a trust,
haughty, severe, confident in his own abilities, and despising those of other
men; incapable of being diverted from any resolution by remonstrances or
entreaties; and, in prosecuting any scheme, regardless alike of love or of
pity.
Montmorency
made choice of a strong camp, under the walls of Avignon, at the confluence of
the Rhone and the Durance, one of which plentifully supplied his troops with
all necessaries from the inland provinces, and the other covered his camp on
that side where it was most probable the enemy would approach. He labored with
unwearied industry to render the fortifications of this camp impregnable, and
assembled there a considerable army, though greatly inferior to that of the
enemy; while the king with another body of troops encamped at Valence higher up
the Rhone. Marseilles and Arles were the only towns he thought it necessary to
defend; the former, in order to retain the command of the sea; the latter, as
the barrier of the province of Languedoc; and each of these he furnished with
numerous garrisons of his best troops, commanded by officers on whose fidelity
and valor he could rely. The inhabitants of the other towns, as well as of the
open country, were compelled to abandon their houses, and were conducted to the
mountains, or to the camp at Avignon, or to the inland provinces. The
fortifications of such places as might have afforded shelter or defence to the enemy, were thrown down. Corn, forage, and
provisions of every kind, were carried away or destroyed; all the mills and
ovens were ruined, and the wells filled up or rendered useless. The devastation
extended from the Alps to Marseilles, and from the sea to the confines of
Dauphiné; nor does history afford any instance among civilized nations, in
which this cruel expedient for the public safety was employed with the same
rigor.
At
length, the emperor arrived with the van of his army on the frontiers of
Provence, and was still so possessed with confidence of success, that during a
few days when he was obliged to halt until the rest of his troops came up, he
began to divide his future conquests among his officers; and, as a new
incitement to serve him with zeal, gave them liberal promises of offices,
lands, and honors in France. The face of desolation, however, which presented
itself to him, when he entered the country, began to damp his hopes, and
convinced him that a monarch, who, in order to distress an enemy, had voluntarily
ruined one of his richest provinces, would defend the rest with desperate
obstinacy. Nor was it long before he became sensible that Francis’s plan of defence was as prudent as it appeared to be extraordinary.
His fleet, on which Charles chiefly depended for subsistence, was prevented for
some time by contrary winds, and other accidents to which naval operations are
subject, from approaching the French coast; even after its arrival, it afforded
at best a precarious and scanty supply to such a numerous body of troops;
nothing was to be found in the country itself for their support; nor could they
draw any considerable aid from the dominions of the duke of Savoy, exhausted
already by maintaining two great armies. The emperor was no less embarrassed
how to employ, than how to subsist his forces; for though he was now in
possession of almost an entire province, he could not be said to have the
command of it, while he held only defenseless towns; and while the French,
besides their camp, at Avignon, continued masters of Marseilles and Arles. At
first he thought of attacking their camp, and of terminating the war by one
decisive blow; but skillful officers who were appointed to view it, declared
the attempt to be utterly impracticable. He then gave orders to invest
Marseilles and Arles, hoping that the French would quit their advantageous post
in order to relieve them; but Montmorency adhering firmly to his plan, remained
immoveable at Avignon, and the Imperialists met with such a warm reception from
the garrisons of both towns, that they relinquished their enterprises with loss
and disgrace. As a last effort, the emperor advanced once more towards Avignon,
though with an army harassed by the perpetual incursions of small parties of
the French light troops, weakened by diseases, and dispirited by disasters,
which seemed the more intolerable, because they were unexpected.
During
these operations, Montmorency found himself exposed to greater danger from his
own troops than from the enemy; and their inconsiderate valor went near to have
precipitated the kingdom into those calamities which he with such industry and
caution had endeavored to avoid. Unaccustomed to behold an enemy ravaging their
country almost without control; impatient of such long inaction; unacquainted
with the slow and remote, but certain effects of Montmorency’s system of defence; the French wished for a battle with no less ardor
than the Imperialists. They considered the conduct of their general as a
disgrace to their country, his caution they imputed to timidity; his
circumspection to want of spirit; and the constancy with which he pursued his
plan, to obstinacy or pride. These reflections, whispered at first among the
soldiers and subalterns, were adopted, by degrees, by officers of high rank; and
as many of them envied Montmorency’s favor with the king, and more were
dissatisfied with his harsh disgusting manner, the discontent soon became great
in his camp, which was filled with general murmurings, and almost open
complaints against his measures.
Montmorency,
on whom the sentiments of his own troops made as little impression as the
insults of the enemy, adhered steadily to his system; though, in order to
reconcile the army to his maxims, no less contrary to the genius of the nation,
than to the ideas of war among undisciplined troops, he assumed an unusual
affability in his deportment, and often explained, with great condescension,
the motives of his conduct, the advantages which had already resulted from it,
and the certain success with which it would be attended.
At
last, Francis joined his army at Avignon, which, having received several
reinforcements, he now considered as of strength sufficient to face the enemy.
As he had pit no small constraint upon himself, in consenting that his troops should
remain so long upon the defensive, it can hardly be doubted but that his
fondness for what was daring and splendid, added to the impatience both of
officers and Soldiers, would at last have overruled Montmorency’s salutary
caution.
Happily
the retreat of the enemy delivered the kingdom from the danger which any rash
resolution might have occasioned. The emperor, after spending two inglorious
months in Provence, without having performed anything suitable to his vast
preparations, or that could justify the confidence with which he had boasted of
his own power, found that besides Antonio de Leyva, and other officers of
distinction, he had lost one half of his troops by diseases or by famine; and that
the rest were in no condition to struggle any longer with calamities, by which
so many of their companions had perished. Necessity, therefore, extorted from
him orders to retire; and though he was some time in motion before the French
suspected his intention, a body of light troops, assisted by crowds of peasants,
eager to be revenged on those who had brought such desolation on their country,
hung upon the rear of the Imperialists, and by seizing every favorable
opportunity of attacking them, threw them often into confusion. The road by
which they fled, for they pursued their march with such disorder and
precipitation that it scarcely deserves the name of a retreat, was strewed with
arms or baggage, which in their hurry and trepidation they had abandoned, and
covered with the sick, the wounded, and the dead; insomuch that Martin Bellay,
an eye-witness of their calamities, endeavors to give his readers some idea of
them, by comparing their miseries to those which the Jews suffered from the
victorious and destructive arms of the Romans. If Montmorency, at this critical
moment, had advanced with all his forces, nothing could have saved the whole
Imperial army from utter ruin. But that general, by standing so long and so
obstinately on the defensive, had become cautious to excess; his mind,
tenacious of any bent it had once taken, could not assume a contrary one as
suddenly as the change of circumstances required; and he still continued to
repeat his favorite maxims, that it was more prudent to allow the lion to
escape than to drive him to despair, and that a bridge of gold should be made
for a retreating enemy.
The
emperor having conducted the shattered remains of his troops to the frontiers
of Milan, and appointed the Marquis del Guasto to
succeed Leyva in the government of that duchy, set out for Genoa. As he could
not bear to expose himself to the scorn of the Italians, after such a sad
reverse of fortune; and did not choose, under his present circumstances, to
revisit those cities through which he had so lately passed in triumph for one
conquest, and in certain expectation of another, he embarked directly for Spain
[November].
Nor
was the progress of his arms on the opposite frontier of France such as to
alleviate, in any degree, the losses which he had sustained in Provence.
Bellay, by his address and intrigues, had prevailed on so many of the German
princes to withdraw the contingent of troops which they had furnished to the
king of the Romans, that he was obliged to lay aside all thoughts of his
intended irruption into Champagne. Though a powerful army levied in the
Low-Countries entered Picardy, which they found but feebly guarded, while the
strength of the kingdom was drawn towards the south; yet the nobility, taking
arms with their usual alacrity, supplied by their spirit the defects of the
king’s preparations, and defended Peronne, and other
towns which were attacked, with such vigour, as
obliged the enemy to retire, without making any conquest of importance.
Thus
Francis, by the prudence of his own measures, and by the union and valor of his
subjects, rendered abortive those vast efforts in which his rival had almost
exhausted his whole force. As this humbled the emperor’s arrogance no less than
it checked his power, he was mortified more sensibly on this occasion than on
any other, during the course of the long contests between him and the French
monarch. One circumstance alone embittered the joy with which the success of
the campaign inspired Francis. That was the death of the dauphin, his eldest
son, a prince of great hopes, and extremely beloved by the people on account of
his resemblance to his father. This happening suddenly, was imputed to poison,
not only by the vulgar, fond of ascribing the death of illustrious personages
to extraordinary causes, but by the king and his ministers. The count de Montecuculi, an Italian nobleman, cupbearer to the dauphin,
being seized on suspicion, and put to the torture, openly charged the Imperial
generals, Gonzaga and Leyva, with having instigated him to the commission of
that crime; he even threw out some indirect and obscure accusations against the
emperor himself. At a time when all France was exasperated to the utmost
against Charles, this uncertain and extorted charge was considered as an
incontestable proof of guilt; while the confidence with which both he and his
officers asserted their own innocence, together with the indignation, as well
as horror, which they expressed on their being supposed capable of such a
detestable action, were little attended to, and less regarded.
It
is evident, however, that the emperor could have no inducement to perpetrate
such a crime, as Francis was still in the vigor of life himself, and had two
sons, besides the dauphin, grown up almost to the age of manhood. That single
consideration, without mentioning the emperor’s general character, unblemished
by the imputation of any deed resembling this in atrocity, is more than
sufficient to counterbalance the weight of a dubious testimony uttered during
the anguish of torture. According to the most unprejudiced historians, the
dauphin’s death was occasioned by his having drunk too freely of cold water
after overheating himself at tennis; and this account, as it is the most
simple, is likewise the most credible. But if his days were cut short by
poison, it is not improbable that the emperor conjectured rightly, when he
affirmed that it had been administered by the direction of Catharine of Medici,
in order to secure the crown to the duke of Orleans, her husband. The
advantages resulting to her by the dauphin’s death were obvious as well as great;
nor did her boundless and daring ambition ever recoil from any action necessary
towards attaining the objects which she had in view.
1537.
THE MADNESS OF THE FRENCH KING
Next
year opened with a transaction very uncommon, but so incapable of producing any
effect, that it would not deserve to be mentioned if it were not a striking
proof of the personal animosity which mingled itself in all the hostilities
between Charles and Francis, and which often betrayed them into such
indecencies towards each other, as lessened the dignity of both. Francis,
accompanied by the peers and princes of the blood, having taken his seat in the
parliament of Paris with the usual solemnities, the advocate-general appeared;
and after accusing Charles of Austria (for so he affected to call the emperor)
of having violated the treaty of Cambray, by which he was absolved from the
homage due to the crown of France for the countries of Artois and Flanders;
insisted that this treaty Being now void, he was still to be considered as a
vassal of the crown, and by consequence had been guilty of rebellion in taking
arms against his sovereign; and therefore he demanded that Charles should be
summoned to appear in person, or by his counsel, before the parliament of
Paris, his legal judges, to answer for this crime. The request was granted; a
herald repaired to the frontiers of Picardy, and summoned him with the
accustomed formalities to appear against a day prefixed. That term being
expired, and no person appearing in his name, the parliament gave judgment,
“That Charles of Austria had forfeited by rebellion and contumacy those fiefs;
declared Flanders and Artois to be reunited to the crown of France!” and
ordered their decree for this purpose to be published by sound of trumpet on
the frontiers of these provinces.
Soon
after this vain display of his resentment, rather than of his power, Francis
marched towards the Low-Countries [March], as if he had intended to execute the
sentence which his parliament had pronounced, and to seize those territories
which it had awarded to him. As the queen of Hungary, to whom her brother the
emperor had committed the government of that part of his dominions, was not
prepared for so early a campaign, he at first made some progress, and took
several towns of importance. But being obliged soon to leave his army, in order
to superintend the operations of war, the Flemings, having assembled a numerous
army, not only recovered most of the places which they had lost, but began to
make conquests in their turn. At last they invested Térouanne, and the duke of
Orleans, now dauphin, by the death of his brother, and Montmorency, whom
Francis had honored with the constable’s sword, as the reward of his great
services during the former campaign, determined to hazard a battle in order to
relieve it. While they were advancing for this purpose, and within a few miles
of the enemy, they were stopped short by the arrival of a herald from the queen
of Hungary, acquainting him that a suspension of arms was now agreed upon.
This
unexpected event was owing to the zealous endeavors of the two sisters, the
queens of France and of Hungary, who had long labored to reconcile the
contending monarchs. The war in the Netherlands Had laid waste the frontier
provinces of both countries, without any real advantage to either. The French
and Flemings equally regretted the interruption of their commerce, which was
beneficial to both. Charles as well as Francis, who had each strained to the utmost,
in order to support the vast operations of the former campaign, found that they
could not now keep armies on foot in this quarter, without weakening their
operations in Piedmont, where both wished to push the war with the greatest vigour. All these circumstances facilitated the
negotiations of the two queens; a truce was concluded [July 30th], to continue
in force for ten months, but it extended no farther than the Low-Countries.
In
Piedmont the war was still prosecuted with great animosity; and though neither
Charles nor Francis could make the powerful efforts to which this animosity
prompted them, they continued to exert themselves like combatants, whose rancor
remains after their strength is exhausted. Towns were alternately lost and
retaken; skirmishes were fought every day; and much blood was shed, without any
action that gave a decided superiority to either side. At last the two queens,
determined not to leave unfinished the Good work which they had begun,
prevailed, by their importunate solicitations, the one on her brother, the
other on her husband, to consent also to a truce in Piedmont for three months.
The conditions of it were, that, each should keep possession of what was in his
hands, and after leaving garrisons in the towns, should withdraw his army out
of the province; that plenipotentiaries should be appointed to adjust all
matters in dispute by a final treaty.
The
powerful motives which inclined both princes to this accommodation, have been
often mentioned. The expenses of the war had far exceeded the sums which their
revenues were capable of supplying; nor durst they venture upon any great
addition to the impositions then established, as subjects had not yet learned
to bear with patience the immense burdens to which they have become accustomed
in modern times. The emperor in particular, though he had contracted debts
which in that age appeared prodigious, had it not in his power to pay the large
arrears long due to his army. At the same time, he had no prospect of deriving
any aid in money or men either from the pope or venetians, though he had
employed promises and threats, alternately, in order to procure it. But he
found the former not only fixed in his resolution of adhering steadily to the
neutrality which he had always declared to be suitable to his character, but
passionately desirous of bringing about a peace. He perceived that the latter
were still intent on their ancient object of holding the balance even between
the rivals, and solicitous not to throw too great a weight into either scale.
What
made a deeper impression on Charles than all these, was the dread of the
Turkish arms, which, by his league with Solyman, Francis had drawn upon him.
Though Francis, without the assistance of a single ally, had a war to maintain
against an enemy greatly superior in power to himself, yet so great was the
horror of Christians, in that age, at any union with infidels, which they
considered not only as dishonorable but profane, that it was long before he
could be brought to avail himself of the obvious advantages resulting from such
a confederacy. Necessity at last surmounted his delicacy and scruples.
Towards
the close of the preceding year, La Forest, a secret agent at the Ottoman
Porte, had concluded a treaty with the sultan, whereby Solyman engaged to
invade the kingdom of Naples, during the next campaign, and to attack the king
of the Romans in Hungary with a powerful army, while Francis undertook to enter
the Milanese at the same time with a proper force. Solyman had punctually
performed what was incumbent on him. Barbarossa with a great fleet appeared on
the coast of Naples, filled that kingdom, from which all the troops had been
drawn towards Piedmont, with consternation, landed without resistance near
Taranto, obliged Castro, a place of some strength, to surrender, plundered the
adjacent country, and was taking measures for securing and extending his
conquests, when the unexpected arrival of Doria, together with the pope’s
galleys, and a squadron of the Venetian fleet, made it prudent for him to
retire. In Hungary the progress of the Turks was more formidable. Mahmet, their general, after gaining several small
advantages, defeated the Germans in a great battle at Essek on the Drave. Happily for Christendom, it was not in Francis’s power to execute
with equal exactness what he had stipulated; nor could he assemble at this
juncture an army strong enough to penetrate into the Milanese. By this he
failed in recovering possession of that duchy; and Italy was not only saved
from the calamities of a new war, but from feeling the desolating rage of the
Turkish arms, as an addition to all that it had suffered. As the emperor knew
that he could not long resist the efforts of two such powerful confederates,
nor could expect that the same fortunate accidents would concur a second time
to deliver Naples, and to preserve the Milanese; as he foresaw that the Italian
states would not only tax him loudly with insatiable ambition, but might even
turn their arms against him, if he should be so regardless of their danger as
obstinately to protract the war, he thought it necessary, both for his safety
and reputation, to give his consent to a truce. Nor was Francis willing to
sustain all the blame of obstructing the reestablishment of tranquility, or to
expose himself on that account to the danger of being deserted by the Swiss and
other foreigners in his service. He even began to apprehend that his own
subjects would serve him coldly, if by contributing to aggrandize the power of
the Infidels, which it was his duty, and had been the ambition of his ancestors
to depress, he continued to act in direct opposition to all the principles
which ought to influence a monarch distinguished by the title of Most Christian
King. He chose, for all these reasons, rather to run the risk of disobliging
his new ally the sultan, than, by an unseasonable adherence to the treaty with
him, to forfeit what was of greater consequence.
But
though both parties consented to a truce, the plenipotentiaries found
insuperable difficulties in settling the articles of a definitive treaty. Each
of the monarchs, with the arrogance of a conqueror, aimed at giving law to the
other; and neither would so far acknowledge his inferiority, as to sacrifice
any point of honor, or to relinquish any matter of right; so that the
plenipotentiaries spent the time in long and fruitless negotiations, and
separated after agreeing to prolong the truce for a few months.
1538.
THE PEACE OF THE POPE
The
pope, however, did not despair of accomplishing a point in which the
plenipotentiaries had failed, and took upon himself the sole burden of
negotiating a peace. To form a confederacy capable of defending Christendom
from the formidable inroads of the Turkish arms, and to concert effectual
measures for the extirpation of the Lutheran heresy, were two great objects
which Paul had much at heart, and he considered the union of the emperor with
the king of France as an essential preliminary to both.
To
be the instrument of reconciling these contending monarchs, whom his predecessors
by their interested and indecent intrigues had so often embroiled, was a
circumstance which could not fail of throwing distinguished luster on his
character and administration. Nor was he without hopes that, while he pursued
this laudable end, he might secure advantages to his own family, the aggrandizing
of which he did not neglect, though he aimed at it with a less audacious
ambition than was common among the popes of that century.
Influenced
by these considerations, he proposed an interview between the two monarchs, at
Nice, and offered to repair thither in person, that he might act as mediator in
composing all their differences. When a pontiff of a venerable character, and
of a very advanced age, was willing, from his zeal for peace, to undergo the
fatigues of so long a journey, neither Charles nor Francis could with decency
decline the interview. But though both came to the place of rendezvous, so
great was the difficulty of adjusting the ceremonial, or such the remains of
distrust and rancor on each side, that they refused to see one another, and everything
was transacted by the intervention of the pope, who visited them alternately.
With
all his zeal and ingenuity he could not find out a method of removing the
Obstacles which prevented a final accommodation, particularly those arising
from the possession of the Milanese; nor was all the weight of his authority
sufficient to overcome the obstinate perseverance of either monarch in
asserting his own claims. At last, that he might not seem to have labored
altogether without effect, he prevailed on them to sign a truce for ten years
[June 18], upon the same condition with the former, that each should retain
what was now in his possession, and in the meantime should send ambassadors to
Rome, to discuss their pretensions at leisure.
Thus
ended a war of no long continuance, but very extensive in its operations, and
in which both parties exerted their utmost strength. Though Francis failed in
the object which he had principally in view, the recovery of the Milanese, he
acquired, nevertheless, great reputation by the wisdom of his measures as well
as the success of his arms in repelling a formidable invasion; and by keeping
possession of one half of the duke of Savoy’s dominions, he added no inconsiderable
accession of strength to his kingdom. Whereas Charles, repulsed and baffled,
after having boasted so arrogantly of victory, purchased an inglorious truce,
by sacrificing an ally who had rashly confided too much in his friendship and
power.
The
unfortunate duke murmured, complained, and remonstrated against a treaty so
much to his disadvantage, but in vain; he had no means of redress, and was
obliged to submit. Of all his dominions, Nice, with its dependences, was the
only corner of which he himself kept possession. He saw the rest divided
between a powerful invader and the ally to whose protection he had trusted,
while he remained a sad monument of the imprudence of weak princes, who by
taking part in the quarrel of mighty neighbors, between whom they happen to be
situated, are crushed and overwhelmed in the shock.
A
few days after signing the treaty of truce, the emperor set sail for Barcelona,
but was driven by contrary winds to the island of St. Margaret on the coast of
Provence. When Francis, who happened to be not far distant, heard of this, he
considered it as an office of civility to invite him to take shelter in his
dominions, and proposed a personal interview with him at Aigues-mortes.
The emperor, who would not be outdone by his rival in complaisance, instantly
repaired thither. As soon as he cast anchor in the road, Francis, without
waiting to settle any point of ceremony, but relying implicitly on the
emperor’s honor for his security, visited him on board his galley, and was
received and entertained with the warmest demonstrations of esteem and affection.
Next day the emperor repaid the confidence which the king had placed in him. He
landed at Aiguesmortes with as little precaution,
and met with a reception equally cordial. He remained on shore during the
night, and in both visits the two monarchs vied with each other in expressions
of respect and friendship.
After
twenty years of open hostilities, or of secret enmity; after so many injuries
reciprocally inflicted or endured; after having formally challenged one another
to single combat; after the emperor had inveighed so publicly against Francis
as a prince void of honor and integrity; and after Francis had accused him of
being accessary to the murder of his eldest son; such an interview appears
altogether singular and even unnatural. But the history of these monarchs
abounds with such surprising transitions. From implacable hatred they appeared
to pass, in a moment, to the most cordial reconcilement; nom suspicion and
distrust, to perfect confidence; and from, practicing all the dark arts of a
deceitful policy, they could assume, of a sudden, the liberal and open manners
of two gallant gentlemen.
THE
STORY OF THE MURDER OF THE DUKE OF FLORENCE
The
pope, besides the glory of having restored peace to Europe, gained, according
to his expectation, a point of great consequence to his family, by prevailing
on the emperor to betroth Margaret of Austria, his natural daughter, formerly
the wife of Alexander di Medici, to his grandson Octavio Farnese, and, in
consideration of this marriage, to bestow several honors and territories upon
his future son-in-law. A very tragical event, which happened about the
beginning of the year 1537, had deprived Margaret of her first husband.
That
young prince, whom the emperor’s partiality had raised to the supreme power in
Florence, upon the ruins of the public liberty, neglected entirely the cares of
government, and abandoned himself to the most dissolute debauchery. Lorenzo di
Medici his nearest kinsman was not only the companion but director of his
pleasures, and employing all the powers of a cultivated and inventive genius in
this dishonorable ministry, added such elegance as well as variety to vice, as
gained him an absolute ascendant over the mind of Alexander. But while Lorenzo
seemed to be sunk in luxury, and affected such an appearance of indolence and
effeminacy, that he would not wear a sword, and trembled at the sight of blood,
he concealed under that disguise a dark, designing, audacious spirit. Prompted
either by the love of liberty, or allured by the hope of attaining the supreme
power, he determined to assassinate Alexander his benefactor and friend.
Though
he long revolved this design in his mind, his reserved and suspicious temper
prevented him from communicating it to any person whatever; and continuing to
live with Alexander in their usual familiarity, he, one night, under pretence of having secured him an assignation with a lady
of high rank whom he had often solicited, drew that unwary prince into a secret
apartment of his house, and there stabbed him, while he lay carelessly on a
couch expecting the arrival of the lady whose company he had been promised.
But
no sooner was the deed done, than standing astonished, and struck with horror
at its atrocity, he forgot, in a moment, all the motives which had induced him
to commit it. Instead of rousing the people to recover their liberty by
publishing the death of the tyrant, instead of taking any step towards opening
his own way to the dignity now vacant, he locked the door of the apartment,
and, like a man bereaved of reason and presence of mind, fled with the utmost
precipitation out of the Florentine territories. It was late next morning
before the fate of the unfortunate prince was known, as his attendants,
accustomed to his irregularities, never entered his apartment early.
Immediately the chief persons in the state assembled. Being induced partly by
the zeal of cardinal Cibo for the house of Medici, to
which he was nearly related, partly by the authority of Francis Guicciardini,
who recalled to their memory, and represented in striking colors, the caprice
as well as turbulence of their ancient popular government, they agreed to place
Cosmo di Medici, a youth of eighteen, the only male heir of that illustrious
house, at the head of the government; though at the same time such was their
love of liberty, that they established several regulations in order to
circumscribe and moderate his power.
Meanwhile,
Lorenzo having reached a place of safety; made known what he had done to Philip Strozzi and the other Florentines who had been driven
into exile, or who had voluntarily retired, when the republican form of
government was abolished, in order to make way for the dominion of the Medici.
By them, the deed was extolled with extravagant praises, and the virtue of Lorenzo
was compared to that of the elder Brutus, who disregarded the ties of blood, or
with that of the younger, who forgot the friendship and favors of the tyrant,
that they might preserve or recover the liberty of their country. Nor did they
rest satisfied with empty panegyrics; they immediately quitted their different
places of retreat, assembled forces, animated their vassals and partisans to
take arms, and to seize this opportunity of reestablishing the public liberty
on its ancient foundation. Being openly assisted by the French ambassador at
Rome, and secretly encouraged by the pope, who bore no good-will to the house
of Medici, they entered the Florentine dominions with a considerable body of men.
But the persons who had elected Cosmo possessed not only the means of
supporting his government, but abilities to employ them in the most proper
manner. They levied, with the greatest expedition, a good number of troops;
they endeavored by every art to gain the citizens of greatest authority, and to
render the administration of the young prince agreeable to the people. Above
all, they courted the emperor’s protection, as the only firm foundation of
Cosmos dignity and power.
Charles,
knowing the propensity of the Florentines to the friendship of France, and how
much all the partisans of a republican government detested him as the oppressor
of their liberties, saw it to be greatly for his interest to prevent the
reestablishment of the ancient constitution in Florence. For this reason, he
not only acknowledged Cosmo as head of the Florentine state, and conferred on
him all the titles of honor with which Alexander had been dignified, but
engaged to defend him to the utmost; and as a pledge of this, ordered the
commanders of such of his troops as were stationed on the frontiers of Tuscany,
to support him against all aggressors. By their aid, Cosmo, obtained an easy
victory over the exiles, whose troops he surprised in the night-time, and took
most of the chiefs prisoners; an event which broke all their measures, and
fully established his own authority. But though he was extremely desirous of
the additional honor of marrying the emperor’s daughter, the widow of his
predecessor, Charles, secure already of his attachment, chose rather to gratify
the pope, by bestowing her on his nephew.
1539.
THE CALL FOR THE COUNCIL OF TRENT
During
the war between the emperor and Francis, an event had happened which abated in
some degree the warmth and cordiality of friendship which had long subsisted
between the latter and the king of England.
James
the fifth of Scotland, an enterprising young prince, having heard of the
emperor’s intention to invade Provence, was so fond of showing that he did not
yield to any of his ancestors in the sincerity of his attachment to the French
crown, and so eager to distinguish himself by some military exploit, that he
levied a body of troops with an intention of leading them in person to the
assistance of the king of France. Though some unfortunate accidents prevented
his carrying any troops into France, nothing could divert him from going
thither in person. Immediately upon his landing, he hastened to Provence, but
had been detained so long in his voyage, that he came too late to have any share
in the military operations, and met the king on his return after the retreat of
the Imperialists. But Francis was so greatly pleased with his zeal, and no less
with his manners and conversation, that he could not refuse him his daughter
Magdalen, whom he demanded in marriage. It mortified Henry extremely to see a
prince, of whom he was immoderately jealous, form an alliance [Jan 1, 1537],
from which he derived such an accession of reputation as well as security. He
could not, however, with decency, oppose Francis’s bestowing his daughter upon
a monarch descended from a race of princes, the most ancient and faithful
allies of the French crown. But when James, upon the sudden death of Magdalen,
demanded as his second wife Mary of Guise, he warmly solicited Francis to deny
his suit, and in order to disappoint him, asked that lady in marriage for
himself. When Francis preferred the Scottish king’s sincere courtship to his
artful and malevolent proposal, he discovered much dissatisfaction. The
pacification agreed upon at Nice, and the familiar interview of the two rivals
at Aigues-mortes, filled Henry’s mind with new
suspicions, as if Francis had altogether renounced his friendship for the sake
of new connections with the emperor.
Charles,
thoroughly acquainted with the temper of the English king, and watchful to observe
all the shiftings and caprices of his passions,
thought this a favorable opportunity of renewing his negotiations with him,
which had been long broken off. By the death of queen Catharine, whose interest
the emperor could not with decency have abandoned, the chief cause of their
discord was removed; so that, without touching upon the delicate question of
her divorce, he might now take what measures he thought most effectual for
regaining Henry’s good-will. For this purpose, he began with proposing several
marriage-treaties to the king. He offered his niece, a daughter of the king of
Denmark, to Henry himself; he demanded the princess Mary for one of the princes
of Portugal, and was even willing to receive her as the king’s illegitimate
daughter. Though none of these projected alliances ever took place, or perhaps
were ever seriously intended, they occasioned such frequent intercourse between
the courts, and so many reciprocal professions of civility and esteem, as
considerably abated the edge of Henry’s rancor against the emperor, and paved
the way for that union between them which afterwards proved so disadvantageous
to the French king.
The
ambitious schemes in which the emperor had been engaged, and the wars he had
been carrying on for some years, proved, as usual, extremely favorable to the
progress of the reformation in Germany. While Charles was absent upon his
African expedition, or intent on his projects against France, his chief object
in Germany was to prevent the dissensions about religion from disturbing the
public tranquility, by granting such indulgence to the protestant princes as
might induce them to concur with his measures, or at least to hinder them from
taking part with his rival. For this reason, he was careful to secure to the
protestants the possession of all the advantages which they had gained by the
articles of pacification at Nuremberg, in the year one thousand five hundred
and thirty-two; and except some slight trouble from the proceedings of the
Imperial chamber, they met with nothing to disturb them in the exercise of
their religion, or to interrupt the successful zeal with which they propagated
their opinions.
Meanwhile
the pope continued his negotiations for convoking a general council; and though
the protestants had expressed great dissatisfaction with his intention to fix
upon Mantua as the place of meeting, he adhered obstinately to his choice,
issued a bull on the second of June, one thousand five hundred and thirty-six,
appointing it to assemble in that city on the twenty-third of May the year
following; he nominated three cardinals to preside in his name; enjoined all
Christian princes to countenance it by their authority, and invited the
prelates of every nation to attend in person.
This
summons of a council, an assembly which from its nature and intention demanded
quiet times, as well as pacific dispositions, at the very juncture when the
emperor was on his march towards France, and ready to involve a great part of
Europe in the confusions of war, appeared to every person extremely
unseasonable. It was intimated, however, to all the different courts by nuncios despatched on purpose. With an intention to gratify
the Germans, the emperor, during his residence in Rome, had warmly solicited
the pope to call a council; but being at the same time willing to try every art
in order to persuade Paul to depart from the neutrality which he preserved
between him and Francis, he sent Heldo his
vice-chancellor into Germany, along with a nuncio despatched thither, instructing him to second all the nuncio’s representations, and to
enforce them with the whole weight of the Imperial authority.
The
protestants gave them audience at Smalkalde, [Feb,
25, 1537], where they had assembled in a body in order to receive them. But
after weighing all their arguments, they unanimously refused to acknowledge a
council summoned in the name and by the authority of the pope alone; in which
he assumed the sole right of presiding; which was to be held in a city not only
far distant from Germany, but subject to a prince, who was a stranger to them,
and closely connected with the court of Rome; and to which their divines could
not repair with safety, especially after their doctrines had been stigmatized in
the very bull of convocation with the name of heresy. These and many other
objections against the council, which appeared to them unanswerable, they
enumerated in a large manifesto, which they published in vindication of their
conduct.
Against
this the court of Rome exclaimed as a flagrant proof of their obstinacy and
presumption, and the pope still persisted in his resolution to hold the council
at the time and in the place appointed. But some unexpected difficulties being
started by the duke of Mantua, both about the right of jurisdiction over the
persons who resorted to the council, and the security of his capital amidst
such a concourse of strangers, the pope [Oct. 8, 1538], after fruitless
endeavors to adjust these, first prorogued the council for some months, and
afterwards, transferring the place of meeting to Vicenza in the Venetian
territories, appointed it to assemble on the First of May, in the following
year. As neither the emperor nor the French king, who had not then come to any
accommodation, would permit their subjects to repair thither, not a single
prelate appeared on the day prefixed, and the pope, that his authority might
not become altogether contemptible by so many ineffectual efforts to convoke
that assembly, put off the meeting by an indefinite prorogation.
But
that he might not seem to have turned his whole attention towards a reformation
which he was not able to accomplish, while he neglected that which was in his
own power, he deputed a certain number of cardinals and bishops, with full
authority to inquire into the abuses and corruptions of the Roman court; and to
propose the most effectual method of removing them. This scrutiny, undertaken
with reluctance, was carried on slowly and with remissness. All defects were
touched with a gentle hand, afraid of probing too deep, or of discovering too
much. But even by this partial examination, many irregularities were detected,
and many enormities exposed to light, while the remedies which they suggested
as most proper were either inadequate or were never applied. The report and
resolution of these deputies, though intended to be kept secret, were
transmitted by some accident into Germany, and being immediately made public,
afforded ample matter for reflection, and triumph to the protestants.
On
the one hand, they demonstrated the necessity of a reformation in the head as
well as the members of the church, and even pointed out many of the corruptions
against which Luther and his followers had remonstrated with the greatest
vehemence. They showed, on the other hand, that it was vain to expect this reformation
from ecclesiastics themselves, who, as Luther strongly expressed it, piddled at
curing warts, while they overlooked or confirmed ulcers.
The
earnestness with which the emperor seemed, at first, to press their acquiescing
in the pope’s scheme of holding a council in Italy, alarmed the protestant
princes so much, that they thought it prudent to strengthen their confederacy,
by admitting several new members who solicited that privilege, particularly the
king of Denmark. Heldo, who during his residence in
Germany, had observed all the advantages which they derived from that union,
endeavored to counterbalance its effects by an alliance among the Catholic
powers of the empire. This league, distinguished by the name of Holy, was
merely defensive; and though concluded by Heldo in
the emperor’s name, was afterwards disowned by him, and subscribed by very few
princes.
The
protestants soon got intelligence of this association, notwithstanding all the
endeavors of the contracting parties to conceal it; and their zeal, always apt
to suspect and to dread, even to excess, everything that seemed to threaten
religion, instantly took the alarm, as if the emperor had been just ready to
enter upon the execution of some formidable plan for the extirpation of their opinions.
In order to disappoint this, they held frequent consultations, they courted the
kings of France and England with great assiduity, and even began to think of
raising the respective contingents both in men and money with which they were
obliged to furnish by the treaty of Smalkalde. But it
was not long before they were convinced that these apprehensions were without
foundation, and that the emperor, to whom repose was absolutely necessary, after
efforts so much beyond his strength in the war with France, had no thoughts of
disturbing the tranquility of Germany. As a proof of this, at an interview with
the protestant princes in Frankfort [April 19], his ambassadors agreed that all
concessions in their favor, particularly those contained in the pacification of
Nuremberg, should continue in force for fifteen months; that during this period
all proceedings of the Imperial chamber against them should be suspended; that
a conference should be held by a few divines of each party, in order to discuss
the points in controversy, and to propose articles of accommodation which
should be laid before the next diet. Though the emperor, that he might not
irritate the pope, who remonstrated against the first part of this agreement as
impolitic, and against the latter, as an impious encroachment upon his
prerogative, never formally ratified this convention, it was observed with
considerable exactness, and greatly strengthened the basis of that
ecclesiastical liberty for which the protestants contended.
A
few days after the convention at Frankfort, George duke of Saxony died [April
24], and his death was an event of great advantage to the reformation. That
prince, the head of the Albertine, or younger branch of the Saxon family,
possessed, as marquis of Misnia and Thuringia,
extensive territories, comprehending Dresden, Leipzig, and other cities now the
most considerable in the electorate. From the first dawn of the reformation, he
had been its enemy as avowedly as the electoral princes were its protectors,
and had carried on his opposition not only with all the zeal flowing from
religious prejudices, but with a virulence inspired by personal antyipathy to Luther, and embittered by the domestic
animosity subsisting between him and the other branch of his family. By his
death without issue, his succession fell to his brother Henry, whose attachment
to the protestant religion surpassed, if possible, that of his predecessor to
popery. Henry no sooner took possession of his new dominions, than,
disregarding a clause in George’s will, dictated by his bigotry, whereby he
bequeathed all his territories to the emperor and king of the Romans, if his
brother should attempt to make any innovation in religion, he invited some protestant
divines, and among them Luther himself, to Leipzig. By their advice and
assistance, he overturned in a few weeks the whole system of ancient rites,
establishing the full exercise of the reformed religion with the universal
applause of his subjects, who had long wished for this change, which the
authority of their duke alone had hitherto prevented. This revolution delivered
the protestants from the danger to which they were exposed by having an
inveterate enemy situated in the middle of their territories; and they had now
the satisfaction of seeing that the possessions of the princes and cities
attached to their cause, extended in one great and almost unbroken line from
the shore of the Baltic to the banks of the Rhine.
THE
SPANISH PRIDE AT TEST
Soon
after the conclusion of the truce at Nice, an event happened, which satisfied
all Europe that Charles had prosecuted the war to the utmost extremity that the
state of his affairs would permit.
Vast
arrears were due to his troops, whom he had long amused with vain hopes and
promises. As they now foresaw what little attention would be paid to their
demands, when by the reestablishment of peace their services became of less
importance, they lost all patience, broke out into an open mutiny, and declared
that they thought themselves entitled to seize by violence what was detained
from them contrary to all justice. Nor was this spirit of sedition confined to
one part of the emperor’s dominions; the mutiny was almost as general as the
grievance which gave rise to it. The soldiers in the Milanese plundered the
open country without control, and filled the capital itself with consternation.
Those in garrison at Goletta threatened to give up
that important fortress to Barbarossa. In Sicily, the troops proceeded to still
greater excesses; having driven away their officers, they elected others in
their stead, defeated a body of men whom the viceroy sent against them, took
and pillaged several cities, conducting themselves all the while in such a
manner, that their operations resembled rather the regular proceedings of a concerted
rebellion, than the rashness and violence of a military mutiny. But by the
address and prudence of the generals, who, partly by borrowing money in their
own name, or in that of their master, partly by extorting large sums from the
cities in their respective provinces, raised what was sufficient to discharge
the arrears of the soldiers, these insurrections were quelled. The greater part
of the troops were disbanded, such a number only being kept in pay as was
necessary for garrisoning the principal towns and protecting the seacoasts from
the insults of the Turks.
It
was happy for the emperor that the abilities of his generals extricated him out
of these difficulties, which it exceeded his own power to have removed. He had
depended, as his chief resource for discharging the arrears due to his
soldiers, upon the subsidies which he expected from his Castilian subjects. For
this purpose, he assembled the Cortes of Castile at Toledo, and having represented
to them the extraordinary expense of his military operations, together with the
great debts in which these had necessarily involved him, he proposed to levy
such supplies as the present exigency of his affairs demanded, by a general
excise on commodities.
But
the Spaniards already felt themselves oppressed with a load of taxes unknown to
their ancestors. They had often complained that their country was drained not
only of its wealth but of its inhabitants, in order to prosecute quarrels in
which it was not interested, and to fight battles, from which it could reap no
benefit; and they determined not to add voluntarily to their own burdens, or to
furnish the emperor with the means of engaging in new enterprises no less
ruinous to the kingdom than most of those which he had hitherto carried on. The
nobles in particular inveighed with great vehemence against the imposition
proposed, as an encroachment upon the valuable and distinguishing privilege of
their order, that of being exempted from the payment of any tax.
They
demanded a conference with the representatives of the cities concerning the
state of the nation. They contended that if Charles would imitate the example
of his predecessors, who had resided constantly in Spain, and would avoid
entangling himself in a multiplicity of transactions foreign to the concerns of
his Spanish dominions, his stated revenues of the crown would be fully
sufficient to defray the necessary expenses of government. They represented to
him, that it would be unjust to lay new burdens upon the people, while this
prudent and effectual method of reestablishing public credit, and securing
national opulence, was totally neglected.
Charles,
after employing arguments, entreaties, and promises, but without success, in
order to overcome their obstinacy, dismissed the assembly with great indignation.
From that period neither the nobles nor the prelates have been called to these
assemblies, on pretence that such as pay no part of
the public taxes, should not claim any vote in laying them on. None have been
admitted to the Cortes but the procurators or representatives eighteen cities.
These to the number of thirty-six, being two from each community, form an
assembly which bears no resemblance either in power or dignity or independence
to the ancient Cortes; and are absolutely at the devotion of the court in all
their determinations. Thus the imprudent zeal with which the Castilian nobles
had supported the regal prerogative, in opposition to the claims of the commons
during the commotions in the year one thousand five hundred and twenty-one,
proved at last fatal to their own body. By enabling Charles to depress one of
the orders in the state, they destroyed that balance to which the constitution
owed its security, and put it in his power, or in that of his successors, to
humble the other, and to strip it gradually of its most valuable privileges.
At
the same time, however, the Spanish grandees still possessed extraordinary
power as well as privileges, which they exercised and defended with a
haughtiness peculiar to themselves. Of this the emperor himself had a
mortifying proof during the meeting of the Cortes at Toledo. As he was
returning one day from a tournament accompanied by most of the nobility, one of
the sergeants of the court, out of officious zeal to clear the way for the
emperor, struck the duke of Infantado’s horse with
his baton, which that haughty grandee resenting, drew his sword, beat and
wounded the officer. Charles, provoked at such an insolent deed in his
presence, immediately ordered Ronquillo the judge of the court to arrest the
duke; Ronquillo advanced to execute his charge, when the constable of Castile
interposing, checked him, claimed the right of jurisdiction over a grandee as a
privilege of his office, and conducted Infantado to
his own apartment. All the nobles present were so pleased with the boldness of
the constable in asserting the rights of their order, that, deserting the
emperor, they attended him to his house with infinite applauses, and Charles
returned to the palace unaccompanied by any person but the cardinal Tavera.
The
emperor, how sensible soever of the affront, saw the danger of irritating a
jealous and high-spirited order of men, whom the slightest appearance of
offence might drive to the most unwarrantable extremities. For that reason,
instead of straining at any ill-timed exertion of his prerogative, he prudently
connived at the arrogance of a hotly too potent for him to control, and sent
next morning to the duke of Infantado offering to
inflict what punishment he pleased on the person who had affronted him. The
duke considering this as a full reparation to his honor, instantly forgave the
officer; bestowing on him, besides, a considerable present as a compensation
for his wound. Thus the affair was entirely forgotten; nor would it have
deserved to be mentioned, if it were not a striking example of the high and
independent spirit of the Spanish nobles in that age, as well as an instance of
the emperor’s dexterity in accommodating his conduct to the circumstances in
which he was placed.
STATES
OF THE UNITED PROVINCES
Charles
was far from discovering the same condescension or lenity toward the citizens
of Ghent, who not long after broke out into open rebellion against his
government.
An
event which happened in the year one thousand five hundred and thirty-six, gave
occasion to this rash insurrection so fatal to that flourishing city. At that
time the queen dowager of Hungary, governess of the Netherlands, having
received orders from her brother to invade France with all the forces which she
could raise, she assembled the States of the United Provinces, and obtained
from them a subsidy of twelve hundred thousand florins, to defray the expense
of that undertaking. Of this sum, the county of Flanders was obliged to pay a
third part as its proportion. But the citizens of Ghent, the most considerable
city in that country, averse to a war with France, with which they carried on
an extensive and gainful commerce, refused to pay their quota, and contended,
that in consequence of stipulations between them and the ancestors of their
present sovereign the emperor, no tax could be levied upon them, unless they
had given their express consent to the imposition of it. The governess on the
other hand, maintained, that as the subsidy of twelve hundred thousand florins
had been granted by the States of Flanders, of which their representatives were
members, they were bound, of course, to conform to what was enacted by them, as
it is the first principle in society, on which the tranquility and order of
government depend, that the inclinations of the minority must be overruled by
the judgment and decision of the superior number.
The
citizens of Ghent, however, were not willing to relinquish a privilege of such
high importance as that which they claimed. Having been accustomed, under the
government of the house of Burgundy, to enjoy extensive immunities, and to be
treated with much indulgence, they disdained to sacrifice to the delegated
power of a regent, those rights and liberties which they had often and
successfully asserted against their greatest princes. The queen, though she
endeavored at first to soothe them, and to reconcile them to their duty by
various concessions, was at last so much irritated by the obstinacy with which
they adhered to their claim, that she ordered all the citizens of Ghent, on
whom she could lay hold in any part of the Netherlands, to be arrested. But
this rash action made an impression very different from what she expected, on
men whose minds were agitated with all the violent passions which indignation at
oppression and zeal for liberty inspire.
Less
affected with the danger of their friends and companions, than irritated at the
governess, they openly despised her authority, and sent deputies to the other
towns of Flanders, conjuring them not to abandon their country at such a
juncture, but to concur with them in vindicating its rights against the
encroachments of a woman, who either did not know or did not regard their
immunities. All but a few inconsiderable towns declined entering into any
confederacy against the governess; they joined, however, in petitioning her to
put off the term for payment of the tax so long, that they might have it in
their power to send some of their number into Spain, in order to lay their
title to exemption before their sovereign. This she granted with some
difficulty. But Charles received their commissioners with a haughtiness to
which they were not accustomed from their ancient princes, and enjoining them
to yield the same respectful obedience to his sister, which they owed to him in
person, remitted the examination of their claim to the council of Malines. This
court, which is properly a standing committee of the parliament or states of
the country, and which possesses the supreme jurisdiction in all matters civil
as well as criminal, pronounced the claim of the citizens of Ghent to be
ill-founded, and appointed them forthwith to pay their proportion of the tax.
Enraged
at this decision, which they considered as notoriously unjust, and rendered
desperate on seeing their rights betrayed by that very court which was bound to
protect them, the people of Ghent ran to arms in a tumultuary manner; drove
such of the nobility as resided among them out of the city; secured several of
the emperor’s officers; put one of them to the torture, whom they accused of
having stolen or destroyed the record that contained a ratification of the
privileges of exemption from taxes which they pleaded; chose a council to which
they committed the direction of their affairs; gave orders for repairing and adding
to their fortifications; and openly erected the standard of rebellion against
their sovereign. Sensible, however, of their inability to support what their
zeal had prompted them to undertake, and desirous of securing a protector
against the formidable forces by which they might expect soon to be attacked,
they sent some of their number to Francis, offering not only to acknowledge him
as their sovereign, and to put him in immediate possession of Ghent, but to
assist him with all their forces in recovering those provinces in the
Netherlands, which had anciently belonged to the crown of France, and had been
so lately reunited to it by the decree of the parliament of Paris.
This
unexpected proposition coming from persons who had it in their power to have
performed instantly one part of what they undertook, and who could contribute
so effectually towards the execution of the whole, opened great as well as
alluring prospects to Francis's ambition. The counties of Flanders and Artois
were of greater value than the duchy of Milan, which he had so long labored to
acquire with passionate but fruitless desire; their situation with respect to
France rendered it more easy to conquer or to defend them; and they might be
formed into a separate principality for the duke of Orleans, no less suitable
to his dignity than that which his father aimed at obtaining. To this, the
Flemings, who were acquainted with the French manners and government, would not
have been averse; and his own subjects, weary of their destructive expeditions
into Italy, would have turned their arms towards this quarter with more good
will, and with greater vigour. Several
considerations, nevertheless, prevented Francis from laying hold of this
opportunity, the most favorable in appearance which had ever presented itself,
of extending his own dominions, or distressing the emperor. From the time of
their interview at Aigues-mortes, Charles had
continued to court the king of France with wonderful attention; and often
flattered him with hopes of gratifying at last his wishes concerning the
Milanese, by granting the investiture of it either to him or to one of his
sons. But though these hopes and promises were thrown out with no other
intention than to detach him from his confederacy with the grand seignior, or
to raise suspicions in Solyman’s mind by the
appearance of a cordial and familiar intercourse subsisting between the courts
of Paris and Madrid, Francis was weak enough to catch at the shadow by which he
had been so often amused, and from eagerness to seize it, relinquished what
must have proved a more substantial acquisition. Besides this, the dauphin,
jealous to excess of his brother, and unwilling that a prince who seemed to be
of a restless and enterprising nature, should obtain an establishment, which
from its situation might be considered almost as a domestic one, made use of
Montmorency, who, by a singular piece of good fortune, was at the same time the
favorite of the father and of the son, to defeat the application of the
Flemings, and to divert the king from espousing their cause. Montmorency,
accordingly, represented, in strong terms, the reputation and power which
Francis would acquire by recovering that footing which he formerly had in
Italy, and that nothing would be so efficacious to overcome the emperor's
aversion to this as a sacred adherence to the truce, and refusing, on an
occasion so inviting, to countenance the rebellious subjects of his rival.
Francis, apt of himself to overrate the value of the Milanese, because he
estimated it from the length of time as well as from the great efforts which he
had employed in order to reconquer it, and fond of every action which had the
appearance of generosity, assented without difficulty to sentiments so
agreeable to his own, rejected the propositions of the citizens of Ghent, and
dismissed their deputies with a harsh answer.
Not
satisfied with this, by a further refinement in generosity, he communicated to
the emperor his whole negotiation with the malecontents,
and all that le knew of their schemes and intentions. This convincing proof of
Francis’s disinterestedness relieved Charles from the most disquieting
apprehensions, and opened a way to extricate himself out of all his
difficulties. He had already received full information of all the transactions
in the Netherlands, and of the rage with which the people of Ghent had taken
arms against his government. He was thoroughly acquainted with the genius and
qualities of his subjects in that country; with their love of liberty; their
attachment to their ancient privileges and customs; as well as the invincible
obstinacy with which their minds, slow but firm and persevering, adhered to any
measure on which they had deliberately resolved. He easily saw what
encouragement and support they might have derived from the assistance of France
and though now free from any danger on that quarter, he was still sensible that
some immediate as well as vigorous interposition was necessary, in order to
prevent the spirit of disaffection from spreading in a country where the number
of cities, the multitude of people, together with the great wealth diffused
among them by commerce, rendered it peculiarly formidable, and would supply it
with inexhaustible resources. No expedient, after long deliberation, appeared
to him so effectual as his going in person to the Netherlands; and the
governess his sister being of the same opinion, warmly solicited him to
undertake the journey. There were only two routes which he could take; one by
land through Italy and Germany, the other entirely by sea, from some port in
Spain to one in the Low-Countries But the former was more tedious than suited
the present exigency of his affairs; nor could he in consistency with his
dignity, or even his safety, pass through Germany, without such a train both of
attendants and of troops, as would have added greatly to the time he must have
consumed in his journey; the latter was dangerous at this season, and while he
remained uncertain with respect to the friendship of the king of England, was
not to be ventured upon, unless under the convoy of a powerful fleet. This
perplexing situation, in which he was under the necessity of choosing, and did
not know what to choose, inspired him at last with the singular and seemingly
extravagant thought of passing through France, as the most expeditious way of
reaching the Netherlands. He proposed in his council to demand Francis’s
permission for that purpose. All his counselors joined with one voice in
condemning the measure as no less rash than unprecedented, and which must
infallibly expose him to disgrace or to danger; to disgrace, if the demand were
rejected in the manner that he had reason to expect; to danger, if he put his
person in the power of an enemy whom he had often offended, who had ancient
injuries to revenge, as well as subjects of present contest still remaining
undecided. But Charles, who had studied the character of his rival with greater
care and more profound discernment than any of his ministers, persisted in his
plan, and flattered himself that it might be accomplished not only without
danger to his own person, but even without the expense of any concession
detrimental to his crown.
With
this view he communicated the matter to the French ambassador at his court, and
sent Granville his chief minister to Paris, in order to obtain from Francis
permission to pass through his dominions, and to promise that he would soon
settle the affair of the Milanese to his satisfaction. But at the same time he entreated
that Francis would not exact any new promise, or even insist on former
engagements, at this juncture, lest whatever he should grant, under his present
circumstances, might seem rather to be extorted by necessity than to flow from
friendship or the love of justice.
Francis,
instead of attending to the snare which such a slight artifice scarcely
concealed, was so dazzled with the splendor of overcoming an enemy by acts of
generosity, and so pleased with the air of superiority which the rectitude and
disinterestedness of his proceedings gave him on this occasion, that he at once
assented to all that was demanded. Judging of the emperor’s heart by his own,
he imagined that the sentiments of gratitude, arising from the remembrance of
good offices and liberal treatment, would determine him more forcibly to fulfill
what he had so often promised, than the most precise stipulations that could he
inserted in any treaty.
Upon
this, Charles, to whom every moment was precious, set out, notwithstanding the
fears and suspicions of his Spanish subjects, with a small but splendid train
of about a hundred persons. At Bayonne, on the frontiers of France, he was
received by the dauphin and the duke of Orleans, attended by the constable
Montmorency. The two princes offered to go into Spain, and to remain there as
hostages for the emperor’s safety; but this he rejected, declaring, that he
relied with implicit confidence on the king’s honor, and had never demanded,
nor would accept of any other pledge for his security. In all the towns through
which he passed, the greatest possible magnificence was displayed; the
magistrates presented him the keys of the gates; the prison doors were set
open; and by the royal honors paid to him, he appeared more like the sovereign
of the country than a foreign prince [1540]. The king advanced as far as Chatelherault to meet him; their interview was
distinguished by the warmest expressions of friendship and regard. They
proceeded together towards Paris, and presented to the inhabitants of that
city, the extraordinary spectacle of two rival monarchs, whose enmity had
disturbed and laid waste Europe during twenty years, making their solemn entry
together with all the symptoms of a confidential harmony, as if they had
forgotten for ever past injuries, and would never
revive hostilities for the future.
Charles
remained six days at Paris; but amidst the perpetual caresses of the French
court, and the various entertainments contrived to amuse or to do him honor, he
discovered an extreme impatience to continue his journey, arising as much from
an apprehension of danger which constantly haunted him, as from the necessity
of his presence in the Low-Countries.
Conscious
of the disingenuity of his own intentions, he trembled when he reflected that
some fatal accident might betray them to his rival, or lead him to suspect
them; and though his artifices to conceal them should be successful, he could
not help fearing that motives of interest might at last triumph over the
scruples of honor, and tempt Francis to avail himself of the advantage now in
his hands. Nor were there wanting persons among the French ministers, who
advised the king to turn his own arts against the emperor, and as the
retribution due for so many instances of fraud or falsehood, to seize and
detain his person until he granted him full satisfaction with regard to all the
just claims of the French crown. But no consideration could induce Francis to
violate the faith which he had pledged, nor could any argument convince him
that Charles, after all the promises that he had given, and all the favors which
lie had received, might still be capable of deceiving him. Full of this false
confidence, he accompanied him to St. Quintin; and the two princes, who had met
his on the borders of Spain, did not take leave of him until he entered his
dominions in the Low-Countries.
As
soon as the emperor reached his own territories [Jan. 24], the French
ambassadors demanded the accomplishment of what he had promised concerning the
investiture of Milan: but Charles, under the plausible pretext that his whole
attention was then engrossed by the consultations necessary towards suppressing
the rebellion in Ghent, put off the matter for some time. But in order to
prevent Francis from suspecting his sincerity, he still continued to talk of
his resolutions with respect to that matter in the same strain as when he
entered France, and even wrote to the king much to the same purpose, though in
general terms, and with equivocal expressions, which he might afterwards explain
away or interpret at pleasure.
Meanwhile,
the unfortunate citizens of Ghent, destitute of leaders, capable either of
directing their councils, or conducting their troops; abandoned by the French
king, and unsupported by their countrymen; were unable to resist their offended
sovereign, who was ready to advance against them with one body of troops which
he had raised in the Netherlands, with another drawn out of Germany, and a
third which had arrived from Spain by sea. The near approach of danger made them,
at last, so sensible of their own folly, that they sent ambassadors to the
emperor, imploring his mercy, and offering to set open their gates at his
approach. Charles, without vouchsafing them any other answer than that he would
appear among them as their sovereign, with the scepter and the sword in his
hand, began his march at the head of his troops. Though he chose to enter the
city on the twenty-fourth of February, his birthday, he was touched with
nothing of that tenderness or indulgence which was natural towards the place of
his nativity. Twenty-six of the principal citizens were put to death [April
201]; a greater number were sent into banishment; the city was declared to have
forfeited all its privileges and immunities; the revenues belonging to it were
confiscated; its ancient form of government was abolished; the nomination of
its magistrates was vested for the future in the emperor and his successors; a
new system of laws and political administration was prescribed; and in order to
bridle the seditious spirit of the citizens, orders were given to erect a
strong citadel, for defraying the expense of which a fine of a hundred and
fifty thousand florins was imposed on the inhabitants, together with an annual
tax of six thousand florins for the support of the garrison. By these rigorous
proceedings, Charles not only punished the citizens of Ghent, but set an awful
example of severity before his other subjects in the Netherlands, whose
immunities and privileges, partly the effect, partly the cause of their
extensive commerce, circumscribed the prerogative of their sovereign within
very narrow bounds, and often stood in the way of measures which he wished to
undertake, or fettered and retarded him in his operations.
Charles
having thus vindicated and reestablished his authority in the Low-Countries,
and being, now under no necessity of continuing the same scene of falsehood and
dissimulation with which he had long amused Francis, began gradually to throw
aside the veil under which he had concealed his intentions with respect to the
Milanese. At first, he eluded the demands of the French ambassadors, when they
again reminded him of his promises; then he proposed, by way of equivalent for
the duchy of Milan, to grant the duke of Orleans the investiture of Flanders,
clogging the offer, however, with impracticable conditions, or such as he knew
would be rejected. At last, being driven from all his evasions and subterfuges
by their insisting for a categorical answer, he peremptorily refused to give up
a territory of such value, or voluntarily to make such a liberal addition to
the strength of an enemy, by diminishing his own power. He denied, at the same
time, that he had ever made any promise which could bind him to an action so
foolish, and so contrary to his own interest.
Of
all the transactions in the emperor’s life, this, without doubt, reflects the
greatest dishonor on his reputation. Though Charles was not extremely
scrupulous at other times about the means which he employed for accomplishing
his ends, and was not always observant of the strict precepts of veracity and
honor, he had hitherto maintained some regard for the maxims of that less
precise and rigid morality by which monarchs think themselves entitled to
regulate their conduct. But, on this occasion, the scheme that he formed of
deceiving a generous and open-hearted prince; the illiberal and mean artifices
by which he carried it on; the insensibility with which he received all the
marks of his friendship, as well as the ingratitude with which he requited
them, are all equally unbecoming the dignity of his character, and inconsistent
with the grandeur of his views.
This
transaction exposed Francis to as much scorn as it did the emperor to censure.
After the experience of a long-reign, after so many opportunities of
discovering the duplicity and artifices of his rival, the credulous simplicity
with which he trusted him at this juncture seemed to merit no other return than
what it actually met with. Francis, however, remonstrated and exclaimed, as if
this had been the first instance in which the emperor had deceived him.
Feeling, as is usual, the insult which was offered to his understanding still
more sensibly than the injury done to his interest, he discovered such
resentment, as made it obvious that he would lay hold on the first opportunity
of being revenged, and that a war, no less rancorous than that which had so
lately raged, would soon break out anew in Europe.
GROWTH
OF THE ORDER OF THE JESUITS
But
singular as the transaction which has been related may appear, this year is
rendered still more memorable by the establishment of the order of Jesuits; a
body whose influence on ecclesiastical as well as civil affairs bath been so
considerable, that an account of the genius of its laws and government justly
merits a place in history.
When
men take a view of the rapid progress of this society towards wealth and power;
when they contemplate the admirable prudence with which it has been governed;
when they attend to the persevering and systematic spirit with which its
schemes have been carried on; they are apt to ascribe such a singular
institution to the superior wisdom of its founder, and to suppose that he had
formed and digested his plan with profound policy. But the Jesuits, as well as
the other monastic orders, are indebted for the existence of their order not to
the wisdom of their founder, but to his enthusiasm. Ignatio Loyola, whom I have already mentioned on occasion of the wound which he
received in defending Pampeluna, was a fanatic distinguished
by extravagancies in sentiment and conduct, no less incompatible with the
maxims of sober reason, than repugnant to the spirit of true religion. The wild
adventures, and visionary schemes, in which his enthusiasm engaged him, equal
anything recorded in the legends of the Romish saints; but are unworthy of
notice in history.
Prompted
by this fanatical spirit, or incited by the love of power and distinction, from
which such pretenders to superior sanctity are not exempt, Loyola was ambitious
of becoming the founder of a religious order. The plan, which he formed of its
constitution and laws, was suggested, as he gave out, and as his followers
still teach, by the immediate inspiration of heaven. But notwithstanding this
high pretension, his design met at first with violent opposition.
The
pope, to whom Loyola had applied for the sanction of his authority to confirm
the institution, referred his petition to a committee of cardinals. They
represented the establishment to be unnecessary as well as dangerous, and Paul
refused to grant his approbation of it. At last, Loyola removed all his
scruples by an offer which it was impossible for any pope to resist. He
proposed, that besides the three vows of poverty, of chastity, and of monastic
obedience, which are common to all the orders of regulars, the members of his society
should take a fourth vow of obedience to the pope, binding themselves to go
whithersoever he should command for the service of religion, and without
requiring anything from the holy see for their support. At a time when the
papal authority had received such a shock by the revolt of so many nations from
the Romish church; at a time when every part of the popish system was attacked
with so much violence and success, the acquisition of a body of men, thus
peculiarly devoted to the see of Rome, and whom it might set in opposition to
all its enemies, was an object of the highest consequence. Paul, instantly
perceiving this, confirmed the institution of the Jesuits by his bull [Sept.
27]; granted the most ample privileges to the members of the society; and
appointed Loyola to be the first general of the order.
The
event had fully justified Paul’s discernment, in expecting such beneficial
consequences to the see of Rome from this institution. In less than half a
century, the society obtained establishments in every country that adhered to
the Roman catholic church; its power and wealth increased amazingly; the number
of its members became great; their character as well as accomplishments were
still greater; and the Jesuits were celebrated by the friends, and dreaded by
the enemies of the Romish faith, as the most able and enterprising order in the
church.
The
constitution and laws of the society were perfected by Laynez and Aquaviva, the two generals who succeeded Loyola,
men far superior to their master in abilities, and in the science of
government. They framed that system of profound and artful policy which
distinguishes the order. The large infusion of fanaticism, mingled with its
regulations, should be imputed to Loyola its founder. Many circumstances concurred
in giving a peculiarity of character to the order of Jesuits, and in forming
the members of it not only to take a greater part in the affairs of the world
than any other body of monks, but to acquire superior influence in the conduct
of them.
The
primary object of almost all the monastic orders is to separate men from the
world, and from any concern in its affairs. In the solitude and silence of the
cloister, the monk is called to work out his own salvation by extraordinary
acts of mortification and piety. He is dead to the world, and ought not to
mingle in its transactions. He can be of no benefit to mankind, but by his
example and by his prayers. On the contrary, the Jesuits are taught to consider
themselves as formed for action. They are chosen soldiers, bound to exert
themselves continually in the service of God and of the pope, his vicar on
earth. Whatever tends to instruct the ignorant; whatever can be of use to
reclaim or to oppose the enemies of the holy see is their proper object. That
they may have full leisure for this active service, they are totally exempted
from those functions, the performance of which is the chief business of other
monks. They appear in no processions; they practice no rigorous austerities;
they do not consume one half of their time in the repetition of tedious
offices. But they are required to attend to all the transactions of the world,
on account of the influence which these may have upon religion; they are
directed to study the dispositions of persons in high rank, and to cultivate
their friendship; and by the very constitution, as well as genius of the order,
a spirit of action and intrigue is infused into all its members.
As
the object of the society of Jesuits differed from that of the other monastic
orders, the diversity was no less in the form of its government. The other
orders are to be considered as voluntary associations, in which whatever
affects the whole body is regulated by the common suffrage of all its members.
The executive power is vested in the persons placed at the head of each
convent, or of the whole society; the legislative authority resides in the
community. Affairs of moment, relating to particular convents, are determined
in conventual chapters; such as respect the whole order are considered in
general congregations. But Loyola, full of the ideas of implicit obedience,
which he had derived from his military profession, appointed that the
government of his order should be purely monarchical. A general, chosen for
life by deputies from the several provinces, possessed power that was supreme
and independent, extending to every person, and to every case. He, by his sole
authority, nominated provincials, rectors, and every other officer employed in
the government of the society, and could remove them at pleasure. In him was
vested the sovereign administration of the revenues and funds of the order.
Every member belonging to it was at his disposal; and by his uncontrollable
mandate, he could impose on them any task, or employ them in what service soever
he pleased. To his commands they were required not only to yield outward
obedience, but to resign up to him the inclinations of their own wills, and the
sentiments of their own understandings. They were to listen to his injunctions,
as if they had been uttered by Christ himself. Under his direction, they were
to be mere passive instruments, like clay in the hands of the potter or like
dead carcasses incapable of resistance. Such a singular form of policy could
not fail to impress its character on all the members of the order, and to give
a peculiar force to all its operations. There is not in the annals of mankind
any example of such perfect despotism, exercised not over monks shut up in the
cells of a convent, but over men dispersed among all the nations of the earth.
As
the constitutions of the order vest in the general such absolute dominion over
all its members, they carefully provide for his being perfectly informed with
respect to the character and abilities of his subjects. Every novice who offers
himself as a candidate for entering into the order, is obliged to manifest his
conscience to the superior, or to a person appointed by him; and in doing this
is required to confess not only his sins and defects, but to discover the
inclinations, the passions, and the bent of his soul. This manifestation must
be renewed every six months. The society, not satisfied with penetrating in
this manner into the innermost recesses of the heart, directs each member to
observe the words and actions of the novices; they are constituted spies upon
their conduct; and are bound to disclose everything of importance concerning
them to the superior.
In
order that this scrutiny into their character may be as complete as possible, a
long noviciate must expire, during which they pass
through the several gradations of ranks in the society, and they must have
attained the full age of thirty-three years before they can be admitted to take
the final vows, by which they become professed members. By these various
methods, the superiors, under whose immediate inspection the novices are
placed, acquire a thorough knowledge of their dispositions and talents. In
order that the general, who is the soul that animates and moves the whole
society, may have under his eye everything necessary to inform or direct him,
the provincials and heads of the several houses are obliged to transmit to him
regular and frequent reports concerning the members under their inspection. In
these they descend into minute details with respect to the character of each
person, his abilities, natural or acquired, his temper, his experience in
affairs, and the particular department for which he is best fitted. These
reports, when digested and arranged, are entered into registers kept on
purpose, that the general may, at one comprehensive view, survey the state of
the society in every corner of the earth; observe the qualifications and
talents of its members; and thus choose, with perfect information, the instruments,
which his absolute power can employ in any service for which he thinks meet to
destine them.
As
it was the professed intention of the order of Jesuits to labor with unwearied
zeal in promoting the salvation of men, this engaged them, of course, in many
active functions. From their first institution, they considered the education
of youth as their peculiar province; they aimed at being spiritual guides and
confessors; they preached frequently in order to instruct the people; they sent
out missionaries to convert unbelieving nations. The novelty of the institution,
as well as the singularity of its objects, procured the order many admirers and
patrons. The governors of the society had the address to avail themselves of
every circumstance in its favor, and in a short time the number as well as
influence of its members increased wonderfully. Before the expiration of the
sixteenth century, the Jesuits had obtained the chief direction of the
education of youth in every catholic country in Europe. They had become the
confessors of almost all its monarchs, a function of no small importance in any
reign, but under a weak prince superior even to that of minister. They were the
spiritual guides of almost every person eminent for rank or power. They
possessed the highest degree of confidence and interest with the papal court,
as the most zealous and able champions for its authority. The advantages which
an active and enterprising body of men might derive from all these
circumstances are obvious. They formed the minds of men in their youth. They
retained an ascendant over them in their advanced years. They possessed, at
different periods, the direction of the most considerable courts in Europe.
They mingled in all affairs. They took part in every intrigue and revolution.
The general, by means of the extensive intelligence which be received, could
regulate the operations of the order with the most perfect discernment, and by
means of his absolute power could carry them on with the utmost vigour and effect.
Together
with the power of the order, its wealth continued to increase. Various
expedients were devised for eluding the obligation of the vow of poverty. The
order acquired ample possessions in every catholic country; and by the number
as well as magnificence of its public buildings, together with the value of its
property, moveable or real, it vied with the most opulent of the monastic
fraternities. Besides the sources of wealth common to all the regular clergy,
the Jesuits possessed one which was peculiar to themselves. Under pretext of
promoting the success of their missions, and of facilitating the support of
their missionaries, they obtained a special license from the court of Rome, to
trade with the nations which they labored to convert. In consequence of this, they
engaged in an extensive and lucrative commerce, both in the East and West
Indies. They opened warehouses in different parts of Europe, in which they
vended their commodities. Not satisfied with trade alone, they imitated the
example of other commercial societies, and aimed at obtaining settlements. They
acquired possession accordingly of a large and fertile province in the southern
continent of America, and reigned as sovereigns over some hundred thousand
subjects.
Unhappily
for mankind, the vast influence which the order of Jesuits acquired by all
these different means, has been often exerted with the most pernicious effect.
Such was the tendency of that discipline observed by the society in forming its
members, and such the fundamental maxims in its constitution, that every Jesuit
was taught to regard the interest of the order as the capital object, to which
every consideration was to be sacrificed. This spirit of attachment to their
order, the most ardent, perhaps, that ever influenced anybody of men, is the
characteristic principle of the Jesuits, and serves as a key to the genius of
their policy, as well as to the peculiarities in their sentiments and conduct.
As
it was for the honor and advantage of the society, that its members should
possess an ascendant over persons in high rank or of great power, the desire of
acquiring and preserving such a direction of their conduct, with greater
facility, has led the Jesuits to propagate a system of relaxed and pliant
morality, which accommodates itself to the passions of men, which justifies
their vices, which tolerates their imperfections, which authorizes almost every
action that the most audacious or crafty politician would wish to perpetrate.
As
the prosperity of the order was intimately connected with the preservation of
the papal authority, the Jesuits, influenced by the same principle of
attachment to the interests of their society, have been the most zealous
patrons of those doctrines which tend to exalt ecclesiastical power on the
ruins of civil government. They have attributed to the court of Rome a jurisdiction
as extensive and absolute as was claimed by the most presumptuous pontiffs in
the dark ages. They have contended for the entire independence of ecclesiastics
on the civil magistrate. They have published such tenets concerning the duty of
opposing princes who were enemies of the catholic faith, as countenanced the
most atrocious crimes, and tended to dissolve all the ties which connect
subjects with their rulers.
As
the order derived both reputation and authority from the zeal with which it
stood forth in defence of the Romish church against
the attacks of the reformers, its members, proud of this distinction, have
considered it as their peculiar function to combat the opinions, and to check
the progress of the protestants. They have made use of every art, and have
employed every weapon against them. They have set themselves in opposition to
every gentle or tolerating measure in their favor. They have incessantly
stirred up against them all the rage of ecclesiastical and civil persecution.
Monks
of other denominations have, indeed, ventured to teach the same pernicious
doctrines, and have held opinions equally inconsistent with the order and
happiness of civil society. But they, from reasons which are obvious, have
either delivered such opinions with greater reserve, or have propagated them
with less success. Whoever recollects the events which have happened in Europe
during two centuries, will find that the Jesuits may justly be considered as
responsible for most of the pernicious effects arising from that corrupt and
dangerous casuistry, from those extravagant tenets concerning ecclesiastical
power, and from that intolerant spirit, which have been the disgrace of the
church of Rome throughout that period, and which have brought so many
calamities upon civil society.
But
amidst many bad consequences flowing from the institution of this order,
mankind, it must be acknowledged, have derived from it some considerable
advantages. As the Jesuits made the education of youth one of their capital
objects, and as their first attempts to establish colleges for the reception of
students were violently opposed by the universities in differed countries, it
became necessary for them, as the most effectual method of acquiring the public
favor, to surpass their rivals in science and industry. This prompted them to
cultivate the study of ancient literature with extraordinary ardor. This put
them upon various methods for facilitating the instruction of youth; and by the
improvements which they made in it, they have contributed so much towards the
progress of polite learning, that on this account they have merited well of
society. Nor has the order of Jesuits been successful only in teaching the
elements of literature; it has produced likewise eminent masters in many
branches of science, and can alone boast of a greater number of ingenious
authors than all the other religious fraternities taken together.
But
it is in the new world that the Jesuits have exhibited the most wonderful
display of their abilities, and have contributed most effectually to the
benefit of the human species. The conquerors of that unfortunate quarter of the
globe acted at first as if they had nothing in view, but to plunder, to
enslave, and to exterminate its inhabitants. The Jesuits alone made humanity
the object of their settling there. About the beginning of the last century,
they obtained admission into the fertile province of Paraguay, which stretches
across the southern continent of America, from the east side of the immense
ridge of the Andes, to the confines of the Spanish and Portuguese settlements
on the banks of the river de la Plata. They found the inhabitants in a state
little different from that which takes place among men when they first begin to
unite together; strangers to the arts; subsisting precariously by hunting or
fishing; and hardly acquainted with the first principles of subordination and
government. The Jesuits set themselves to instruct and to civilize these
savages. They taught them to cultivate the ground, to rear tame animals, and to
build houses. They brought them to live together in villages. They trained them
to arts and manufactures. They made them taste the sweets of society; and
accustomed them to the blessings of security and order. These people became the
subjects of their benefactors; who have governed them with a tender attention,
resembling that with which a father directs his children. Respected and beloved
almost to adoration, a few Jesuits presided over some hundred thousand Indians.
They maintained a perfect equality among all the members of the community. Each
of them was obliged to labor, not for himself alone, but for the public. The
produce of their fields, together with the fruits of their industry of every
species, were deposited in common store-houses, from which each individual
received everything necessary for the supply of his wants. By this institution,
almost all the passions which disturb the peace of society, and render the
members of it unhappy, were extinguished. A few magistrates, chosen from among their
countrymen by the Indians themselves, watched over the public tranquility, and
secured obedience to the laws. The sanguinary punishments frequent under other
governments were unknown. An admonition from a Jesuit, a slight mark of infamy,
or, on some singular occasion, a few lashes with a whip, were sufficient to
maintain good order among these innocent and happy people.
But
even in this meritorious effort of the Jesuits for the good of mankind, the
genius and spirit of their order have mingled and are discernible. They plainly
aimed at establishing in Paraguay an independent empire, subject to the society
alone, and which, by the superior excellence of its constitution and police,
could scarcely have failed to extend its dominion over all the southern
continent of America. With this view, in order to prevent the Spaniards or
Portuguese in the adjacent settlements from acquiring any dangerous influence
over the people within the limits of the province subject to the society, the
Jesuits endeavored to inspire the Indians with hatred and contempt of these
nations. They cut off all intercourse between their subjects and the Spanish or
Portuguese settlements. They prohibited any private trader of either nation
from entering their territories. When they were obliged to admit any person in
a public character from the neighboring governments, they did not permit him to
have any conversation with their subjects, and no Indian was allowed even to
enter the house where these strangers resided, unless in the presence of a
Jesuit. In order to render any communication between them as difficult as
possible, they industriously avoided giving the Indians any knowledge of the
Spanish, or of any other European language; but encouraged the different
tribes, which they had civilized, to acquire a certain dialect of the Indian
tongue, and labored to make that the universal language throughout their
dominions. As all these precautions, without military force, would have been
insufficient to have rendered their empire secure and permanent, they
instructed their subjects in the European arts of war. They formed them into
bodies of cavalry and infantry, completely armed and regularly disciplined.
They provided a great train of artillery, as well as magazines stored with all
the implements of war. Thus they established an army so numerous and well
appointed, as to be formidable in a country, where a few sickly and
ill-disciplined battalions composed all the military force kept on foot by the
Spaniards or Portuguese.
The
Jesuits gained no considerable degree of power during the reign of Charles V,
who, with his usual sagacity, discerned the dangerous tendency of the
institution, and checked its progress. But as the order was founded in the
period of which I write the history, and as the age to which I address this
work hath seen its fall, the view which I have exhibited of the laws and genius
of this formidable body will not, I hope, be unacceptable to my readers;
especially as one circumstance has enabled me to enter into this detail with
particular advantage. Europe had observed, for two centuries, the ambition and
power of the order. But while it felt many fatal effects of these, it could not
fully discern the causes to which they were to be imputed. It was unacquainted
with many of the singular regulations in the political constitution or
government of the Jesuits, which formed the enterprising spirit of intrigue
that distinguished its members, and elevated the body itself to such a height
of power. It was a fundamental maxim with the Jesuits, from their first
institution, not to publish the rules of their order. These they kept concealed
as an impenetrable mystery. They never communicated them to strangers; nor even
to the greater part of their own members. They refused to produce them when
required by courts of justice; and by a strange solecism in policy, the civil
power in different countries authorized or connived at the establishment of an
order of men, whose constitution and laws were concealed with a solicitude
which alone was a good reason for excluding them. During the prosecutions
lately carried on against them in Portugal and France, the Jesuits have been so
inconsiderate as to produce the mysterious volumes of their institute. By the
aid of these authentic records, the principles of their government may be
delineated, and the sources of their power investigated with a degree of
certainty and precision, which, previous to that event, it was impossible to
attain. But as I have pointed out the dangerous tendency of the constitution
and spirit of the order with the freedom becoming an historian, the candor and
impartiality no less requisite in that character call on me to add one
observation, that no class of regular clergy in the Romish church has been more
eminent for decency and even purity of manners, than the major part of the
order of Jesuits. The maxims of an intriguing, ambitious, interested policy,
might influence those who governed the society, and might even corrupt the
heart, and pervert the conduct of some individuals, while the greater number,
engaged in literary pursuits, or employed in the functions of religion, was
left to the guidance of those common principles which restrain men from vice,
and excite them to what is becoming and laudable. The causes which occasioned
the ruin of this mighty body, as well as the circumstances and effects with
which it has been attended in the different countries of Europe, though objects
extremely worthy the attention of every intelligent observer of human affairs,
do not fall within the period of this history.
1541.
THE DIET OF RATISBON
No
sooner had Charles reestablished order in the Low-Countries, than he was
obliged to turn his attention to the affairs in Germany.
The
protestants pressed him earnestly to appoint that conference between a select
number of the divines of each party, which had been stipulated in the
convention at Frankfort. The pope considered such an attempt to examine into
the points in dispute, or to decide concerning them, as derogatory to his right
of being the supreme judge in controversy; and being convinced that such a
conference would either be ineffectual by determining nothing, or prove
dangerous by determining too much, he employed every art to prevent it. The
emperor, however, finding it more for his interest to soothe the Germans than
to gratify Paul, paid little regard to his remonstrances. In a diet held at Haguenaw [June 25], matters were ripened for the
conference. In another diet assembled at Worms [Dec. 6], the conference was
begun, Melanchthon on the one side and Eckius on the
other sustaining the principal part in the dispute; but after they had made
some progress, though without concluding anything, it was suspended by the
emperor’s command, that it might be renewed with greater solemnity in his own
presence, in a diet summoned to meet at Ratisbon [1541]. This assembly was
opened with great pomp, and with a general expectation that its proceedings
would be vigorous and decisive.
By
the consent of both parties, the emperor was entrusted with the power or
nominating the persons who should manage the conference, which it was agreed
should be conducted not in the form of a public disputation, but as a friendly
scrutiny or examination into the articles which had given rise to the present
controversies. He appointed Eckius, Gropper, and Pflug, on the part of the catholics;
Melanchthon, Bucer, and Pistorius, on that of the
protestants; all men of distinguished reputation among their own adherents,
and, except Eckius, all eminent for moderation, as
well as desirous of peace.
As
they were about to begin their consultations, the emperor put into their hands
a book, composed, as he said, by a learned divine in the Low-Countries, with
such extraordinary perspicuity and temper, as, in his opinion, might go far to
unite and comprehend the two contending parties. Gropper a canon of Cologne,
whom he had named among the managers of the conference, a man of address as
well as of erudition, was afterwards suspected of being the author of this
short treatise. It contained positions with regard to twenty-two of the chief
articles in theology, which included most of the questions then agitated in the
controversy between the Lutherans and the church of Rome.
By
ranging his sentiments in a natural order, and expressing them with great
simplicity, by employing often the very words of scripture, or of the primitive
fathers; by softening the rigor of some opinions, and explaining away what was
absurd in others; by concessions, sometimes on one side, and sometimes on the
other; and especially by banishing as much as possible scholastic phrases,
those words and terms of arts in controversy, which serve as badges of
distinction to different sects, and for which theologians often contend more
fiercely than for opinions themselves; he at last framed his work in such a
manner, as promised fairer than anything that had hitherto been attempted to
compose and to terminate religious dissensions.
But
the attention of the age was turned, with such acute observation, towards
theological controversies, that it was not easy to impose on it by any gloss,
how artful or specious soever. The length and eagerness of the dispute had
separated the contending parties so completely, and had set their minds at such
variance, that they were not to be reconciled by partial concessions.
All
the zealous catholics, particularly the ecclesiastics
who had a seat in the diet, joined in condemning Gropper’s treatise as too
favorable to the Lutheran opinion, the poison of which heresy it conveyed, as
they pretended, with greater danger, because it was in some degree disguised.
The rigid protestants, especially Luther himself, and his patron the elector of
Saxony, were for rejecting it as an impious compound of error and truth,
craftily prepared that it might impose on the weak, the timid, and the
unthinking. But the divines, to whom the examination of it was committed,
entered upon that business with greater deliberation and temper. As it was more
easy in itself, as well as more consistent with the dignity of the church, to
make concessions, and even alterations with regard to speculative opinions, the
discussion whereof is confined chiefly to schools, and which present nothing to
the people that either strikes their imagination or affects their senses, they
came to an accommodation about these without much labor, and even defined the
great article concerning justification to their mutual satisfaction.
But,
when they proceeded to points of jurisdiction, where the interest and authority
of the Roman see were concerned, or to the rites and forms of external worship,
where every change that could be made must be public, and draw the observation
of the people, there the catholics were altogether
intractable; nor could the church either with safety or with honor abolish its
ancient institutions. All the articles relative to the power of the pope, the
authority of councils, the administration of the sacraments, the worship of
saints, and many other particulars, did not, in their nature, admit of any
temperament; so that after laboring long to bring about an accommodation with
respect to these, the emperor found all his endeavors ineffectual. Being
impatient, however, to close the diet, he at last prevailed on a majority of
the members to approve of the following recess [July 8]; “That the articles
concerning which the divines had agreed in the conference, should be held as
points decided, and be observed inviolably by all; that the other articles,
about which they had differed, should be referred to the determination of a general
council, or if that could not be obtained, to a national synod of Germany; and
if it should prove impracticable, likewise, to assemble a synod, that a general
diet of the empire should be called within eighteen months, in order to give
some final judgment upon the whole controversy; that the emperor should use all
his interest and authority with the pope, to procure the meeting either of a
general council or synod; that, in the meantime, no innovations should be
attempted, no endeavors should be employed to gain proselytes; and neither the
revenues of the church, nor the rights of monasteries, should be invaded”.
All
the proceedings of this diet, as well as the recess in which they terminated,
gave great offence to the pope. The power which the Germans had assumed of
appointing their own divines to examine and determine matters of controversy,
he considered as a very dangerous invasion of his rights; the renewing of their
ancient proposal concerning a national synod, which had been so often rejected by
him and his predecessors, appeared extremely undutiful; but the bare mention of
allowing a diet, composed chiefly of laymen, to pass judgment with respect to
articles of faith, was deemed no less criminal and profane than the worst of
those heresies which they seemed zealous to suppress. On the other hand, the
protestants were no less dissatisfied with a recess, that considerably abridged
the liberty which they enjoyed at that time. As they murmured loudly against
it, Charles, unwilling to leave any seeds of discontent in the empire, granted
them a private declaration in the most ample terms, exempting them from
whatever they thought oppressive or injurious in the recess, and ascertaining
to them the full possession of all the privileges which they had ever enjoyed.
Extraordinary
as these concessions may appear, the situation of the emperor’s affairs at this
juncture made it necessary for him to grant them. He foresaw a rupture with
France to be not only unavoidable, but near at hand, and durst not give any
such cause of disgust or fear to the protestants, as might force them, in self-defence, to court the protection of the French king,
from whom, at present, they were much alienated. The rapid progress of the
Turks in Hungary was a more powerful and urgent motive to that moderation which
Charles discovered. A great revolution had happened in that kingdom...
STATE
OF AFFAIRS IN HUNGARY
John Zapol Scepus having chosen,
as has been related, rather to possess a tributary kingdom, than to renounce
the royal dignity to which he had been accustomed, had, by the assistance of
his mighty protector Solyman, wrested from Ferdinand a great part of the
country, and left him only the precarious possession of the rest.
But
being a prince of pacific qualities, the frequent attempts of Ferdinand, or of
his partisans among the Hungarians, to recover what they had lost, greatly
disquieted him; and the necessity on these occasions, of calling in the Turks,
whom he considered and felt to be his masters rather than auxiliaries, was
hardly less mortifying. In order, therefore, to avoid these distresses, as well
as to secure quiet and leisure for cultivating the arts and enjoying amusements
in which he delighted, he secretly came to an agreement with his competitor [A.
D. 1535], on this condition; That Ferdinand should acknowledge him as king of
Hungary, and leave him during life, the unmolested possession of that part of
the kingdom now in his power; but that, upon his demise, the sole right of the
whole should devolve upon Ferdinand.
As
John had never been married, and was then far advanced in life, the terms of
the contract seemed very favorable to Ferdinand. But, soon after, some of the
Hungarian nobles, solicitous to prevent a foreigner from ascending their
throne, prevailed on John to put an end to a long celibacy, by marrying
Isabella, the daughter of Sigismund, king of Poland. John had the satisfaction,
before his death, which happened within less than a year after his marriage, to
see a son born to inherit his kingdom. To him, without regarding his treaty
with Ferdinand, which he considered, no doubt, as void, upon an event not
foreseen when it was concluded, he bequeathed his crown; appointing the queen
and George Martinuzzi, bishop of Waradin,
guardians of his son, and regents of the kingdom. The greater part of the
Hungarians immediately acknowledged the young prince as king, to whom, in
memory of the founder of their monarchy, they gave the name of Stephen.
Ferdinand,
though extremely disconcerted by this unexpected event, resolved not to abandon
the kingdom which he flattered himself with having acquired by his compact with
John. He sent ambassadors to the queen to claim possession, and to offer the
province of Transylvania as a settlement for her son, preparing at the same
time to assert his right by force of arms. But John had committed the care of
his son to persons, who had too much spirit to give up the crown tamely, and
who possessed abilities sufficient to defend it. The queen, to all the address
peculiar to her own sex, added a masculine courage, ambition, and magnanimity. Martinuzzi, who had raised himself from the lowest rank in
life to his present dignity, was one of those extraordinary men, who, by the
extent as well as variety of their talents, are fitted to act a superior part
in bustling and factious times. In discharging the functions of his
ecclesiastical office, he put on the semblance of an humble and austere
sanctity. In civil transactions, he discovered industry, dexterity, and
boldness. During war, he laid aside the cassock, and appeared on horseback with
his scimitar and buckler, as active, as ostentatious, and as gallant as any of
his countrymen. Amidst all these different and contradictory forms which he
could assume, an insatiable desire of dominion and authority was conspicuous.
From such persons it was obvious what answer Ferdinand had to expect. He soon
perceived that he must depend on arms alone for recovering Hungary.
Having
levied for this purpose a considerable body of Germans, whom his partisans
among the Hungarians joined with their vassals, he ordered them to march into
that part of the kingdom which adhered to Stephen. Martinuzzi,
unable to make head against such a powerful army in the field, satisfied
himself with holding out the towns, all of which, especially Buda, the place of
greatest consequence, he provided with everything necessary for defence; and in the meantime he sent ambassadors to
Solyman, beseeching him to extend towards the son the same imperial protection
which had so long maintained the father on his throne. The sultan, though
Ferdinand used his utmost endeavors to thwart this negotiation, and even
offered to accept of the Hungarian crown on the same ignominious condition, of
paying tribute to the Ottoman Porte, by which John had held it, saw such
prospects of advantage from espousing the interest of the young king, that he
instantly promised him his protection; and commanding one army to advance
forthwith towards Hungary, he himself followed with another. Meanwhile the Germans,
hoping to terminate the war by the reduction of a city in which the king and
his mother were shut up, had formed the siege of Buda. Martinuzzi,
having drawn thither the strength of the Hungarian nobility, defended the town
with such courage and skill, as allowed the Turkish forces time to come up to
its relief. They instantly attacked the Germans, weakened by fatigue, diseases,
and desertion, and defeated them with great slaughter.
Solyman
soon after joined his victorious troops, and being weary of so many expensive
expeditions undertaken in defence of dominions which
were not his own, or being unable to resist this alluring opportunity of
seizing a kingdom, while possessed by an infant, under the guardianship of a
woman and a priest, he allowed interested considerations to triumph with too
much facility over the principles of honor and the sentiments of humanity. What
he planned ungenerously, he executed by fraud. Having prevailed on the queen to
send her son, whom he pretended to be desirous of seeing, into his camp, and
having, at the same time, invited the chief of the nobility to an entertainment
there, while they, suspecting no treachery, gave themselves up to the mirth and
jollity of the feast, a select band of troops by the sultan’s orders seized one
of the gates of Buda. Being thus master of the capital, of the king’s person,
and of the leading men among the nobles, he gave orders to conduct the queen,
together with her son, to Transylvania, which province he allotted to them, and
appointing a pasha to preside in Buda with a large body of soldiers, annexed
Hungary to the Ottoman empire. The tears and complaints of the unhappy queen
had no influence to change his purpose, nor could Martinuzzi either resist his absolute and uncontrollable command, or prevail on him to
recall it.
Before
the account of this violent usurpation reached Ferdinand, he was so unlucky as
to have despatched other ambassadors to Solyman with
a fresh representation of his right to the crown of Hungary, as well as a
renewal of his former overture to hold the kingdom of the Ottoman Porte, and to
pay for it an annual tribute. This ill-timed proposal was rejected with scorn.
The sultan, elated with success, and thinking that he might prescribe what
terms he pleased to a prince who voluntarily proffered conditions so unbecoming
his own dignity, declared that he would not suspend the operations of war,
unless Ferdinand instantly evacuated all the towns which he still held in
Hungary, and consented to the imposition of a tribute upon Austria, in order to
reimburse the sums which his presumptuous invasion of Hungary had obliged the
Ottoman Porte to expend in defence of that kingdom.
In
this state were the affairs of Hungary. As the unfortunate events there had
either happened before the dissolution of the diet at Ratisbon, or were dreaded
at that time, Charles saw the danger of irritating and inflaming the minds of
the Germans, while a formidable enemy was ready to break into the empire; and
perceived that he could not expect any vigorous assistance either towards the
recovery of Hungary, or the defence of the Austrian
frontier, unless he courted and satisfied the protestants. By the concessions
which have been mentioned, he gained this point, and such liberal supplies,
both of men and money, were voted for carrying on the war against the Turks, as
left him under little anxiety about the security of Germany during the next
campaign.
Immediately
upon the conclusion of the diet, the emperor set out for Italy. As he passed
through Lucca, he had a short interview with the pope; but nothing could be
concluded concerning the proper method of composing the religious disputes in
Germany, between two princes, whose views and interests with regard to that
matter were at this juncture so opposite. The pope’s endeavours to remove the causes of discord between Charles and Francis, and to extinguish
those mutual animosities which threatened to break out suddenly into open
hostility, were not more successful.
The
emperor’s thoughts were bent so entirely, at that time, on the great enterprise
which he had concerted against Algiers, that he listened with little attention
to the pope’s schemes or overtures, and hastened to join his army and fleet.
THE
DISASTER OF THE EXPEDITION AGAINST ALGIERS
Algiers
still continued in that state of dependence on the Turkish empire to which
Barbarossa had subjected it. Ever since he, as captain Basha, commanded the
Ottoman fleet, Algiers had been governed by Hascen-Aga,
a renegado eunuch, who, by passing through every station in the corsair’s
service, had acquired such experience in war, that he was well fitted for a
station which required a man of tried and daring courage.
Hascen, in order to show how well he
deserved that dignity, carried on his piratical depredations against the
Christian states with amazing activity, and outdid, if possible, Barbarossa
himself in boldness and cruelty. The commerce of the Mediterranean was greatly
interrupted by his cruisers, and such frequent alarms given to the coast of
Spain, that there was a necessity of erecting watch-towers at proper distances,
and of keeping guards constantly on foot, in order to descry the approach of
his squadrons, and to protect the inhabitants from their descents.
Of
this the emperor had received repeated and clamorous complaints from his
subjects, who represented it as an enterprise corresponding to his power, and
becoming his humanity, to reduce Algiers, which, since the conquest of Tunis,
was the common receptacle of all the free-booters; and to exterminate that
lawless race, the implacable enemies of the Christian name. Moved partly by
their entreaties, and partly allured by the hope of adding to the glory which
he had acquired by his last expedition into Africa, Charles, before he left
Madrid in his way to the Low-Countries, had issued orders both in Spain and
Italy, to prepare a fleet and army for this purpose.
No
change in circumstances, since that time, could divert him from this resolution,
or prevail on him to turn his arms towards Hungary; though the success of the
Turks in that country seemed more immediately to require his presence there;
though many of his most faithful adherents in Germany urged that the defence of the empire ought to be his first and peculiar
care; though such as bore him no good-will ridiculed his preposterous conduct
in flying from an enemy almost at hand, that he might go in quest of a remote
and more ignoble foe. But to attack the sultan in Hungary, how splendid soever
that measure might appear, was an undertaking which exceeded his power, and was
not consistent with his interest. To draw troops out of Spain or Italy, to
march them into a country so distant as Hungary, to provide the vast apparatus
necessary for transporting thither the artillery, ammunition, and baggage of a
regular army, and to push the war in that quarter, where there was little
prospect of bringing it to an issue during several campaigns, were undertakings
so expensive and unwieldy as did not correspond with the low condition of the
emperor’s treasury. While his principal force was thus employed, his dominions
in Italy and the Low-Countries must have lain open to the French king, who
would not have allowed such a favorable opportunity of attacking them to go
unimproved. Whereas the African expedition, the preparations for which were
already finished, and almost the whole expense of it defrayed, would depend
upon a single effort; and besides the security and satisfaction which the
success of it must give his subjects, would detain him during so short a space,
that Francis could hardly take advantage of his absence, to invade his
dominions in Europe.
On
all these accounts, Charles adhered to his first plan, and with such determined
obstinacy, that he paid no regard to the pope, who advised, or to Andrew Doria,
who conjured him not to expose his whole armament to almost unavoidable
destruction, by venturing to approach the dangerous coast of Algiers at such an
advanced season of the year, and when the autumnal winds were so violent.
Having embarked on board Doria’s galleys at Porto
Venere in the Genoese territories, he soon found that this experienced sailor
had not judged wrong concerning the element with which he was so well
acquainted; for such a storm arose, that it was with the utmost difficulty and
danger he reached Sardinia, the place of general rendezvous. But as his courage
was undaunted, and his temper often inflexible, neither the renewed
remonstrances of the pope and Doria, nor the danger to which he had already
been exposed by disregarding their advice had any other effect than to confirm
him in his fatal resolution. The force, indeed, which he had collected, was
such as might have inspired a prince less adventurous, and less confident in
his own schemes, with the most sanguine hopes of success. It consisted of
twenty thousand foot, and two thousand horse, Spaniards, Italians, and Germans,
mostly veterans, together with three thousand volunteers, the flower of the
Spanish and Italian nobility, fond of paying court to the emperor by attending
him in his favorite expedition, and eager to share in the glory which they
believed he was going to reap; to these were added a thousand soldiers sent
from Malta by the order of St. John, led by a hundred of its most gallant
knights.
The
voyage, from Majorca to the African coast, was not less tedious, or full of
hazard, than that which he had just finished. When he approached the land, the
roll of the sea, and vehemence of the winds, would not permit the troops to
disembark. But at last the emperor, seizing a favorable opportunity, landed
them without opposition, not far from Algiers, and immediately advanced towards
the town. To oppose this mighty army, Hascen had only
eight hundred Turks, and five thousand Moors, partly natives of Africa, and
partly refugees from Granada. He returned, however, a fierce and haughty
answer, when summoned to surrender. But with such a handful of soldiers,
neither his desperate courage, nor consummate skill in war, could have long
resisted forces superior to those which had defeated Barbarossa at the head of
sixty thousand men, and which had reduced Tunis, in spite of all his endeavors
to save it.
But
how far soever the emperor might think himself beyond the reach of any danger
from the enemy, he was suddenly exposed to a more dreadful calamity, and one
against which human prudence, and human efforts availed nothing. On the second
day after his landing, and before he had time for anything but to disperse some
light armed Arabs who molested his troops on their march, the clouds began to
gather, and the heavens to appear with a fierce and threatening aspect. Towards
evening, rain began to fall, accompanied with violent wind; and the rage of the
tempest increasing, during the night, the soldiers, who had brought nothing
ashore but their arms, remained exposed to all its fury, without tents, or
shelter, or cover of any kind. The ground was soon so wet that they could not
lie down on it; their camp being in a low situation, was overflowed with water,
and they sunk at every step to the ankles in mud; while the wind blew with such
impetuosity, that, to prevent their falling, they were obliged to thrust their
spears into the ground, and to support themselves by taking hold of them. Hascen was too vigilant an officer to allow an enemy in
such distress to remain unmolested. About the dawn of morning, he sallied out
with soldiers, who having been screened from the storm under their own roofs,
were fresh and vigorous. A body of Italians, who were stationed nearest the
city, dispirited and benumbed with cold, fled at the approach of the Turks. The
troops at the post behind them discovered greater courage; but as the rain had
extinguished their matches, and wetted their powder, their muskets were
useless, and having scarcely strength to handle their other arms, they were
soon thrown into confusion. Almost the whole army, with the emperor himself in
person, was obliged to advance, before the enemy could be repulsed, who, after
spreading such general consternation, and killing a considerable number of men,
retired at last in good order.
But
all feeling or remembrance of this loss and danger were quickly obliterated by
a more dreadful as well as affecting spectacle. It was now broad day; the hurricane
had abated nothing of its violence, and the sea appeared agitated with all the
rage of which that destructive element is capable; all the ships, on which
alone the whole army knew that their safety and subsistence depended, were seen
driven from their anchors, some dashing against each other some beat to pieces
on the rocks, many forced ashore, and not a few sinking in the waves. In less
than an hour, fifteen ships of war, and a hundred and forty transports with
eight thousand men perished; and such of the unhappy crews as escaped the fury
of the sea, were murdered without mercy by the Arabs, as soon as they reached
land. The emperor stood in silent anguish and astonishment beholding this fatal
event, which at once blasted all his hopes of success, and buried in the depths
the vast stores which he had provided, as well for annoying the enemy, as for
subsisting his own troops. He had it not in his power to afford them any other
assistance or relief than by sending some troops to drive away the Arabs, and
thus delivering a few who were so fortunate as to get ashore from the cruel
fate which their companions had met with. At last the wind began to fall, and
to give some hopes that as many ships might escape as would be sufficient to
save the army from perishing by famine, and transport them back to Europe. But
these were only hopes; the approach of evening covered the sea with darkness;
and it being impossible for the officers on board the ships which had outlived
the storm to send any intelligence to their companions who were ashore, they
remained during the night in all the anguish of suspense and uncertainty. Next
day, a boat despatched by Doria made shift to reach
land, with information, that having weathered out the storm, to which, during
fifty years knowledge of the sea, he had never seen any equal in fierceness and
horror, he had found it necessary to bear away with his shattered ships to Cape Metafuz. He advised the emperor, as the face of the
sky was still lowering and tempestuous, to march with all speed to that place,
where the troops could reembark with greater ease.
Whatever
comfort this intelligence afforded Charles, from being assured that part of his
fleet had escaped, was balanced by the new cares and perplexity in which it
involved him with regard to his army. Metafuz was at
least three days’ march from his present camp; all the provisions which he had
brought ashore at his first landing were now consumed; his soldiers, worn out
with fatigue, were hardly able for such a march, even in a friendly country,
and being dispirited by a succession of hardships which victory itself would
scarcely have rendered tolerable, they were in no condition to undergo new
toils. But the situation of the army was such as allowed not one moment for
deliberation, nor left it the least doubtful what to choose. They were ordered
instantly to march, the wounded, the sick, and the feeble being placed in the centre; such as seemed most vigorous were stationed in the
front and rear. Then the sad effects of what they had suffered began to appear
more manifestly than ever, and new calamities were added to all those which
they had already endured. Some could hardly bear the weight of their arms;
others, spent with the toil of forcing their way through deep and almost
impassable roads, sunk down and died; many perished by famine, as the whole
army subsisted chiefly on roots and berries, or the flesh of horses, killed by
the emperor’s order, and distributed among the several battalions; many were
drowned in brooks, which were swollen so much by the excessive rains, that in
passing them they waded up to the chin; not a few were killed by the enemy, who
during the greater part of their retreat, alarmed, harassed, and annoyed them
night and day. At last they arrived at Metafuz: and the
weather being now so calm as to restore their communication with the fleet,
they were supplied with plenty of provisions, and cheered with the prospect of
safety.
During
this dreadful series of calamities, the emperor discovered great qualities,
many of which a long continued flow of prosperity had scarcely afforded him an
opportunity of displaying. He appeared conspicuous for firmness and constancy
of spirit, for magnanimity, fortitude, humanity, and compassion. He endured as
great hardships as the meanest soldier; he exposed his own person wherever
danger threatened; he encouraged the desponding, visited the sick and wounded,
and animated all by his words and example. When the army embarked, he was among
the last who left the shore, although a body of Arabs hovered at no great
distance, ready to fall on the rear. By these virtues, Charles atoned, in some
degree, for his obstinacy and presumption in undertaking an expedition so fatal
to his subjects.
The
calamities which attended this unfortunate enterprise did not end here; for no
sooner were the forces got on board, than a new storm arising, though less
furious than the former, scattered the fleet, and obliged them, separately, to
make towards such ports in Spain or Italy as they could first reach; thus
spreading the account of their disasters, with all the circumstances of
aggravation and horror, which their imagination, still under the influence of
fear, suggested. The emperor himself, after escaping great dangers, and being
forced into the port of Bugia in Africa [Dec. 21], where he was obliged by
contrary winds to remain several weeks, arrived at last in Spain, in a
condition very different from that in which he had returned from his former
expedition against the infidels.
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