THE REIGN OF THE EMPEROR CHARLES V
BOOK
IX.
DEATH
OF FRANCIS I
THE
emperor’s dread of the hostile intentions of the pope and French king did not
proceed from any imaginary or ill-grounded suspicion. Paul had already given
the strongest proofs both of his jealousy and enmity.
Charles
could not hope that Francis, after a rivalship of so
long continuance, would behold the great advantages which he had gained over
the confederate protestants, without feeling his ancient emulation revive. He
was not deceived in this conjecture. Francis had observed the rapid progress of
his arms with deep concern, and though hitherto prevented by circumstances
which have been mentioned, from interposing in order to check them, he was now
convinced that, if he did not make some extraordinary and timely effort,
Charles must acquire such a degree of power as would enable him to give law to
the rest of Europe. This apprehension, which did not take its rise from the
jealousy of rivalship alone, but was entertained by
the wisest politicians of the age, suggested various expedients which might
serve to retard the course of the emperor's victories, and to form by degrees
such a combination against him as might put a stop to his dangerous career.
With
this view, Francis instructed his emissaries in Germany to employ all their
address in order to revive the courage of the confederates, and to prevent them
from submitting to the emperor. He made liberal offers of his assistance to the
elector and landgrave, whom he knew to be the most zealous as well as the most
powerful of the whole body; he used every argument and proposed every advantage
which could either confirm their dread of the emperor's designs, or determine
them not to imitate the inconsiderate credulity of their associates, in giving
up their religion and liberties to his disposal. While he took this step
towards continuing the civil war which raged in Germany, he endeavored likewise
to stir up foreign enemies against the emperor. He solicited Solyman to seize
this favorable opportunity of invading Hungary, which had been drained of all
the troops necessary for its defence, in order to
form the army against the confederates of Smalkalde.
He exhorted the pope to repair, by a vigorous and seasonable effort, the error
of which he had been guilty in contributing to raise the emperor to such a
formidable height of power. Finding Paul, both from the consciousness of his
own mistake, and his dread of its consequences, abundantly disposed to listen
to what he suggested, he availed himself of this favorable disposition which
the pontiff began to discover, as an argument to gain the Venetians. He
endeavored to convince them that nothing could save Italy, and even Europe,
from oppression and servitude, but their joining with the pope and him, in
giving the first beginning to a general confederacy, in order to humble that
ambitious potentate, whom they had all equal reason to dread.
Having
set on foot these negotiations, in the southern courts, he turned his attention
next towards those in the north of Europe. As the king of Denmark had
particular reasons to be offended with the emperor, Francis imagined that the
object of the league which he had projected would be highly acceptable to him: and
lest considerations of caution or prudence would restrain him from joining in
it, he attempted to overcome these, by offering him the young queen of Scots in
marriage to his son. As the ministers who governed England in the name of
Edward VI had openly declared themselves converts to the opinions of the
reformers, as soon as it became safe upon Henry's death to lay aside that
disguise which his intolerant bigotry had forced them to assume, Francis
flattered himself that their zeal would not allow them to remain inactive
spectators of the overthrow and destruction of those who professed the same
faith with themselves. He hoped, that notwithstanding the struggles of faction
incident to a minority, and the prospect of an approaching rupture with the
Scots, he might prevail on them likewise to take part in the common cause.
While
Francis employed such a variety of expedients, and exerted himself with such
extraordinary activity, to rouse the different states of Europe against his
rival, he did not neglect what depended on himself alone. He levied troops in
all parts of his dominions; he collected military stores; he contracted with
the Swiss cantons for a considerable body of men; he put his finances in
admirable order; he remitted considerable sums to the elector and landgrave;
and took all the other steps necessary towards commencing hostilities on the
shortest warning, and with the greatest vigour.
Operations
so complicated, and which required the putting so many instruments in motion,
did not escape the emperor's observation. He was early informed of Francis’s
intrigues in the several courts of Europe, as well as of his domestic
preparations; and sensible how fatal an interruption a foreign war would prove
to his designs in Germany, he trembled at the prospect of that event. The
danger, however, appeared to him as unavoidable as it was great. He knew the
insatiable and well directed ambition of Solyman, and that he always chose the
season for beginning his military enterprises with prudence equal to the valor
with which he conducted them. The pope, as he had good reason to believe,
wanted not pretexts to justify a rupture, nor inclination to begin hostilities.
He had already made some discovery of his sentiments, by expressing a joy
altogether unbecoming the head of the church, upon receiving an account of the
advantage which the elector of Saxony had gained over Albert of Brandenburg;
and as he was now secure of finding, in the French king, an ally of sufficient
power to support him, he was at no pains to conceal the violence and extent of
his enmity. The Venetians, Charles was well assured, had long observed the
growth of his power with jealousy, which, added to the solicitations and
promises of France, might at last quicken their slow counsels, and overcome
their natural caution. The Danes and English, it was evident, had both peculiar
reason to be disgusted, as well as strong motives to act against him. But above
all, he dreaded the active emulation of Francis himself, whom he considered as
the soul and mover of any confederacy that could be formed against him; and as
that monarch had afforded protection to Verrina, who
sailed directly to Marseilles upon the miscarriage of Fiesco’s conspiracy, Charles expected every moment to see the commencement of those hostile
operations in Italy, of which he conceived the insurrection in Genoa to have
been only the prelude.
But
while he remained in this state of suspense and solicitude, there was one
circumstance which afforded him some prospect of avoiding the danger. The
French king’s health began to decline. A disease, which was the effect of his
intemperance and inconsiderate pursuit of pleasure, preyed gradually on his
constitution. The preparations for war, as well as the negotiations in the
different courts, began to languish, together with the monarch who gave spirit
to both. The Genoese, during that interval [March] reduced Montobbio,
took Jerome Fiesco prisoner, and having put him to
death, together with his chief adherents, extinguished all remains of the
conspiracy. Several of the Imperial cities in Germany, despairing of timely
assistance from France, submitted to the emperor. Even the landgrave seemed
disposed to abandon the elector, and to bring matters to a speedy
accommodation, on such terms as he could obtain. In the meantime, Charles
waited with impatience the issue of a distemper, which was to decide whether he
must relinquish all other schemes, in order to prepare for resisting a
combination of the greater part of Europe against him, or whether he might
proceed to invade Saxony, without interruption or fear of danger.
The
good fortune, so remarkably propitious to his family, that some historians have
called it the Star of the House of Austria, did not desert him on this
occasion. Francis died at Rambouillet, on the last
day of March, in the fifty-third year of his age, and the thirty-third of his
reign. During twenty-eight years of that time, an avowed rivalship subsisted between him and the emperor, which involved not only their own
dominions, but the greater part of Europe, in wars, which were prosecuted with
more violent animosity, and drawn out to a greater length, than had been known
in any former period. Many circumstances contributed to this. Their animosity
was founded in opposition of interest, heightened by personal emulation, and
exasperated not only by mutual injuries, but by reciprocal insults. At the same
time, whatever advantage one seemed to possess towards gaining the ascendant,
was wonderfully balanced by some favorable circumstance peculiar to the other.
The
emperor's dominions were of greater extent, the French king's lay more compact;
Francis governed his kingdom with absolute power; that of Charles was limited,
but he supplied the want of authority by address : the troops of the former
were more impetuous and enterprising; those of the latter better disciplined,
and more patient of fatigue. The talents and abilities of the two monarchs were
as different as the advantages which they possessed, and contributed no less to
prolong the contest between them. Francis took his resolutions suddenly,
prosecuted them at first with warmth, and pushed them into execution with a
most adventurous courage; but being destitute of the perseverance necessary to
surmount difficulties, he often abandoned his designs, or relaxed the vigor of
pursuit, from impatience, and sometimes from levity. Charles deliberated long,
and determined with coolness; but having once fixed his plan, he adhered to it
with inflexible obstinacy, and neither danger nor discouragement could turn him
aside from the execution of it. The success of their enterprises was suitable
to the diversity of their characters, and was uniformly influenced by it.
Francis, by his impetuous activity, often disconcerted the emperor’s best laid
schemes; Charles, by a more calm but steady prosecution of his designs, checked
the rapidity of his rival’s career, and baffled or repulsed his most vigorous
efforts. The former, at the opening of a war or of a campaign broke in upon his
enemy with the violence of a torrent, and carried all before him; the latter,
waiting until he saw the force of his rival begin to abate, recovered in the
end not only all that he had lost, but made new acquisitions. Few of the French
monarch's attempts towards conquest, whatever promising aspect they might wear
at first, were conducted to a happy issue; many of the emperor’s enterprises,
even after they appeared desperate and impracticable, terminated in the most
prosperous manner. Francis was dazzled with the splendor of an undertaking;
Charles was allured by the prospect of its turning to his advantage.
The
degree, however, of their comparative merit and reputation has not been fixed
either by a strict scrutiny into their abilities for government, or by an
impartial consideration of the greatness and success of their undertakings; and
Francis is one of those monarchs who occupies a higher rank in the temple of
Fame, than either his talents or performances entitle him to hold. This
pre-eminence he owed to many different circumstances.
The
superiority which Charles acquired by the victory of Pavia, and which from that
period he preserved through the remainder of his reign, was so manifest, that
Francis’s struggle against his exorbitant and growing dominion was viewed by
most of the other powers, not only with the partiality which naturally arises
for those who gallantly maintain an unequal contest, but with the favor due to
one who was resisting a common enemy, and endeavoring to set bounds to a
monarch equally formidable to them all. The characters of princes, too,
especially among their contemporaries, depend not only upon their talents for
government, but upon their qualities as men. Francis, notwithstanding the many
errors conspicuous in his foreign policy and domestic administration, was
nevertheless humane, beneficent, and generous. He possessed dignity without
pride; affability free from meanness; and courtesy exempt from deceit. All who
had access to him, and no man of merit was ever denied that privilege,
respected and loved him. Captivated with his personal qualities, his subjects
forgot his defects as a monarch, and admiring him as the most accomplished and
amiable gentleman in his dominions, they hardly murmured at acts of
maladministration, which, in a prince of less engaging dispositions, would have
been deemed unpardonable.
This
admiration, however, must have been temporary only, and would have died away,
with the courtiers who bestowed it; the illusion arising from his private
virtues must have ceased, and posterity would have judged of his public conduct
with its usual impartiality; but another circumstance prevented this, and his
name hath been transmitted to posterity with increasing reputation. Science and
the arts had, at that time, made little progress in France. They were just
beginning to advance beyond the limits of Italy, where they had revived, and
which had hitherto been their only seat. Francis took them immediately under
his protection, and vied with Leo himself, in the zeal and munificence with
which he encouraged them. He invited learned men to his court, he conversed
with them familiarly, he employed them in business, he raised them to offices
of dignity, and honored them with his confidence. That order of men, not more
prone to complain when denied the respect to which they conceive themselves
entitled, than apt to be pleased when treated with the distinction which they
consider as their due, thought they could not exceed in gratitude to such a
benefactor, and strained their invention, and employed all their ingenuity in
panegyric. Succeeding authors, warmed with their descriptions of Francis’s
bounty, adopted their encomiums, and even added to them. The appellation of
Father of Letters bestowed upon Francis, hath rendered his memory sacred among
historians and they seem to has e regarded it as a sort of impiety to uncover
his infirmities, or to point out his defects. Thus Francis, notwithstanding his
inferior abilities, and want of success, hath more than equaled the fame of
Charles. The good qualities which he possessed as a man, have entitled him to
greater admiration and praise than have been bestowed upon the extensive genius
and fortunate arts of a more capable, but less amiable rival.
By
his death a considerable change was made in the state of Europe. Charles, grown
old in the arts of government and command, had now to contend only with younger
monarchs, who could not be regarded as worthy to enter the lists with him, who
had stood so many encounters with Henry VIII and Francis I, and come off with
honor in all those different struggles. By this event, he was eased of all his
disquietude, and was happy to find that he might begin with safety those
operations against the elector of Saxony, which he had hitherto been obliged to
suspend. He knew the abilities of Henry II, who had just mounted the throne of
France, to be greatly inferior to those of his father, and foresaw that he
would be so much occupied for some time in displacing the late king's
ministers, whom he hated, and in gratifying the ambitious demands of his own
favorites, that he had nothing to dread, either from his personal efforts, or
from any confederacy which this inexperienced prince could form.
But
as it was uncertain how long such an interval of security might continue,
Charles determined instantly to improve it: and as soon as he heard of
Francis’s demise, he began his march [April 13] from Egra on the borders of Bohemia. But the departure of the papal troops, together with
the retreat of the Flemings, had so much diminished his army, that sixteen
thousand men were all he could assemble.
With
this inconsiderable body he set out on an expedition, the event of which was to
decide what degree of authority he should possess from that period in Germany;
but as this little army consisted chiefly of the veteran Spanish and Italian,
bands, he did not, in trusting to them, commit much to the decision of most
sanguine hopes of success. The Elector had levied an army greatly superior in
number; but neither the experience and discipline of his troops, nor the
abilities of his officers, were to be compared with those of the emperor. The
elector, besides, had already been guilty of an error, which deprived him of
all the advantage which he might have derived from his superiority in number,
and was alone sufficient to have occasioned his ruin. Instead of keeping his
forces united, he detached one great body towards the frontiers of Bohemia, in
order to facilitate his junction with the malcontents of that kingdom, and
cantoned a considerable part of what remained in different places of Saxony,
where he expected the emperor would make the first impression, vainly imagining
that open towns, with small garrisons, might be rendered tenable against an
enemy.
The
emperor entered the southern frontier of Saxony, and attacked Altorl upon the Elster. The
impropriety of the measure which the elector had taken was immediately seen,
the troops posted in that town surrendering without resistance; and those in
all the other places between that and the Elbe, either imitated their example,
or fled as the Imperialists approached. Charles, that they might not recover
from the panic with which they seemed to be struck, advanced without losing a
moment.
The
elector, who had fixed his head quarters at Meissen,
continued in his wonted state of fluctuation and uncertainly. He even became
more undetermined, in proportion as the danger drew near, and called for prompt
and decisive resolutions. Sometimes he acted as if he had resolved to defend
the banks of the Elbe, and to hazard a battle with the enemy, as soon as the
detachments which he had called in were able to join him. At other times he
abandoned this as rash and perilous, seeming to adopt the more prudent counsels
of those who advised him to endeavor at protracting the war, and for that end
to retire under the fortifications of Wittenberg, where the Imperialists could
not attack him without manifest disadvantage, and where he might wait, in
safety, for the succors which he expected from Mecklenburg, Pomerania, and the
protestant cities on the Baltic. Without fixing upon either of these plans, he
broke down the bridge at Meissen, and marched along the east bank of the Elbe
to Muhlberg. There he deliberated anew, and, after
much hesitation, adopted one of those middle schemes, which are always
acceptable to feeble minds incapable of deciding. He left a detachment at Muhlberg to oppose the Imperialists, if they should attempt
to pass at that place, and advancing a few miles with his main body, encamped
there in expectation of the event, according to which lie proposed to regulate his
subsequent motions.
Charles,
meanwhile, pushing forward incessantly, arrived the evening of the twenty-third
of April on the banks of the Elbe, opposite to Muhlberg.
The river, at that place, was three hundred paces in breadth, above four feet
in depth, its current rapid, and the bank possessed by the Saxons was higher
than that which he occupied. Undismayed, however, by all these obstacles, he
called together his general officers, and, without asking their opinions,
communicated to them his intention of attempting next morning to force his
passage over the river, and to attack the enemy wherever he could come up with
them. They all expressed their astonishment at such a bold resolution and even
the duke of Alva, though naturally daring and impetuous, and Maurice of Saxony,
notwithstanding his impatience to crush his rival the elector, remonstrated
earnestly against it. But the emperor, confiding in his own judgment or good
fortune, paid no regard to their arguments, and gave the orders necessary for
executing his designs.
Early
in the morning a body of Spanish and Italian foot marched towards the river,
and began an incessant fire upon the enemy. The long heavy muskets used in that
age, did execution on the opposite bank, and many of the soldiers, hurried on
by martial ardor, in order to get nearer the enemy, rushed into the stream,
and, advancing breast high, fired with a more certain aim, and with greater
effect. Under cover of their fire, a bridge of boats was begun to be laid for
the infantry; and a peasant having undertaken to conduct the cavalry through
the river by a ford with which he was well acquainted, they also were put in
motion. The Saxons posted in Muhlberg endeavored to
obstruct these operations by a brisk fire from a battery which they had
erected, but as a thick fog covered all the low grounds upon the river, they
could not take aim with any certainty, and the Imperialists suffered very
little; at the same time the Saxons being much galled by the Spaniards and
Italians, they set on tire some boats which had been collected near the
village, and prepared to retire. The Imperialists perceiving this, ten Spanish
soldiers instantly strip themselves, and holding their swords with their teeth,
swam across the river, put to flight such of the Saxons as ventured to oppose
them, saved from the flames as many boats as were sufficient to complete their
own bridge, and by this spirited and successful action, encouraged their
companions no less than they intimidated the enemy.
By
this time the cavalry, each trooper having a foot soldier behind him, began to
enter the river, the light horse marching in the front, followed by the men at
arms, whom the emperor led in person, mounted on a Spanish horse, dressed in a
sumptuous habit, and carrying a javelin in his hand. Such a numerous body
struggling through a great river, in which, according to the directions of
their guide, they were obliged to make several turns, sometimes treading on a
firm bottom, sometimes swimming, presented to their companions, whom they left
behind, a spectacle equally magnificent and interesting. Their courage, at
last, surmounted every obstacle, no man betraying any symptom of fear, when the
emperor shared in the danger no less than the meanest soldier. The moment that
they reached the opposite side, Charles, without waiting the arrival of the
rest of the infantry, advanced towards the Saxons with the troops which had
passed along with him, who, flushed with their good fortune, and despising an
enemy who had neglected to oppose them, when it might have been done with such
advantage, made no account of their superior numbers, and marched on as to a
certain victory.
During
all these operations, which necessarily consumed much lime, the elector
remained inactive in his camp and from an infatuation which appears to be so
amazing, that the best informed historians impute it to the treacherous arts of
his generals, who deceived him by false intelligence, he would not believe that
the emperor had passed the river, or could be so near at hand. Being convinced,
at last, of his fatal mistake, by the concurring testimony of eye-witnesses, he
gave orders for retreating towards Wittenberg. But a German army, encumbered,
as usual, with baggage and artillery, could not be put suddenly in motion. They
had just begun to march when the light troops of the enemy came in view, and
the elector saw an engagement to be unavoidable. As he was no less bold in
action than irresolute in council, he made the disposition for battle with the
greatest presence of mind, and in the most proper manner, taking advantage of a
great forest to cover his wings, so as to prevent his being surrounded by the
enemy’s cavalry, which were far more numerous than his own. The emperor, likewise,
ranged his men in order as they came up, and riding along the ranks, exhorted
them with few but efficacious words to do their duty. It was with a very
different spirit that the two armies advanced to the charge.
As
the day, which had hitherto been dark and cloudy, happened to clear up at that
moment, this accidental circumstance made an impression on the different
parties corresponding to the tone of their minds; the Saxons, surprised and
disheartened, felt pain at being exposed fully to the view of the enemy; the
Imperialists, being now secure that the protestant forces could not escape from
them, rejoiced at the return of sunshine, as a certain presage of victory.
The
shock of battle would not have been long doubtful, if the personal courage which
the elector displayed, together with the activity which he exerted from the
moment that the approach of the enemy rendered an engagement certain, and cut
off all possibility of hesitation, had not revived in some degree the spirit of
his troops. They repulsed the Hungarian light-horse who began the attack, and
received with firmness the men at arms who next advanced to the charge; but as
these were the flower of the Imperial army, were commanded by experienced
officers, and fought under the emperor’s eye, the Saxons soon began to give
way, and the light troops rallying at the same time, and falling on their
flanks, the flight became general. A small body of chosen soldiers, among whom
the elector had fought in person, still continued to defend themselves, and
endeavored to save their master by retiring into the forest; but being
surrounded on every side, the elector wounded in the face, exhausted with
fatigue, and perceiving all resistance to be vain, surrendered himself a
prisoner.
He
was conducted immediately towards the emperor, whom he found just returned from
the pursuit, standing on the field of battle in the full exultation of success,
and receiving the congratulations of his officers, upon this complete victory
obtained by his valor and conduct. Even in such an unfortunate and humbling
situation, the elector's behavior was equally magnanimous and decent. Sensible
of his condition, he approached his conqueror without any of the sullenness or
pride which would have been improper in a captive; and conscious of his own
dignity, he descended to no mean submission, unbecoming the high station which
he held among the German princes. “The fortune of war”, said he, “has made me
your prisoner, most gracious emperor, and I hope to be treated”—Here Charles
harshly interrupted him: “And am I then, at last, acknowledged to be emperor?
Charles of Ghent was the only title you lately allowed me. You shall be treated
as you deserve”. At these words he turned from him abruptly with a haughty air.
To this cruel repulse, the king of the Romans added reproaches in his own name,
using expressions still more ungenerous and insulting. The elector made no
reply; but, with an unaltered countenance, which discovered neither
astonishment nor dejection, accompanied the Spanish soldiers appointed to guard
him.
THE
SURRENDER OF WITTENBERG
This
decisive victory cost the Imperialists only fifty men. Twelve hundred of the Saxons were killed, chiefly in the pursuit,
and a greater number taken prisoners. About four hundred kept in a body, and
escaped to Wittenberg, together with the electoral prince, who had likewise
been wounded in the action. After resting two days in the field of battle,
partly to refresh his army, and partly to receive the deputies of the adjacent
towns, which were impatient to secure his protection by submitting to his will,
the emperor began to move towards Wittenberg, that he might terminate the war
at once, by the reduction of that city. The unfortunate elector was carried
along in a sort of triumph, and exposed everywhere, as a captive, to his own
subjects; a spectacle extremely afflicting to them, who both honored and loved
him; though the insult was so far from subduing his firm spirit, that it did
not even ruffle the wonted tranquility and composure of his mind.
As
Wittenberg, the residence, in that age, of the electoral branch of the Saxon
family, was one of the strongest cities in Germany, and could not be taken, if
properly defended, without great difficulty, the emperor marched thither with
the utmost dispatch, hoping that while the consternation occasioned by his
victory was still recent, the inhabitants might imitate the example of their
countrymen, and submit to his power, as soon as he appeared before their walls.
But Sybilla of Cleves, the elector’s wife, a woman no
less distinguished by her abilities than her virtue, instead of abandoning
herself to tears and lamentations upon her husband’s misfortune, endeavored by
her example as well as exhortations, to animate the citizens. She inspired them
with such resolution, that, when summoned to surrender, they returned a
vigorous answer, warning the emperor to behave towards their sovereign with the
respect due to his rank, as they were determined to treat Albert of
Brandenburg, who was still a prisoner, precisely in the same manner that he
treated the elector. The spirit of the inhabitants, no less than the strength
of the city, seemed now to render a siege in form necessary. After such a
signal victory, it would have beer disgraceful not to have undertaken it,
though at the same time the emperor was destitute of everything requisite for
carrying it on. But Maurice removed all difficulties by engaging to furnish
provisions, artillery, ammunition, pioneers, and whatever else should be
needed. Trusting to this, Charles gave orders to open the trenches before the
town. It quickly appeared, that Maurice’s eagerness to reduce the capital of
those dominions, which he expected as his reward for taking arms against his
kinsman and deserting the protestant cause, had led him to promise what
exceeded his power to perform. A battering train was, indeed, carried safely
down the Elbe from Dresden to Wittenberg; but as Maurice had not sufficient
force to preserve a secure communication between his own territories and the
camp of the besiegers, count Mansfeldt, who commanded
a body of electoral troops, intercepted and destroyed a convoy of provisions
and military stores, and dispersed a band of pioneers destined for the service
of the Imperialists. This put a stop to the progress of the siege, and
convinced the emperor, that as he could not rely on Maurice’s promises,
recourse ought to be had to some more expeditious as well as more certain
method of getting possession of the town.
The
unfortunate elector was in his hands and Charles was ungenerous and
hard-hearted enough to take advantage of this, in order to make an experiment
whether he might not bring about his design, by working upon the tenderness of
a wife for her husband, or upon the piety of children towards their parent.
With this view, he summoned Sybilla a second time to
open the gates, letting her know that if she again refused to comply, the
elector should answer with his head for her obstinacy. To convince her that
this was not an empty threat, he brought his prisoner to an immediate trial.
The proceedings against him were as irregular as the stratagem was barbarous.
Instead of consulting the states of the empire, or remitting the cause to any
court, which, according to the German constitution, might have legally taken
cognizance of the elector’s crime, he subjected the greatest prince in the
empire to the jurisdiction of a court-martial, composed of Spanish and Italian
officers, and in which the unrelenting duke of Alva, a fit instrument for any
act of violence, presided [May 101]. This strange tribunal founded its charge
upon the ban of the empire which had been issued against the prisoner by the
sole authority of the emperor, and was destitute of every legal formality which
could render it valid. But the court-martial, presuming the elector to be
thereby manifestly convicted of treason and rebellion, condemned him to stiffer
death by being beheaded. This decree was intimated to the elector while he was
amusing himself in playing at chess with Ernest of Brunswick his
fellow-prisoner. He paused for a moment, thought without discovering any symptom either of surprise or terror; and after taking
notice of the irregularity as well as injustice of the emperor's proceedings:
“It is easy, continued he, to comprehend his scheme. I must die, because Wittemberg will not surrender; and I shall lay down my life
with pleasure, if, by that sacrifice, I can preserve the dignity of my house,
and transmit to my posterity the inheritance which belongs to them. Would to
God that this sentence may not affect my wife and children more than it
intimidates me! and that they, for the sake of adding a few days to a life
already too long, may not renounce honors and territories which they were born
to possess!”. He then turned to his antagonist, whom he challenged to continue
the game. He played with his usual attention and ingenuity, and having beat
Ernest, expressed all the satisfaction which is commonly felt on gaining such
victories. After this, he withdrew to his own apartment, that he might employ
the rest of his time in such religious exercises as were proper in his
situation.
It
was not with the same indifference, or composure, that the account of the
elector's danger was received in Wittenberg. Sybilla,
who had supported with such undaunted fortitude her husband’s misfortunes,
while she imagined that they could reach no farther than to diminish his power
or territories, felt all her resolution fail as soon as his life was
threatened.
Solicitous
to save that, she despised every other consideration; and was willing to make
any sacrifice, in order to appease an incensed conqueror. At the same time, the
duke of Cleves, the elector of Brandenburg, and Maurice, to none of whom
Charles had communicated the true motives of his violent proceedings against
the elector, interceded warmly with him to spare his life. The first was
prompted so to do merely in compassion for his sister, and regard for his
brother-in-law. The two others dreaded the universal reproach that they would
incur, if, after having boasted so often of the ample security which the
emperor had promised them with respect to their religion, the first effect of
their union with him should be the public execution of a prince, who was justly
held in reverence as the most zealous protector of the protestant cause.
Maurice, in particular, foresaw that he must become the object of detestation
to the Saxons, and could never hope to govern them with tranquility, if he were
considered by them as accessary to the death of his nearest kinsman, in order
that he might obtain possession of his dominions.
While
they, from such various motives, solicited Charles, with the most earnest
importunity, not to execute the sentence; Sybilla,
and his children, conjured the elector, by letters as well as messengers, to
scruple at no concession that would extricate him out of the present danger,
and deliver them from their fears and anguish on his account. The emperor,
perceiving that the expedient which he had tried began to produce the effect
that he intended, fell by degrees from his former rigor, and allowed himself to
soften into promises of clemency and forgiveness, if the elector would show
himself worthy of his favor, by submitting to reasonable terms. The elector, on
whom the consideration of what he might suffer himself had made no impression,
was melted by the tears of his wife whom he loved, and could not resist the
entreaties of his family. In compliance with their repeated solicitations, he
agreed to articles of accommodation [May 191], which he would otherwise have
rejected with disdain. The chief of them were, that he should resign the
electoral dignity, as well for himself as for his posterity, into the emperor’s
hands, to be disposed of entirely at his pleasure; that he should instantly put
the Imperial troops in possession of the cities of Wittenberg and Gotha; that
he should set Albert of Brandenburg at liberty without ransom; that he should
submit to the decrees of the Imperial chamber, and acquiesce in whatever
reformation the emperor should make in the constitution of that court; that he
should renounce ill leagues against the emperor or king of the Romans, and
enter into no alliance for the future, in which they were not comprehended.
In
return for these important concessions, the emperor not only promised to spare
his life, but to settle on him and his posterity the city of Gotha and its
territories, together with an annual pension of fifty thousand florins, payable
out of the revenues of the electorate; and likewise to grant him a sum in ready
money to be applied towards the discharge of his debts. Even these articles of
grace were clogged with the mortifying condition of his remaining, the
emperor’s prisoner during the rest of his life. To the whole, Charles had
subjoined, that he should submit to the decrees of the pope and council with regard
to the controverted points in religion; but the elector, though he had been
persuaded to sacrifice all the objects which men commonly hold to be the
dearest and most valuable, was inflexible with regard to this point; and
neither threats nor entreaties could prevail to make him renounce what he
deemed to be truth, or persuade him to act in opposition to the dictates of his
conscience.
As
soon as the Saxon garrison marched out of Wittenberg, the emperor fulfilled his
engagements to Maurice; and in reward for his merit in having deserted the
protestant cause, and having contributed with such success towards the
dissolution of the Smalkaldic league, he gave him
possession of that city, together with all the other towns in the electorate.
It
was not without reluctance, however, that he made such a sacrifice; the
extraordinary success of his arms had begun to operate in its usual manner,
upon his ambitious mind, suggesting new and vast projects for the aggrandizement
of his family, towards the accomplishment of which the retaining of Saxony
would have been of the utmost consequence. But as this scheme was not then ripe
for execution, he durst not yet venture to disclose it; nor would it have been
either safe or prudent to offend Maurice at this juncture, by such a manifest
violation of all the promises which had seduced him to abandon his natural
allies.
THE
REDUCTION OF SAXONY
The
landgrave, Maurice’s father-in-law, was still in arms; and though now left alone
to maintain the protestant cause, was neither a feeble nor contemptible enemy.
His dominions were of considerable extent; his subjects animated with zeal for
the reformation; and if he could have held the Imperialists at bay for a short
time, he had much to hope from a party whose strength was still unbroken, whose
union as well as vigour might return, and which had
reason to depend, with certainty, on being effectually supported by the king of
France. The landgrave thought not of anything so bold or adventurous; but being
seized with the same consternation which had taken possession of his
associates, be was intent only on the means of procuring favorable terms from
the emperor whom he viewed as a conqueror, to whose will there was a necessity
of submitting. Maurice encouraged this tame and pacific spirit, by magnifying,
on the one hand, the emperor's power; by boasting, on the other, of his own
interest with his victorious ally; and by representing the advantageous
conditions which he could not fail of obtaining by his intercession for a
friend, whom he was so solicitous to save. Sometimes the landgrave was induced
to place such unbounded confidence in his promises, that he was impatient to
bring matters to a final accommodation. On other occasions, the emperor's
exorbitant ambition, restrained neither by the scruples of decency, nor the
maxims of justice, together with the recent and shocking proof which he had
given of this in his treatment of the elector of Saxony, came so full into his
thoughts, and made such a lively impression on them, that he broke off abruptly
the negotiations which he had begun seeming to be convinced that it was more
prudent to depend for safety on his own arms, than to confide in Charles’s
generosity. But this bold resolution, which despair had suggested to an
impatient spirit, fretted by disappointments, was not of long continuance. Upon
a more deliberate survey of the enemy’s power, as well as his own weakness, his
doubts and fears returned upon him, and together with them the spirit of
negotiating, and the desire of accommodation.
Maurice
and the elector of Brandenburg acted as mediators between him and the emperor;
and after all that the former had vaunted of his influence, the conditions
prescribed to the landgrave were extremely rigorous. The articles with regard
to his renouncing the league of Smalkalde,
acknowledging the emperor’s authority, and submitting to the decrees of the
Imperial chamber, were the same which had been imposed on the elector of
Saxony. Besides these, he was required to surrender his person and territories
to the emperor; to implore for pardon on his knees; to pay a hundred and fifty
thousand crowns towards defraying the expenses of the war; to demolish the
fortifications of all the towns in his dominions except one; to oblige the
garrison which he placed in it to take an oath of fidelity to the emperor; to
allow a free passage through his territories to the Imperial troops as often as
it shall be demanded; to deliver up all his artillery and ammunition to the
emperor; to set at liberty, without ransom, Henry of Brunswick, together with
the other prisoners whom he had taken during the war; and neither to take arms
himself, nor to permit any of his subjects to serve against the emperor or his
allies for the future.
The
landgrave ratified these articles, though with the utmost reluctance, as they
contained no stipulation with regard to the manner in which he was to be
treated, and left him entirely at the emperor's mercy. Necessity, however,
compelled him to give his assent to them. Charles, who had assumed the haughty
and imperious tone of a conqueror, ever since the reduction of Saxony, insisted
on unconditional submission, and would permit nothing to be added to the terms
which he had prescribed, that could in any degree limit the fullness of his
power, or restrain him from behaving as he saw meet towards a prince whom he
regarded as absolutely at his disposal. But though he would not vouchsafe to
negotiate with the landgrave on such a footing of equality, as to suffer any
article to be inserted among those which he had dictated to him, that could be
considered as a formal stipulation for the security and freedom of his own
person; he, or his ministers in his name, gave the elector of Brandenburg and
Maurice such full satisfaction with regard to this point, that they assured the
landgrave, that Charles would behave to him in the same way as he had done to
the duke of Württemberg, and would allow him, whenever he had made his
submission, to return to his own territories. Upon finding the landgrave to be
still possessed with his former suspicions of the emperor's intentions, and
unwilling to trust verbal or ambiguous declarations, in a matter of such
essential-concern as his own liberty, they sent him a bond signed by them both,
containing the most solemn obligations, that if any violence whatsoever was
offered to his person, during his interview with the emperor, they would
instantly surrender themselves to his sons, and remain in their hands to be
treated by them in the same manner as the emperor should treat him.
This,
together with the indispensable obligation of performing what was contained in
the articles of which he had accepted, removed his doubts and scruples, or made
it necessary to get over them. He repaired for that purpose, to the Imperial
camp at Halle in Saxony, where a circumstance occurred which revived his
suspicions and increased his fears. Just as he was about to enter the chamber
of presence, in order to make his public submission to the emperor, a copy of
the articles which he had approved of was put into his hands, in order that he
might ratify them anew. Upon perusing them, he perceived that the imperial
ministers had added two new articles; one importing, that if any dispute should
arise concerning the meaning of the former conditions, the emperor should have
the right of putting what interpretation upon them he thought most reasonable;
the other, that the landgrave was bound to submit implicitly to the decisions
of the council of Trent. This unworthy artifice, calculated to surprise him
into an approbation of articles, to which he had not the most idea of
assenting, by proposing them to him at a time when his mind was engrossed and
disquieted with the thoughts of that humiliating ceremony which he had to
perform, filled the landgrave with indignation, and made him break out into all
those violent expressions of rage to which his temper was prone. With some
difficulty, the elector of Brandenburg and Maurice prevailed at length on the
emperor’s ministers to drop the former article as unjust, and to explain the
latter in such a manner that he could agree to it, without openly renouncing
the protestant religion.
This
obstacle being surmounted, the landgrave was impatient to finish a ceremony which,
how mortifying soever, had been declared necessary towards has obtaining
pardon. The emperor was seated on a magnificent throne, with all the ensigns of
his dignity, surrounded by a numerous train of the princes of the empire, among
whom was Henry of Brunswick, lately the landgrave’s prisoner, and now, by a
sudden reverse of fortune, a spectator of his humiliation. The landgrave was
introduced with great solemnity, and advancing towards the throne, fell upon
his knees. His chancellor, who walked behind him, immediately read, by his
master’s command, a paper which contained an humble confession of the crime
whereof he had been guilty; an acknowledgment that he had merited on that
account the most severe punishment; an absolute resignation of himself and his
dominions to be disposed of at the emperor’s pleasure; a submissive petition
for pardon, his hopes of which were founded entirely on the emperor’s clemency;
and it concluded with promises of behaving, for the future, like a subject
whose principles of loyalty and obedience would be confirmed, and would even
derive new force from the sentiments of gratitude which must hereafter fill and
animate his heart. While the chancellor was reading this abject declaration,
the eyes of all the spectators were fixed on the unfortunate landgrave; few
could behold a prince, so powerful as well as high-spirited, suing for mercy in
the posture of a suppliant, without being touched with commiseration, and
perceiving serious reflections arise in their minds upon the instability and
emptiness of human grandeur.
The
emperor viewed the whole transaction with a haughty unfeeling composure; and
preserving a profound silence himself, made a sign to one of his secretaries to
read his answer : the tenor of which was: That though he might have justly
inflicted on him the grievous punishment which his crimes deserved, yet,
prompted by his own generosity, moved by the solicitations of several princes
in behalf of the landgrave, and influenced by his penitential acknowledgments,
he would not deal with him according to the rigor of justice, and would subject
him to no penalty that was not specified in the articles which he had already
subscribed. The moment the secretary had finished, Charles turned away
abruptly, without deigning to give the unhappy suppliant any sign of compassion
or reconcilement. He did not even desire him to rise from his knees; which the
landgrave having ventured to do unbidden, advanced towards the emperor with an
intention to kiss his hand, flattering himself, that his guilt being now fully
expiated, he might presume to take that liberty. But the elector of
Brandenburg, perceiving that this familiarity would be offensive to the
emperor, interposed, and desired the landgrave to go along with him and Maurice
to the duke of Alva’s apartments in the castle.
He
was received and entertained by that nobleman with the respect and courtesy due
to such a guest. But after supper, while he was engaged in play, the duke took
the elector and Maurice aside, and communicated to them the emperor’s orders,
that the landgrave must remain a prisoner in that place under the custody of a
Spanish guard.
As
they had not hitherto entertained the most distant suspicion of the emperor’s
sincerity or rectitude of intention, their surprise was excessive, and their
indignation not inferior to it, on discovering how greatly they had been
deceived themselves, and how infamously abused, in having been made the
instruments of deceiving and ruining their friend. They had recourse to
complaints, to arguments, and to entreaties, in order to save themselves from
that disgrace, and to extricate him out of the wretched situation into which he
had been betrayed by too great confidence in them. But the duke of Alva
remained inflexible, and pleaded the necessity of executing the emperor’s
commands. By this time it grew late, and the landgrave, who knew nothing of
what had passed, nor dreaded the snare in which he was entangled, prepared for
departing, when the fatal orders were intimated to him. He was struck dumb at
first with astonishment, but after being silent a few moments, he broke out
into all the violent expressions which horror, at injustice accompanied with
fraud, naturally suggests.
He
complained, expostulated, exclaimed; sometimes inveighing against the emperor's
artifices as unworthy of a great and generous prince; sometimes censuring the
credulity of his friends in trusting to Charles's insidious promises; sometimes
charging them with meanness in stooping to lend their assistance towards the
execution of such a perfidious and dishonorable scheme, and in the end he
required them to remember their engagements to his children, and instantly to
fulfill them. They, after giving way for a little to the torrent of his
passion, solemnly asserted their own innocence and upright intention in the
whole transaction, and encouraged him to hope, that as soon as they saw the
emperor, they would obtain redress of an injury which affected their own honor,
no less than it did his liberty. At the same time, in order to soothe his rage
and impatience, Maurice remained with him during the night in the apartment
where he was confined.
Next
morning, the elector and Maurice applied jointly to the emperor, representing
the infamy to which they would be exposed throughout Germany, if the landgrave
were detained in custody; that they would not have advised, nor would he
himself have consented to an interview, if they had suspected that the loss of
his liberty was to be the consequence of his submission; that they were bound to
procure his release, having plighted their faith to that effect, and engaged
their own persons as sureties for his.
Charles
listened to their earnest remonstrances with the utmost coolness. As he now
stood no longer in need of their services, they had the mortification to find
that their former obsequiousness was forgotten, and little regard paid to their
intercession. He was ignorant, he told them, of their particular or private
transactions with the landgrave, nor was his conduct to be regulated by any
engagements into which they had thought fit to enter; though he knew well what
he himself had promised, which was not that the landgrave should be exempt from
all restraint, but that he should not be kept a prisoner during life.
Having
said this with a peremptory and decisive tone, he put an end to the conference;
and they seeing no probability, at that time, of making any impression upon the
emperor, who seemed to have taken this resolution deliberately, and to be
obstinately bent on adhering to it, were obliged to acquaint the unfortunate
prisoner with the ill success of their endeavors in his behalf. The
disappointment threw him into a new and more violent transport of rage, so that
to prevent his proceeding to some desperate extremity, the elector and Maurice
promised that they would not quit the emperor, until, by the frequency and
fervor of their intercessions, they had extorted his consent to set him free.
They
accordingly renewed their solicitations a few days afterwards, but found
Charles more haughty and intractable than before, and were warned that if they
touched again upon a subject so disagreeable, and with regard to which he had
determined to hear nothing farther, he would instantly give orders to convey
the prisoner into Spain. Afraid of hurting the landgrave by an officious or
ill-timed zeal to serve him, they not only desisted, but left the court, and as
they did not choose to meet the first sallies of the landgrave's rage upon his
learning the cause of their departure, they informed him of it by a letter,
wherein they exhorted him to fulfill all that he had promised to the emperor,
as the most certain means of procuring a speedy release.
Whatever
violent emotions their abandoning his cause in this manner occasioned, the
landgrave's impatience to recover liberty made him follow their advice. He paid
the sum which had been imposed on him, ordered his fortresses to be razed, and
renounced all alliances which could give offence. This prompt compliance with
the will of the conqueror produced no effect. He was still guarded with the
same vigilant severity; and being carried about, together with the degraded
elector of Saxony, wherever the emperor went, their disgrace and his triumph
was each day renewed. The fortitude as well as equanimity, with which the
elector bore these repeated insults, were not more remarkable than the
landgrave's fretfulness and impatience. His active impetuous mind could ill
brook restraint; and reflection upon the shameful artifices, by which he had
been decoyed into that situation, as well as indignation at the injustice with
which he was still detained in it, drove him often to the wildest excesses of
passion.
The
people of the different cities, to whom Charles thus wantonly exposed those
illustrious prisoners as a public spectacle, were sensibly touched with such an
insult offered to the Germanic body, and murmured loudly at this indecent
treatment of two of its greatest princes. They had soon other causes of
complaint, and such as affected them more nearly. Charles proceeded to add
oppression to insult, and arrogating to himself all the rights of a conqueror,
exercised them with the utmost rigor. He ordered his troops to seize the
artillery and military stores belonging to such as had been members of the Smalkaldic league, and having collected upwards of five
hundred pieces of cannon, a great number in that age, he sent part of them into
the Low-Countries, part into Italy, and part into Spain, in order to spread by
this means the fame of his success, and that they might serve as monuments of
his having subdued a nation hitherto deemed invincible He then levied, by his
sole authority, large sums of money, as well upon those who had served him with
fidelity during the war, as upon such as had been in arms against him; upon the
former, as their contingent towards a war, which, having been undertaken, as he
pretended, for the common benefit, ought to be carried on at the common charge;
upon the latter, as a fine by way of punishment for their rebellion.
By
these exactions, he amassed above one million six hundred thousand crowns, a
sum which appeared prodigious in the sixteenth century. But so general was the
consternation which bad seized the Germans upon his rapid success, and such the
dread of his victorious troops, that all implicitly obeyed his commands;
though, at the same time, these extraordinary stretches of power greatly
alarmed a people jealous of their privileges, and habituated, during several
ages, to consider the Imperial authority as neither extensive nor formidable.
This discontent and resentment, how industriously soever they concealed them,
became universal; and the more these passions were restrained and kept down for
the present, the more likely were they to burst out soon with additional
violence.
KING
FERDINAND AND THE BOHEMIAN REBELS
While
Charles gave law to the Germans like a conquered people, Ferdinand treated his
subjects in Bohemia with still greater rigor.
That
kingdom possessed privileges and immunities as extensive as those of any nation
in which the feudal institutions were established. The prerogative of their
kings was extremely limited, and the crown itself elective. Ferdinand, when
raised to the throne, had confirmed their liberties with every solemnity
prescribed by their excessive solicitude for the security of a constitution of
government to which they were extremely attached.
He
soon began, however, to be weary of a jurisdiction so much circumscribed, and
to despise a scepter which he could not transmit to his posterity; and
notwithstanding all his former engagements, he attempted to overturn the
constitution from its foundations; that, instead of an elective kingdom, he
might render it hereditary.
But
the Bohemians were too high-spirited tamely to relinquish privileges which they
had long enjoyed. At the same time, many of them having embraced the doctrines
of the reformers, the seeds of which John Huss and Jerome of Prague had planted
in their country about the beginning of the preceding century, the desire of
acquiring religious liberty mingled itself with their zeal for their civil rights;
and these two kindred passions heightening, as usual, each other's force,
precipitated them immediately into violent measures.
They
had not only refused to serve their sovereign against the confederates of Smalkalde, but having entered into a close alliance with
the elector of Saxony, they had bound themselves, by a solemn association, to
defend their ancient constitution; and to persist, until they should obtain
such additional privileges as they thought necessary towards perfecting the
present model of their government, or rendering it more permanent.
They
chose Caspar Phlug, a nobleman of distinction, to be
their general; and raised an army of thirty thousand men to enforce their
petitions. But either from the weakness of their leader, or from the
dissensions in a great unwieldy body, which having united hastily, was not
thoroughly compacted, or from some other unknown cause, the subsequent
operations of the Bohemians bore no proportion to the zeal and ardor with which
they took their first resolutions. They suffered themselves to be amused so
long with negotiations and overtures of different kinds, that before they could
enter Saxony, the battle of Muhlberg was fought, the
elector deprived of his dignity and territories, the landgrave confined to close
custody, and the league of Smalkalde entirely
dissipated.
The
same dread of the emperor’s power which had seized the rest of the Germans,
reached them. As soon as their sovereign approached with a body of Imperial
troops, they instantly dispersed, thinking of nothing but how to atone for
their past guilt, and to acquire some hope of forgiveness by a prompt
submission. But Ferdinand, who entered his dominions full of that implacable
resentment which inflames monarchs whose authority has been despised, was not
to be mollified by the late repentance and involuntary return of rebellious
subjects to their duty. He even heard, unmoved, the entreaties and tears of the
citizens of Prague, who appeared before him in the posture of suppliants, and
implored for mercy.
The
sentence which he pronounced against them was rigorous to extremity; he
abolished many of their privileges, he abridged others, and new-modeled the
constitution according to his pleasure. He condemned to death many of those who
had been most active in forming the late association against him, and punished
a still greater number with confiscation of their goods, or perpetual
banishment. He obliged all his subjects, of every condition, to give up their
arms to be deposited in forts where be planted garrisons; and after disarming
his people, he loaded them with new and exorbitant taxes. Thus, by an
ill-conducted and unsuccessful effort to extend their privileges, the Bohemians
not only enlarged the sphere of the royal prerogative, when they intended to
have circumscribed it, but they almost annihilated those liberties which they
aimed at establishing on a broader and more secure foundation.
THE
MURDER OF THE SON OF THE POPE
The
emperor, having now humbled, and, as he imagined, subdued the independent and
stubborn spirit of the Germans by the terror of arms and the rigor of
punishment, held a diet at Augsburg, in order to compose finally the
controversies with regard to religion, which had so long disturbed the empire.
He
durst not, however, trust the determination of a matter so interesting to the
free suffrage of the Germans, broken as their minds now were to subjection. He
entered the city at the head of his Spanish troops, and assigned them quarters
there. The rest of his soldiers he cantoned in the adjacent villages; so that
the members of the diet, while they carried on their deliberations, were
surrounded by the same army which had overcome their countrymen. Immediately
after his public entry, Charles gave a proof of the violence with which he
intended to proceed. He took possession by force of the cathedral, together
with one of the principal churches; and his priests having, by various
ceremonies, purified them from the pollution with which they supposed the
unhallowed ministrations of the protestants to have defiled them, they reestablished
with great pomp the rites of the Romish worship.
The
concourse of members to this diet was extraordinary; the importance of the
affairs concerning which it was to deliberate, added to the tear of giving
offence to the emperor by an absence which lay open to misconstruction, brought
together almost all the princes, nobles, and representatives of cities who had
a right to sit in that assembly. The emperor, in the speech with which he
opened the meeting, called their attention immediately to that point, which
seemed chiefly to merit it. Having mentioned the fatal effects of the religious
dissensions which had arisen in Germany, and taken notice of his own unwearied
endeavors to procure a general council, which alone could provide a remedy
adequate to those evils, he exhorted them to recognize its authority, and to
acquiesce in the decisions of an assembly to which they had originally
appealed, as having the sole right of judgment in the case.
But
the council, to which Charles wished them to refer all their controversies,
had, by this time, undergone a violent change. The fear and jealousy, with
which the emperor's first successes against the confederates of Smalkalde had inspired the pope, continued to increase. Not
satisfied with attempting to retard the progress of the Imperial arms, by the
sudden recall of his troops, Paul began to consider the emperor as an enemy,
the weight of whose power he must soon feel, and against whom he could not be
too hasty in taking precautions. He foresaw that the immediate effect of the
emperor's acquiring absolute power in Germany, would be to render him entirely
master of all the decisions of the council, if it should continue to meet in
Trent. It was dangerous to allow a monarch, so ambitious, to get the command of
this formidable engine, which he might employ at pleasure to limit or overturn
the papal authority. As the only method of preventing this, he determined to
remove the council to some city more immediately under his own jurisdiction,
and at a greater distance from the terror of the emperor's arms, or the reach
of his influence. An incident fortunately occurred, which gave this measure the
appearance of being necessary.
One
or two of the fathers of the council, together with some of their domestics,
happening to die suddenly, the physicians, deceived by the symptoms, or
suborned by the pope’s legates, pronounced the distemper to be infectious and
pestilential. Some of the prelates, struck with a panic, retired; others were
impatient to be gone; and after a short consultation, the council was
translated to Bologna [March 11], a city subject to the pope. All the bishops
in the Imperial interest warmly opposed this resolution, as taken without
necessity, and founded on false or frivolous pretexts.
All
the Spanish prelates, and most of the Neapolitan, by the emperor's express
command, remained at Trent; the rest, to the number of thirty-four,
accompanying the legates to Bologna. Thus a schism commenced in that very
assembly, which had been called to heal the divisions of Christendom; the
fathers of Bologna inveighed against those who stayed at Trent, as contumacious
and regardless of the pope’s authority; while the other accused them of being
so far intimidated by the fears of imaginary danger, as to remove to a place
where their consultations could prove of no service towards reestablishing
peace and order in Germany.
The
emperor, at the same time, employed all his interest to procure the return of
the council to Trent. But Paul, who highly applauded his own sagacity in having
taken a step which put it out of Charles’s power to acquire the direction of
that assembly, paid no regard to a request, the object of which was so extremely
obvious. The summer was consumed in fruitless negotiations with respect to this
point, the importunity of the one and the obstinacy of the other daily
increasing. At last, an event happened which widened the breach irreparably,
and rendered the pope utterly averse from listening to any proposal that came
from the emperor. Charles, as has been already observed, had so violently
exasperated Peter Lewis Farnese, the pope’s son, by refusing to grant him the
investiture of Parma and Placentia, that he had watched ever since that time
with all the vigilance of resentment for an opportunity of revenging that
injury. He had endeavored to precipitate the pope into open hostilities against
the emperor, and had earnestly solicited the king of France to invade Italy.
His hatred and resentment extended to all those whom he knew that the emperor
favored, he did every ill office in his power to Gonzaga, governor of Milan,
and had encouraged Fiesco in his attempt upon the
life of Andrew Doria, because both Gonzaga and Doria possessed a great degree
of the emperor’s esteem and confidence. His malevolence and secret intrigues
were not unknown to the emperor, who could not be more desirous to take
vengeance on him, than Gonzaga and Doria were to be employed as his instruments
in inflicting it.
Farnese,
by the profligacy of his life, and by enormities of every kind, equal to those
committed by the worst tyrants who have disgraced human nature, had rendered
himself so odious, that it was thought any violence whatever might be lawfully
attempted against him. Gonzaga and Doria soon found among his own subjects,
persons who were eager, and even deemed it meritorious, to lend their hands in
such a service. As Farnese, animated with the jealousy which usually possesses
petty sovereigns, had employed all the cruelty and fraud, whereby they endeavor
to supply their defect of power, in order to humble and extirpate the nobility
subject to his government, five noblemen of the greatest distinction in
Placentia combined to avenge the injuries which they themselves had suffered,
as well as those which he had offered to their order.
They
formed their plan in conjunction with Gonzaga; but it remains uncertain whether
he originally suggested the scheme to them, or only approved of what they
proposed, and co-operated in carrying it on. They concerted all the previous
steps with such foresight, conducted their intrigues with such secrecy, and
displayed such courage in the execution of their design, that it may be ranked
among the most audacious deeds of that nature mentioned in history.
One
body of the conspirators surprised, at midday [Sept. 101], the gates of the
citadel of Placentia where Farnese resided, overpowered his guards, and
murdered him. Another party of them made themselves masters of the town, and
called upon their fellow-citizens to take arms, in order to recover their
liberty. The multitude ran towards the citadel, from which three great guns, a
signal concerted with Gonzaga, had been fired; and before they could guess the
cause or the authors of the tumult, they saw the lifeless body of the tyrant
hanging by the heels from one of the windows of the citadel.
But
so universally detestable had he become, that not one expressed any sentiment
of concern at such a sad reverse of fortune, or discovered the least
indignation at this ignominious treatment of a sovereign prince. The exultation
at the success of the conspiracy was general, and all applauded the actors in
it as the deliverers of their country. The body was tumbled into the ditch that
surrounded the citadel, and exposed to the insults of the rabble; the rest of
the citizens returned to their usual occupations, as if nothing extraordinary
had happened.
Before
next morning, a body of troops arriving from the frontiers of the Milanese,
where they had been posted in expectation of the event, took possession of the
city in the emperor's name, and reinstated the inhabitants in the possession of
their ancient privileges. Parma, which the Imperialists attempted likewise to
surprise, was saved by the vigilance and fidelity of the officers whom Farnese
had entrusted with the command of the garrison.
The
death of a son whom, notwithstanding his infamous vices, Paul loved with an
excess of parental tenderness, overwhelmed him with the deepest affliction; and
the loss of a city of such consequence as Placentia, greatly embittered his
sorrow. He accused Gonzaga, in open consistory, of having committed a cruel
murder, in order to prepare the way for an unjust usurpation, and immediately
demanded of the emperor satisfaction for both; for the former, by the
punishment of Gonzaga; for the latter, by the restitution of Placentia to his
grandson, Octavia, its rightful owner. But Charles, who, rather than quit a
prize of such value, was willing not only to expose himself to the imputation
of being accessary to the crime which had given an opportunity of seizing it,
but to bear the infamy of defrauding his own son-in-law of the inheritance
which belonged to him, eluded all his solicitations, and determined to keep
possession of the city, together with its territories.
This
resolution, flowing from an ambition so rapacious, as to be restrained by no
consideration either of decency or justice, transported the pope so far beyond
his usual moderation and prudence, that he was eager to take arms against the
emperor, in order to be avenged on the murderers of his son, and to recover the
inheritance wrested from his family. Conscious, however, of his own inability
to contend with such an enemy, he warmly solicited the French king and the
republic of Venice to join in an offensive league against Charles. But Henry
was intent at that time on other objects. His ancient allies, the Scots, having
been defeated by the English in one of the greatest battles ever fought between
these two rival nations, be was about to send a numerous body of veteran troops
into that country, as well to preserve it from being conquered, as to gain the
acquisition of a new kingdom to the French monarchy, by marrying his son the
dauphin to the young queen of Scotland. An undertaking accompanied with such
manifest advantages, the success of which appeared to be so certain, was not to
be relinquished for the remote prospect of benefit from an alliance depending
upon the precarious life of a pope of fourscore, who had nothing at heart but the
gratification of his own private resentment. Instead, therefore, of rushing
headlong into the alliance proposed, Henry amused the pope with such general
professions and promises, as might keep him from any thoughts of endeavoring to
accommodate his differences with the emperor, but at the same time he avoided
any such engagement as might occasion an immediate rupture with Charles, or
precipitate him into a war for which he was not prepared. The Venetians, though
much alarmed at seeing Placentia in the hands of the Imperialists, imitated the
wary conduct of the French king, as it nearly resembled the spirit which
usually regulated their own conduct.
But
though the pope found that it was not in his power to kindle immediately the
flames of war, he did not forget the injuries which he was obliged for the
present to endure; resentment settled deeper in his mind, and became more
rancorous in proportion as he felt the difficulty of gratifying it. It was
while these sentiments of enmity were in full force, and the desire of
vengeance at its height, that the diet of Augsburg, by the emperor's command,
petitioned the pope, in the name of the whole Germanic body, to enjoin the
prelates who had retired to Bologna to return again to Trent, and to renew
their deliberations in that place
TRENT
IN THE WAITING ROOM OF THE STATION OF HISTORY
Charles
had been at great pains in bringing the members to join in this request. Having
observed a considerable variety of sentiments among the protestants with
respect to the submission which he had required to the decrees of the council,
some of them being altogether intractable, while others were ready to
acknowledge its right of jurisdiction upon certain conditions, he employed all
his address in order to gain or to divide them.
He
threatened and overawed the elector Palatine, a weak prince, and afraid that
the emperor might inflict on him the punishment to which lie had made himself
liable by the assistance that he had given to the confederates of Smalkalde. The hope of procuring liberty for the landgrave,
together with the formal confirmation of his own electoral dignity, overcame
Maurice’s scruples, or prevented him from opposing what he knew would be
agreeable to the emperor. The elector of Brandenburg, less influenced by religious
zeal than any prince of that age, was easily induced to imitate their example,
in assenting to all that the emperor required. The deputies of the cities
remained still to be brought over.
They
were more tenacious of their principles, and though everything that could
operate either on their hopes or fears was tried, the utmost that they would
promise was, to acknowledge the jurisdiction of the council, if effectual
provision were made for securing to the divines of all parties free access to
that assembly, with entire liberty of debate; and if all points in controversy
were decided according to scripture, and the usage of the primitive church. But
when the memorial containing this declaration was presented to the emperor, he
ventured to put in practice a very extraordinary artifice. Without reading, the
paper, or taking any notice of the conditions on which they had insisted, he
seemed to take it for granted that they had complied with his demand, and gave
thanks to the deputies for their full and unreserved submission to the decrees
of the council [Oct. 9]. The deputies, though astonished at what they had
heard, did not attempt to set him right, both parties being better pleased that
the matter should remain under this state of ambiguity, than to push for an
explanation, which must have occasioned a dispute, and would have led, perhaps,
to a rupture.
Having
obtained this seeming submission from the members of the diet to the authority
of the council, Charles employed that as an argument to enforce their petition
for its return to Trent. But the pope, from the satisfaction which he felt in
mortifying the emperor, as well as from his own aversion to what was demanded,
resolved, without hesitation, that his petition should not be granted; though,
in order to avoid the imputation of being influenced wholly by resentment, he
had the address to throw it upon the fathers at Bologna, to put a direct
negative upon the request.
With
this view he referred to their consideration the petition of the diet [Dec.
20], and they, ready to confirm by their assent whatever the legates were
pleased to dictate, declared that the council could not, consistently with its
dignity, return to Trent, unless the prelates who, by remaining there, had
discovered a schismatic spirit, would first repair to Bologna, and join their
brethren; and that, even after their junction, the council could not renew its
consultations with any prospect of benefit to the church, if the Germans did not
prove their intention of obeying its future decrees to be sincere, by yielding
immediate obedience to those which it bad already passed.
This
answer was communicated to the emperor by the pope, who at the same time
exhorted him to comply with demands which appeared to be so reasonable. But
Charles was better acquainted with the duplicity of the pope's character than
to be deceived by such a gross artifice, he knew that the prelates of Bologna
durst utter no sentiment but what Paul inspired; and, therefore, overlooking
them as mere tools in the band of another, be considered their reply as a full
discovery of the pope's intentions. As he could no longer hope to acquire such
an ascendant in the council as to render it subservient to his own plan, he saw
it to be necessary that Paul should not have it in his power to turn against
him the authority of so venerable an assembly.
In
order to prevent this, he sent two Spanish lawyers to Bologna [Jan. 16, 1548],
who, in the presence of the legates, protested. That the translation of the
council to that place had been unnecessary, and founded on false or frivolous
pretexts; that while it continued to meet there, it ought to be deemed an
unlawful and schismatical conventicle; that all its
decisions ought of course to be held as null and invalid; and that since the
pope, together with the corrupt ecclesiastics who depended on him, had
abandoned the care of the church, the emperor, as its protector, would employ
all the power which God had committed to him, in order to preserve it from
those calamities with which it was threatened. A few days after [Jan. 23], the
Imperial ambassador at Rome demanded an audience of the pope, and in presence
of all the cardinals, as well as foreign ministers, protested against the
proceedings of the prelates at Bologna, in terms equally harsh and
disrespectful
It
was not long before Charles proceeded to carry these threats, which greatly
alarmed both the pope and council at Bologna, into execution. He let the diet
know the ill success of his endeavors to procure a favorable answer to their petition,
and that the pope, equally regardless of their entreaties, and of his services
to the church, had refused to gratify them by allowing the council to meet
again at Trent; that, though all hope of holding this assembly in a place,
where they might look for freedom of debate and judgment, was not to be given
up, the prospect of it was, at present, distant and uncertain; that in the
meantime, Germany was torn in pieces by religious dissensions, the purity of
the faith corrupted, and the minds of the people disquieted with a multiplicity
of new opinions and controversies formerly unknown among Christians; that,
moved by the duty which he owed to them as their sovereign, and to the church
as its protector, he had employed some divines of known abilities and learning,
to prepare a system of doctrine, to which all should conform, until a council,
such as they wished for, could be convocated. This system was compiled by Pflug, Helding, and Agricola, of
whom the two former were dignitaries in the Romish church, but remarkable for
their pacific and healing spirit; the last was a protestant divine, suspected,
not without reason, of having been gained by bribes and promises, to betray or
mislead his party on this occasion. The articles presented to the diet of Ratisbon
in the year one thousand five hundred and forty-one, in order to reconcile the
contending parties, served as a model for the present work.
THE
INTERIM OF THE EMPEROR
But
as the emperor’s situation was much changed since that time, and he found it no
longer necessary to manage the protestants with the same delicacy as at that
juncture, the concessions in their favor were not now so numerous, nor did they
extend to points of so much consequence. The treatise contained a complete
system of theology, conformable in almost every article to the tenets of the
Romish church, though expressed, for the most part, in the softest words, or in
scriptural phrases, or in terms of studied ambiguity. Every doctrine, however,
peculiar to popery, was retained, and the observation of all the rites, which
the protestants condemned as inventions of men introduced into the worship of
God, was enjoined. With regard to two points only, some relaxation in the rigor
of opinion as well as some latitude in the practice were admitted. Such
ecclesiastics as had married, and would not put away their wives, were allowed,
nevertheless, to perform all the functions of their sacred office; and those
provinces which had been accustomed to partake of the cup as well as of the
bread in the sacrament of the Lord's supper, were still indulged in the
privilege of receiving both. Even these were declared to be concessions for the
sake of peace, and granted only for a season, in compliance with the weakness
or prejudices of their countrymen.
This
system of doctrine, known afterwards by the name of the Interim, because it
contained temporary regulations, which were to continue no longer in force than
until a free general council could be held, the emperor presented to the diet
[May 15], with a pompous declaration of his sincere intention to re-establish
tranquility and order in the church, as well as of his hopes that their
adopting these regulations would contribute greatly to bring about that
desirable event. It was read in presence of the diet, according to form. As
soon as it was finished, the archbishop of Mentz (Mayence),
president of the electoral college, rose up hastily; and having thanked the
emperor for his unwearied and pious endeavors in order to restore peace to the
church, he, in the name of the diet, signified their approbation of the system
of doctrine which had been read, together with their resolution of conforming
to it in every particular.
The
whole assembly was amazed at a declaration so unprecedented and
unconstitutional, as well as at the elector's presumption in pretending to
deliver the sense of the diet, upon a point which had not hitherto been the
subject of consultation or debate. But not one member had the courage to
contradict what the elector had said; some being overawed by fear, others
remaining silent through complaisance. The emperor held the archbishop's
declaration to be a full constitutional ratification of the Interim, and
prepared to enforce the observance of it, as a decree of the empire.
During
this diet, the wife and children of the landgrave, warmly seconded by Maurice
of Saxony, endeavoured to interest the members in
behalf of that unhappy prince, who still languished in confinement. But
Charles, who did not choose to be brought under the necessity of rejecting any
request that came from such a respectable body, in order to prevent their
representations, laid before the diet an account of his transactions with the
landgrave, together with the motives which had at first induced him to detain
that prince in custody, and which rendered it prudent, as he alleged, to keep
him still under restraint. It was no easy matter to give any good reason, for
an action, incapable of being justified. But he thought the most frivolous
pretexts might be produced in an assembly the members of which were willing to
be deceived, arid afraid of nothing so much as of discovering that they saw his
conduct in its true colors. His account of his own conduct was accordingly
admitted to be fully satisfactory, and after some feeble entreaties that he
would extend his clemency to his unfortunate prisoner, the landgrave's concerns
were no more mentioned.
In
order to counterbalance the unfavorable impression which this inflexible rigor might
make, Charles, as a proof that his gratitude was no less permanent and
unchangeable than his resentment, invested Maurice in the electoral dignity,
with all the legal formalities. The ceremony was performed, with extraordinary
pomp, in an open court, so near the apartment in which the degraded elector was
kept a prisoner, that he could view it from his windows. Even this insult did
not ruffle his usual tranquility; and turning his eyes that way, he beheld a
prosperous rival receiving those ensigns of dignity of which he had been
stripped, without uttering one sentiment unbecoming the fortitude that he had
preserved amidst all his calamities.
Immediately
after the dissolution of the diet, the emperor ordered the Interim to be
published in the German as well as Latin language. It met with the usual
reception of conciliating schemes, when proposed to men heated with
disputation; both parties declaimed against it with equal violence. The
protestants condemned it as a system containing the grossest errors of popery,
disguised with so little art, that it could impose only on the most ignorant,
or on those who, by willfully shutting their eyes, favored the deception. The
papists inveighed against it, as a work in which some doctrines of the church
were impiously given up, others meanly concealed, and all of them delivered in
terms calculated rather to deceive the unwary, than to instruct the ignorant,
or to reclaim such as were enemies to the truth. While the Lutheran divines
fiercely attacked it on the one hand, the general of the Dominicans with no
less vehemence impugned it on the other.
But
at Rome, as soon as the contents of the Interim came to be known, the
indignation of the courtiers and ecclesiastics rose to the greatest height.
They exclaimed against the emperor’s profane encroachment on the sacerdotal function,
in presuming, with the concurrence of an assembly of laymen, to define articles
of faith and to regulate modes of worship. They compared this rash deed to that
of Uzziah, who, with an unhallowed hand, had touched the ark of God; or to the
bold attempts of those emperors, who had rendered their memory detestable, by
endeavoring to model the Christian church according to their pleasure. They
even affected to find out a resemblance between the emperor's conduct and that
of Henry VIII, and expressed their fear of his imitating the example of that
apostate, by usurping the title as well as jurisdiction belonging to the head
of the church. All therefore, contended with one voice, that as the foundations
of ecclesiastical authority were now shaken, and the whole fabric ready to be
overturned by a new enemy, some powerful method of defence should be provided, and a vigorous resistance must be made, in the beginning,
before he grew too formidable to be opposed.
The
pope, whose judgment was improved by longer experience in great transactions,
as well as by a more extensive observation of human affairs, viewed the matter
with more acute discernment, and derived comfort from the very circumstance
which filled them with apprehension. He was astonished that a prince of such
superior sagacity as the emperor, should be so intoxicated with a single
victory, as to imagine that he might give law to mankind, and decide even in
those matters, with regard to which they are most impatient of dominion. He saw
that by joining any one of the contending parties in Germany, Charles might
have had it in his power to have oppressed the other, but that the presumption
of success had now inspired him with the vain thought of his being able to
domineer over both. He foretold that a system which all attacked, and none
defended, could not be of long duration ; and that, for this reason, there was
no need of his interposing in order to hasten its fall ; for as soon as the
powerful hand which now upheld it was withdrawn, it would sink of its own
accord, and be forgotten, forever.
The
emperor, fond of his own plan, adhered to his resolution of carrying it into
full execution. But though the elector Palatine, the elector of Brandenburg, and
Maurice, influenced by the same considerations as formerly, seemed ready to
yield implicit obedience to whatever he should enjoin, he met not everywhere
with a like obsequious submission. John marquis of Brandenburg Anspach, although he had taken part with great zeal in the
war against the confederates of Smalkalde, refused to
renounce doctrines which he held to be sacred; and reminding the emperor of the
repeated promises which he had given his protestant allies, of allowing them
the free exercise of their religion, he claimed, in consequence of these, to be
exempted from receiving the Interim. Some other princes, also, ventured to
mention the same scruples, and to plead the same indulgence. But on this, as on
other trying occasions, the firmness of the elector of Saxony was most
distinguished, and merited the highest praise.
Charles,
well knowing the authority of his example with all the protestant party,
labored with the utmost earnestness, to gain his approbation of the Interim,
and by employing sometimes promises of setting him at liberty, sometimes threats
of treating him with greater harshness, attempted alternately to work upon his
hopes and his fears. But he was alike regardless of both. After having declared
his fixed belief in the doctrines of the reformation, “I cannot now”, said he,
“in my old age, abandon the principles for which I early contended; nor, in
order to procure freedom during a few declining years, will I betray that good
cause, on account of which I have suffered so much, and am still willing to
suffer. Better for me to enjoy, in this solitude, the esteem of virtuous men,
together with the approbation of my own conscience, than to return into the
world, with the imputation and guilt of apostasy, to disgrace and embitter the
remainder of my days”. By this magnanimous resolution, he set his countrymen a
pattern of conduct so very different from that which the emperor wished him to
have exhibited to them, that it drew upon him fresh marks of his displeasure.
The rigor of his confinement was increased; the number of his servants
abridged; the Lutheran clergymen, who had hitherto been permitted to attend
him, were dismissed; and even the books of devotion, which had been his chief
consolation during a tedious imprisonment, were taken from him. The landgrave
of Hesse, his companion in misfortune, did not maintain the same constancy. His
patience and fortitude were both so much exhausted by the length of his
confinement, that, willing to purchase freedom at any price, he wrote to the
emperor, offering not only to approve of the Interim, but to yield an
unreserved submission to his will in every other particular. But Charles who
knew that whatever course the landgrave might hold, neither his example nor his
authority would prevail on his children or subjects to receive the Interim,
paid no regard to his offers. He was kept confined as strictly as ever; and
while he suffered the cruel mortification of having his conduct set in contrast
to that of the elector, he derived not the smallest benefit from the mean step
which exposed him to such deserved censure.
But
it was in the Imperial cities that Charles met with the most violent opposition
to the Interim. These small commonwealths, the citizens of which were
accustomed to liberty and independence, had embraced the doctrines of the
reformation when they were first published, with remarkable eagerness; the bold
spirit of innovation being peculiarly suited to the genius of free government.
Among them, the protestant teachers had made the greatest number of proselytes.
The most eminent divines of the party were settled in them as pastors. By
having the direction of the schools and other seminaries of learning, they bad
trained up disciples, who were as well instructed in the articles of their
faith, as they were zealous to defend them. Such persons were not to be guided
by example, or swayed by authority but having been taught to employ their own
understanding in examining and deciding with respect to the points in
controversy, they thought that they were both qualified and entitled to judge
for themselves. As soon as the contents of the Interim were known. they, with
one voice, joined in refusing to admit it. Augsburg, Ulm, Strasburg, Constance,
Bremen, Magdeburg, together with many other towns of less note, presented
remonstrances to the emperor, setting forth the irregular and unconstitutional
manner in which the Interim had been enacted, and beseeching him not to offer
such violence to their consciences, as to require their assent to a form of
doctrine and worship, which appeared to them repugnant to the express precepts
of the divine law. But Charles having prevailed on so many princes of the
empire to approve of his new model, was not much moved by the representations
of those cities, which, how formidable soever they might have proved, if they
could have been formed into one body, lay so remote from each other, that it
was easy to oppress them separately, before it was possible for them to unite.
In
order to accomplish this, the emperor saw it to be requisite that his measures
should be vigorous, and executed with such rapidity as to allow no time for
concerting any common plan of opposition. Having laid down this maxim as the
rule of his proceedings his first attempt was upon the city of Augsburg, which,
though overawed by the presence of the Spanish troops, he knew to be as much
dissatisfied with the Interim as any in the empire. He ordered one body of
these troops to seize the gates; he posted the rest in different quarters of
the city; and assembling all the burgesses in the town-hall [Aug. 3], he, by
his sole absolute authority, published a decree abolishing their present form
of government, dissolving all their corporations and fraternities, and
nominating a small number of persons, in whom he vested for the future all the
powers of government. Each of the persons, thus chosen, took an oath to observe
the Interim. An act of power so unprecedented as well as arbitrary, which
excluded the body of the inhabitants from any share in the government of their
own community, and subjected them to men who had no other merit than their
servile devotion to the emperor's will, gave general disgust; but as they durst
not venture upon resistance, they were obliged to submit in silence. From
Augsburg, in which he left a garrison, he proceeded to Ulm, and new-modeled its
government with the same violent hand; he seized such of their pastors as
refused to subscribe the Interim, committed them to prison, and at his
departure carried them along with him in chains. By this severity he not only
secured the reception of the Interim, in two of the most powerful cities, but
gave warning to the rest what such as continued refectory had to expect. The
effect of the example was as great as he could have wished; and many towns, in
order to save themselves from the like treatment, found it necessary to comply
with what he enjoined. This obedience, extorted by the rigor of authority,
produced no change in the sentiments of the Germans, and extended no farther
than to make them conform so far to what he required, as was barely sufficient
to screen them from punishment. The protestant preachers accompanied those
religious rites, the observation of which the Interim prescribed, with such an
explication of their tendency, as served rather to confirm than to remove the
scruples of their hearers with regard to them. The people, many of whom had
grown up to mature years since the establishment of the reformed religion, and
never known any other form of public worship, beheld the pompous pageantry of
the popish service with contempt or horror; and in most places the Romish
ecclesiastics who returned to take possession of their churches, could hardly
be protected from insult, or their ministrations from interruption.
Thus,
notwithstanding the apparent compliance of so many cities, the inhabitants
being accustomed to freedom, submitted with reluctance to the power which now
oppressed them. Their understanding as well as inclination revolted against the
doctrines and ceremonies imposed on them; and though, for the present, they
concealed their disgust and resentment, it was evident that these passions
could not always be kept under restraint, but would break out at last in
effects proportional to their violence.
Charles,
however, highly pleased with having bent the stubborn spirit of the Germans to
such general submission, departed for the Low-Countries, fully determined to
compel the cities, which still stood out, to receive the Interim. He carried
his two prisoners, the elector of Saxony and landgrave of Hesse, along with
him, either because he durst not leave them behind him in Germany, or because
he wished to give his countrymen the Flemings this illustrious proof of the
success of his arms, and the extent of his power. Before Charles arrived at
Brussels [Sept. 17], he was informed that the pope’s legates at Bologna had
dismissed the council by an indefinite prorogation, and that the prelates
assembled there had returned to their respective countries. Necessity had
driven the pope into this measure. By the secession of those who had voted
against the translation, together with the departure of others, who grew weary
of continuing in a place where they were not suffered to proceed to business,
so few and such inconsiderable members remained, that the pompous appellation
of a General Council could not, with decency, be bestowed any longer upon them.
Paul had no choice but to dissolve an assembly which was become the object of
contempt, and exhibited to all Christendom a most glaring proof of the impotence
of the Romish see. But unavoidable as the measure was, it lay open to be
unfavorably interpreted, and had the appearance of withdrawing the remedy, at
the very time when those for whose recovery it was provided, were prevailed on
to acknowledge its virtue, and to make trial of its efficacy. Charles did not
fail to put this construction on the conduct of the pope; and by an artful
comparison of his own efforts to suppress heresy, with Paul’s scandalous
inattention to a point so essential, he endeavored to render the pontiff odious
to all zealous catholics. At the same time he
commanded the prelates of his faction to remain at Trent, that the council
might still appear to have a being, and might be ready, whenever it was thought
expedient, to resume its deliberations for the good of the church.
The
motive of Charles’s journey to the Low-Countries, besides gratifying his
favorite passion of travelling from one part of his dominions to another, was
to receive Philip his only son, who was now in the twenty-first year of his
age, and whom he had called thither, not only that he might be recognized by
the states of the Netherlands as heir-apparent, but in order to facilitate the
execution of a vast scheme, the object of which, and the reception it met with,
shall be hereafter explained. Philip having left the government of Spain to
Maximilian, Ferdinand’s eldest son, to whom the emperor had given the princess
Mary his daughter in marriage, embarked for Italy, attended by a numerous
retinue of Spanish nobles. The squadron which escorted him, was commanded by
Andrew Doria, who, notwithstanding his advanced age, insisted on the honor of
performing, in person, the same duty to the son, which he had often discharged
towards the father. He landed safely at Genoa [Nov. 25]; from thence he went to
Milan, and proceeding through Germany, arrived at the Imperial court in
Brussels [April, 1549]. The states of Brabant, in the first place, and those of
the other provinces in their order, acknowledged his right of succession in
common form, and he took the customary oath to preserve all their privileges
inviolate. In all the towns of the Low-Countries through which Philip passed,
he was received with extraordinary pomp. Nothing that could either express the
respect of the people, or contribute to his amusement, was neglected; pageants,
tournaments, and public spectacles of every kind, were exhibited with that
expensive magnificence which commercial nations are fond of displaying, when,
on any occasion, they depart from their usual maxims of frugality. But amidst
these scenes of festivity and pleasure, Philip’s natural severity of temper was
discernible. Youth itself could not render him agreeable, nor his being a
candidate for power form him to courtesy. He maintained a haughty reserve in
his behavior, and discovered such manifest partiality towards his Spanish
attendants, together with such an avowed preference to the manners of their
country, as highly disgusted the Flemings, and gave rise to that antipathy,
which afterwards occasioned a revolution so fatal to him in that part of his
dominions.
Charles
was long detained in the Netherlands by a violent attack of the gout, which
returned upon him so frequently, and with such increasing violence, that it had
broken, to a great degree, the vigour of his
constitution. He nevertheless did not slacken his endeavors to enforce the
Interim. The inhabitants of Strasburg, after a long struggle, found it
necessary to yield obedience; those of Constance, who had taken arms in their
own defence, were compelled by force, not only to
conform to the Interim, but to renounce their privileges as a free city, to do
homage to Ferdinand as archduke of Austria, and as his vassals, to admit an
Austrian governor and garrison. Magdeburg, Bremen, Hamburg, and Lübeck, were
the only Imperial cities of note that still continued refractory.
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