li liS4. , iftjH HBia aaaaftnjgtr. .' !«utf*l;h1il^j»ltiMV , >Tv..'^.,- ,rv\ ,•■f•^-;■ i^X'\^.i. Sk'i'^-sf fm^ Cornell University Library BR 1601.B61 Heroes and martyrs of Christianity; a thr 3 1924 014 085 363 ^J. Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924014085363 HEROES AND MARTYRS^ op^ CHRISTIANITY A THRILLING STORY OF THE STRUGGLES, PERSECUTIONS, WARS, AND VICTORIES OF CHRISTIANS OF ALL TIMES. WRITTEN AND EDITED BY Rev. frederic )M. Bird^ Fonncrly Chaplain and Professor of Psychology, Christian Evidences and Rhetoric in the Lehigh University. MAY IT BE THE MEANS OF INCREASING THE APPRECIATION OF RELIGIOUS LIBERTY THROUGHOUT THE WORLD. Cbe 350 lUustratione arc dnequaUed, many being drawn by Our Own Hrtiste, and others from Designs by the Cdorld's Greatest painters. PHILADELPHIA, PA.: KEELER & KIRKPATRICK, 1897. ICOPYRIGHTEB I'Sg.y, By GEORGE F. LASHER. (Ahh RIGHTS RESERVED.) :^ci^a -The illustrations having been specially drawn for this book, all persons are hereby notified that they are protected by copyright, and any one reproducing them will be prosecuted. PREFACE ROM one point of view it may be said that Christians have no business to be fighting; from another, that they may expect to be occupied with it most of the time. Their Master was the Prince of Peace ; but He told them that He came not to bring peace on earth, but a sword. There was an "irre- pressible conflict" between His ideas and those which then prevailed, and are still powerful, on earth ; and thus the battle of Armageddon, in one shape or another, will go on until the kingdoms of this world — and the republics no less — really and thoroughly become His. On the part of His people this conflict, as employing the arm of flesh, has been both passive and active. Under their Pagan per- secutors the early Christians were as sheep led to the slaughter, and yet they were no less contending for the faith, which thus, within three centuries, outwardly and nominally over- came the world. In later days it was often possible and right for the oppressed to gather together, and, opposing violence by violence, to win deliverance from oppression. In either case they stood for the most precious of human possessions, liberty of conscience, and vindicated the sacred right of thinking and acting, in the highest matters, according to what they believed to be God's will. In this history of Persecutions and Religious Wars, it is intended to follow out the line of thought above indicated, and to acknowledge some of the greatest benefactions that have been bestowed, both in example and in accomplishment, by human beings upon their fellow-men. The tale of the Maccabees furnishes a fit prelude to the long list of Christian conflicts. They were Jews, but in spirit and in life they were the ancestors of apostles and evangelists. With them, as afterwards, the Church was militant. Their story foreshadows that of any subsequent rising for religious freedom ; in doing and enduring they were the prototypes of those who since have stood and suffered for the faith of Christ. 6 PREFACE. Acknowledgments of obligation are incidentally made in various parts of this volutne, and may here be repeated more specifically. For Chapters I. and II., the apocryphal books of the Maccabees, and Dr. Raphall's "Post-Biblical His- tory of the Jews," have been used. For Chapters II.-XL, the works of Neander,. Milner, Milman, Gibbon, have been drawn upon. In the mediaeval portions, reference has been had to Mr. Lea's extremely valuable "History of the Inquisition," to Perrin's "History of the Albigenses," to Mr. E. H. Gillett's " Life and Times of Huss," and occasionally to Mr. Lecky and other writers. For those relating to England, Foxe, Green and Macaulay have been consulted. For the Huguenot wars. Dr. Hanna's pleasant volume has been chiefly followed,, and that of Jonathan Duncan in some cases. For the Netherlands, no other work, of course, can compete with Motley's immortal " Rise of the Dutch Republic." The history of persecutions and religious wars has hitherto been handled only in sections ; and while we do not pretend to have exhausted the subject — for which the labor of many years and the compilation of many volumes would be required — it may be safely claimed that no previous volume in the English language has covered so many portions of this field, from the beginning of systematic persecution and resistance to the coming of a better day. May the lesson of so much bloodshed not be pointed in vain I 1 S t\ ^^ ■KTIfl"'** ', M 't*^ ,_ ANTIOCHUS TAKING JERUSAtEM. w > < M M a as < til O z o en Preface, .... ......... CHAPTER I. ANTIOCHUS AND THE JEWS. The Jews — Ptolemy Philopater— Judea Transferred to Syria — Heliodorus — Jason — Menelaos — Massacre in Jerosalem — The Temple Spoiled — Policy of the King— Popilins— Second Mas- sacre : Cessation of Temple Worship — The Persecution— Eleazar— The Widow and her Seven Sons— The Revolt : Mattathias— Might Jews Fight on the Sabbath ? . . . lT-36 CHAPTER II. JUDAS, THE DELIVERER. ApoUonius and Seren Routed — Lysias Regent — Nicanor and Gforg^as : Their Defeat— Timotheus and Bacchides Beaten : Battle of Bethsura : Recovery of Jerusalem — Fate of Antiochns — Activity of Judas — Folly of Joseph and Azarlah— Defeat of Lysias : Peace — Campaigns of Judas- Siege of Acra — Another Invasion : The Elephants— Death of Eleazar— Siege of Jeru- salem — Judas Royal Governor — Death of Menelaus: Alcimus His Successor — Demetrius King — Bacchides — Alcimus and His Uncle : Nicanor : Peace and War — Nicanor's Blasphemy, Defeat, and Death— Embassy to Rome— Anger of the Jews— Judas' Last Battle : His Death, 37-63 CHAPTER IIL THE AQE OF THE APOSTLES. Non-resistance — Jewish Hostility — Causes of Persecution— Imperial and Popular Attacks — Nero : First Persecution — Deaths of St. Paul and St. Peter — St. James — Other Apostles — Domitian : Third Persecution, . . . . . . . . . 64-77 CHAPTER IV. TRAJAN AND IGNATIUS. Ignatius : His Interview with Trajan — His Epistles : His Martyrdom — Pliny's Letter — Hadrian : Antoninus Pins, ............ 78-92 CHAPTER V. HARCUS AURELIUS, THE STOIC, aharacter of the Emperor— Fourth Persecution — Polycarp : Letter of the Church at Smyrna- Ptolemy and Lucius — Justin Martyr — Felicitas and Her Sons— The Thundering Legion, 9.3-106 CHAPTER VI. THE nARTYRS OF LYONS. IdMei of the Church at Lyons — Vettius- Blandina— Sanctus and Maturus— Biblias — Pothinna— Attains— Alexander— Blandina and Ponticus— Humility of the Confeasors— Symphorianus— Eeignof Commodns, ........... 107-119 7 ^ CONTENTS. CHAPTER Vri. SEVERUS AND HAXIHIN. ^fth Persecution— Speratus and Others— Perpetua and Felicitas— Sixth Persecution— Philip tha Arab— Prediction of Origen, .......•• ISO-ISO CHAPTER VIII. DECIUS. ■Seventh Persecution— In Alexandria— Escape of Dionysius— At Carthage— The Lapsed— Serapion —Reign of Gallus, . . 131-142 CHAPTER IX. VALERIAN. Eighth Persecution— Cyprian's Banishment: His Death— St. Lawrence— Dionysius Banished: Alexandria— Sapricius and Nicephoms— Cyril and Others— Gallienus : The Church Eecog- nized— Pructtiosus — Marinus — Aurelian : Ninth Persecution, ..... 143-168 CHAPTER X. MORE EDICTS AQAINST THE TRUTH: DIOCLETIAN. The Army : Maximian : Marcellus— Tenth Persecution : at Nicomedia— Churches and Books Destroyed— The Edict Torn Down— In the Palace : Through the World— Three More Edicts — Accounts of Phileas and Eusebius—Romanus and Others, ..... 157-174 CHAPTER XI. THE LAST PAGAN PERSECUTION: GALERIUS AND MAXIHIN. Condition of the Empire — ^Boldness of Martyrs— Legend of St. Dorothea— Galerius Proclaims Tol- eration : His Death — New Measures of Oppression— Defeat and Death of Maximin, . 175-186 CHAPTER XIL THE AGES OF DOCTRINE. Edicts Against Heresy— Pagan Worship Suppressed— Theology : Arianism — Julian the Apostate — Feeling Against Executions for Heresy— Arian Cruelties — Athamasius — The Dark Ages — Abelard- Arnold of Buscia— The Waldenses, ....... 187-19» CHAPTER XIIL THE ALBIGENSES. Origin, Beliefs, and Character of the Oathari— Their Persecutions— In Languedoo and Provence — Raymond VI.— Crusade Preached, . . ...... 200-210 CHAPTER XIV. THE ALBIGENSIAN WARS. Sack of B^ziers : " Kill Them All "— Montfort— Fate of Minerve— " Pilgrims : " Sheep and Wolves — First Siege of Toulouse— Pedro of Aragon —Battle of Muret— Raymond Deposed — ^Young Raymond: War Renewed— Second Siege of Toulouse— Death of Montfort— Massacre at Maimonde- Death of Raymond VI. — Crusade of Louis VIII. — Siege of Avignon— Submission of Raymond VII.— Speech of De Foix— Pate of Languedoc, ..... 211-234 CHAPTER XV. WICLIF AND THE LOLLARDS. 'Teaohings of Wiclif— Efforts Against Him— Boldness of His Disciples — Burning of Sawtrey and Badby — Lord Cobham— His Trial— Rising of the Lollards — Oobham Burned, . . 233-242 CONTENTS. 9 CHAPTEB XVI. BOHEMIA AND JOHN HUSS. History of Bohemia— Early Reformers— Entrance of Wiclif 's Doctrines- Huss— Wiclif 's Books Burned— Hiisa Excommunicated— Council of Constance— The Safe-Conduct— Huss Goes to Constance : is Arrested, .......... 243-%4 CHAPTER XVII. THE HARTVRS OF CONSTANCE. Charges Against Huss— His Trial— His Execution— Indignation in Bohemia— Jerome of Prague— His Recantation— His Last Speech— His Death, ....... 26&-268 CHAPTER XVIII. TROUBLES IN BOHEHIA. Inquisitors Appointed — Calixtines and Taborites- Death of the King— Disturbances in Prague : Zisca— Sigismund Heir to the Throne— Crasa Executed — Crusade Proclaimed — Specimen Cruelties— Open Rebellion — First Invasion : Tabor Attacked — Horrors of the War — Siege of Prague— The Pour Articles— Coronation and Retreat of Sigismund, .... 269-284 CHAPTER XIX. ZISCA OF THE CUP. Second and Third Invasions — League of Cities — Zisca Blind — Fourth Invasion — Battle of Deutsoh- brod — Disorder in Prague — Civil War — Zisca Before Prague— His Triumphs — His Death, 285-296 CHAPTER XX. CRUSADES AND COUNCILS. Procopius— Two More Invasions — Negotiations — "Obsequies of Huss" — Last Crusade — Council of Basle —Bohemian Deputation— Dissensions— Death of Procopius, . . . 297-308 CHAPTER XXI. INQUISITION AND REFORMATION. Rise of the Inquisition— In Spain — Tortures of the Victims— Suppression of Thought— Authority vs. Private Judgment— Toleration Among the Reformers — Luther— First Martyrs of the North— Tyndale 309-320 CHAPTER XXIL SMITHFIELD FIRES. England and Henry VIIL—Cranmer— Edward VI.— Mary— Trial of the Bishops— Burning of Rogers, Sanders, Hooper, and Taylor— Of Ridley and Latimer— Of Cranmer— Effect on the People The Roll of Martyrs— Queen Elizabeth— Scotland : Hamilton : Wishart : Ifnox : Queen Mary, .... ....... 321-386 CHAPTER XXIII. IN FRANCE. Early Reformers : a Hard Soil— Francis I.— The Estrapades— Massacres in Provence— Henry II. : New Edict— Arrest of Du Bourg— Bourbons, Guises, and Chatillons —Francis II.— Du Bourg Eumed— Rising of Amboise-Executions-Castelnau, ...... 8S7-352 CHAPTER XXIV. WORDS AND BLOWS. Assembly of Notables— Plots of the Cardinal— Condd Sentenced— Death of Francis II.— Catherine de Medicis— Colloquy of Poissy— Edict of Toleration— Conference at Saveme— Massacre Of Vassy- Anarchy and Bloodshed— Montluc and Des Adrets— Battle of Dreux— Siege of Roaen —Siege of Orleans— Death of Guise, 353-3TS lo CONTENTS. CHAPTER XXV. THE QUEEN OF NAVARRE. Jeanne lyAlbret— Henry— Second War: Battle of St. Denis -Third War: Battle of Jamac: Death of Conde— Battle of Moncontour: of Anray-le-Duc— Peace of St. Germain— Two Parties— Death of Jeanne, ....... - . 374-385 CHAPTER XXVI. ST. BARTHOLOHEW. Marriage of Henry — Charles IX. and Coligny — Coligny "Wounded— The Plot— Murder of Coligny : The Massacre— In the Provinces — The News Abroad — Fourth War : Sieges of Bochelle and Saneerre— The " Politicals "—D'Alenfon's Plot— Death of Charles IX., . . . 386-404 CHAPTER XXVII. THE THREE HENRIES. Condition of France— Henry HI.— Fifth War : The League— Sixth and Seventh Wars— Taking of Gahors— Death of D'Alenjon— Treaty of Nemours— Preparation for War — Navarre Excom- municated—Eighth War : Battle of Coutras— Aggressions of the League : Guise in Paris : Flight of the King — Second States of Blois— Assassination of Guise— Death of Catherine- Alliance of Henry and Navarre — Murder of Henry III., ..... 405-428 CHAPTER XXVIII. THE FOURTH HENRY. Wea.kness of the King — Battle of Arqnes— Battle of Ivry— Siege of Paris — Parma's Strategy — Siege of Rouen— Skirmish at Anmale, ... .... 429-445 CHAPTER XXIX. ABJURATION. The Estates at Paris — Henry Reconciled to the Church— Opposition of the Jesuits : The Pope's Absolution Refused— Coronation— The King Enters PariB : His Clemency— Trial of the Jesuits : Attempt on Henry's Life— War with Spain : Battle of Fontaine— The Pope Absolves Henry— Poverty and Financial Reforms— Amiens Lost and Retaken— Edict of Nantes— Peace ofVervins, ......... ... 444-469 CHAPTER XXX. IN THE LOW COUNTRIES. Charles V.— The Dutch Reformation— 50,000 Martyrs— The Emperor Abdicates— Philip IL— William of Orange— Sack of St. Quentin— Philip Departs— Autosda^fe in Spain, . . 461-47$ CHAPTER XXXL ON THE WAY TO WAR. Onuivelle: The Inquisition- Plain Words from Orange— General Excitement— The "Com- promise:" The "Request:" The " Beggars "—Field-Preachings -Image-Breaking— The "Accord"— The Regent's Slanders— Orange Alone— Affairs of Lannoy, Watrelots and Ostrar well— Tumult at Antwerp— The New Oath— Siege of Valenciennes : Its Punishment- Emigration, ............ 474-495 CHAPTER XXXIL ALVA AND THE BLOOD-COUNCIL. Arrival of the Spaniards— Egmont and Horn Arrested- The New Council— Alva Viceroy- Orange Indicted : His Son Kidnapped— Murderous Decree of the Inquisition— Apology of Orange— Ite Wax Begins— Victory of the Holy Lion— Egmont and Horn Beheaded, . 496-508 CONTENTS. II CHAPTER XXXIII. UPHILL WORK. Slaughter at Jemmingen— More Outrages— Campaign of Orange— Disaster at the Geta— Alva's Statue : ffis New Taxes— The "Act of Pardon »— Murder of Montigny -Exploit of De Ruyter —Activity of Orange— A Desperate Situation, ....... 509-521 CHAPTER XXXIV. REBELLION AND ITS PUNISHHENT. The Sea Beggars— They Take Brill— Outrages at Rotterdam— Revolt of Flushing— Risings in the North— The New Government— Capture of Mons: Its Siege— Estates of Holland Meet- Defeat of Genlis— Orange Takes Roermonde— His Progress Stopped by St. Bartholomew — His Narrow Escape — Surrender of Mons— Blood-Council at Mons— Sack of Mechlin— Horrors at Zutphen — Relief of Tergoes— Defections in the North— Destruction of Naarden— Siege of Harlem— Defeats of La Marok and Batenburg— Heroism of the Besieged— The Last Hope Fails— Fate of Harlem, . . ........ 622-6:5 CHAPTER XXXV. ALKMAAR, HOOK AND LEVDEN. Siege of Alkmaar — Victory on the Zuyder Zee— Departure of Alva — Naval Victory at Bergen — Taking of Middleburg- Battle of Mook : Death of Louis— Mutiny of Spanish Troops— Naval Victory Near Antwerp— Siege of Leyden : Its Relief, .... . 5^6-569 CHAPTER XXXVI. MUTINY AND MASSACRE. Negotiations and a Wedding— Seizure of Schouwen— Death of Requesens— Death of Boisot: Fall of Zierickzee — Edict Against Mutineers— Confusion — Defense of Antwerp — The Spanish Fury- Its Effects : Treaty of Ghent, . ....... 560-570 CHAPTER XXXVII. DON JOHN. Semands of the Estates— The Governor Consents— His Efforts to Win Orange— The Spaniards Go — Seizure of Namur — Attempt on Antwerp Citadel : Its Destruction — Orange at Brussels — The Nobles : Archduke Matthias— Rising at Ghent— Preparations for War — Disaster at Gemblonrs — Amsterdam Won and Purged — A Barren Campaign— Death of Don John, . . 571-586 CHAPTER XXXVIII. HARD TIMES. The Prince of Parma — General Conflision— Bribery : Loss of the South — Treason of Egmont — Siege of Maestricht : Its Heroic Defense : The Massacre — Slanders on Orange — Troubles at Ghent— Great Offers to the Prince— Congress at Cologne— Treason of De Bours and Renne- berg— Siege of Groningen — Defeat of Coewerden — Departure of Count John — Orange Under the Ban — Siege and Relief of Steenwyk — Death of Renneberg, .... 587-603 CHAPTER XXXIX. INDEPENDENCE. Romish Worship Suppressed— Act of Abjuration- A Man Who Would not be King— Alengon as a Candidate : as Sovereign — Orange Dangerously Wounded by an Assassin— Death of the Princess— Parma's Activity, ...... ... 604-613 CHAPTER XL. A KNAVE AND A MARTYR. Alen^on's Plot— French Pniy at Antwerp— An Awkward Situation— Orange Reftises the Throne — Successes of Parma— Intrigues at Ghent— Murder of Orange— His Oharacter— llie Later Wars, . . . « 614-626 12 CONTENTS. CHAPTER XLI. THE INVINCIBLE ARHADA. England and Spain — Preparations for Invasion— The Fight in the Channel : Off the Flemish Coast— The Storm— The Results, 626-635 CHAPTER XLII. THE PURITANS. Under Elizabeth— James I. — Theory of Divine Right— Charles I.— Land and Wentworth- A Per- secuting Church — In Scotland: "The Bishops' "War" — The Long Parliament, . . 636-648 CHAPTER XLIII. THE REVOLUTION. Cavaliers and Roundheads — Attempt to Arrest the Five Members — A View of Both Sides— Civil War — England Adopts the Covenant— Cromwell and the Ironsides— Marston Moor — The Self-denying Ordinance— Naseby— Execution of the King— Cromwell as Protector — The Res- toration — The Covenanters— James II. : His Tyranny and Expulsion, . . . 649-664 CONCLUSION. Oonclusion, ............. 665-669 ILLUSTRATIONS. Page Vision of Army in the Heavens 6 The Holy of Holies 18 Hebrew Slaves in Asia 20 God's Judgment on Heliodorus 21 Murder of Onias the High Priest 23 Massacre of Women and Children in Jerusalem. . 24 Antiochus 25 Jews Made Captive 26 Antiochus and His Army Spoiling the Temple 27 Antiochus as a Persecutor 29 The Mother of the Maccabees and Her Youngest Son 30 Flight of Refugees to the Mountains 32 Mattathias Slays the Apostate 33 Mattathias Exhorting His Followers to Defend Their Faith 35 Ptolemy 36 Jadas Assembling His Warriors 38 I/ysias 39 Judas Restores the Temple 40 Fall of Antiochus 42 An Angel of the Lord Leads the Israelites Against the Enemy 44 Judas Before the Army of Lysias 45 Burning of Jamnia 47 The Elephants in War 49 Judas Pursues His Enemies 50 And They Would Not Offer Resistance on the Sabbath Day 52 Suffocation of Menelaus 55 Sixty Jewish Rulers Slain by Bacchides 57 The Vision of Judas — Jeremiah and the Golden Sword 58 Jndas Last Battle 60 Early Christian Teaching 62 Page Demetrius 63 St. Peter 65 Roman Court in Early Times 67 Ruins of the Interior of the Roman Forum 69 St. Paul 70 St. Matthew 71 St. John 72 Ruins of Domitian's Palace 73 St. James The Less 75 St. Bartholomew 76 Emperor Domitian 77 Trajan 79 Forum of Trajan 80 Ruins of Antioch 81 Over the Battlements 82 Gate of St. Paul 84 Arch of Titus 85 Scourging a Christian 87 Street Scene in Antioch 88 In the Catacomb of St. Agnes 89 Onesimus, for Whom St. Paul Pleaded, Taken to Rome and Stoned 91 Underground Passage in Roman Palace 92 And They Loved Their God Better Than Liberty . 94 Subterranean Altar of St. Agnes 95 And Because of Their Faith They Were Thrown into the Arena 97 Temple of Minerva 99 Polycarp's Prayer 100 A Christian Sentenced to Death lOj 3ridge of Nomentano 105 Pelicitas and Her Seven Sons 105 In the Amphitheatre 108 Staircase in the Palace of Caligula 109 Ruins of the Coliseum iii (13) 14 ILLUSTRATIONS. Page Fountain of Egeria 113 Ancient Armor 115 Christians Attacked by a Mob 116 Blegabalus 118 Nero 119 Septimus Severus 121 Ruins of Casino, Minerva 122 The Arrest of Perpetua 123 The Martyr's Dream 124 Caracalla 125 Roman Shields 127 Street Scene in Asia Minor 128 Archway on Mount Sinai 129 Marcus Aurelias 130 Martyrdom of Metras 132 Serapion Assailed and Killed in His Own House.. 134 Remains of the Temple at Abydos 135 Besar, the Soldier, Loses His Life Trying to Pro- tect the Christians from the Mob 137 The Ibis, the Sacred Bird of the Egyptians 139 Prostrate Colossal Statue of Pharaoh 140 Outer Mummy Case of Queen Ne-fert Ari 141 An Egyptian Woman 144 An Alexandrian Donkey Boy 145 A Street View in Cairo , 147 Tombs of Campagna ,. 148 Lattice Window in Alexandria 150 The CoUossi of Thebes 151 Great Hall in the Temple of Abydos 152 Gallineus 15} Scene Near St. Sabastian's Gate 155 The Nile 156 Diocletian 158 Cobbler Installed in a Ruined Palace 159 Baths of Caracalla 160 Church of St. Trophimus, a Companion of St. Paul 161 The Martyr's Faith 162 The Prefect with His Followers Destroying the Principal Church of Nicomedia 163 Tomb of Hadrian 165 Gates at Nicea (now Isnik) in Bithynia 167 Interior View of Catacombs 169 Ancient Burying Palace of Rome 170 A Cairene Woman 172 Triumphal Arch of San Gallo 173 Decius 174 Remains of a Roman Aqueduct 176 Ruins of Temple of Minerva 177 Theatre of Marcellus, Rome 179 A Roman Fresco 180 Gate of Agora 182 Columns of Temple at Lexor 184 Arch of Constantine 188 Julian 189 Basilica of Constantine 191 Page Constantius II 192 Medal of Theodoras I93 Death of Julian, the Apostate '9.5 Burning of a Heretic I97 Valley of Angrogua '98 The First Crusaders on Their Way to the Holy Land, Destroying the City of Pelagonia 201 Arnold of Brescia, Preaching in His Native Town 203 Brescia 205 Crusaders Crossing the Mountains 206 Persecution of Albigenses 207 Penance of Raymond 208 The Old Fortress Town of Carcassonne 209 The Attack on Beziers 212 Vernet in the Eastern Pyrenees 2i3 The Crusaders Enter Minerve Singing the Te Deum 215 Toulouse 217 Attack on Toulouse Repulsed 219 Avignon ■. 221 Albigensiau Worshippers on the Banks of the Rhone 222 Ancient War Machinery 224 Death of Montfort at Siege of Toulouse 227 Siege of Avignon 229 Massacre of the Vaudois 231 Wiclif 234 Wiclif and the Monks 236 Wiclif 's Church 238 John of Gaunt Defending Wiclif Before the Bishop of Lodi 240 Crouch Oak, Addlestone, Under Which Wiclif Preached 341 Chamber in Lollard's Tower, Lambeth Place, Where the Reformers were Confined 244 , Trial of Wiclif in the Black Friars' Monastery, London 246 The Lollard's Tower, Lambeth Place 247 Cobham's Escape 248 John Huss 250 Burning of Wiclif 's Works at Prague , 251 Lutterworth Church 254 Bishop of Lodi Preaching at the Condemnation of Huss, 256 View of Constance 258 Stones of Carnac 260 Trial of Huss — Degrading the Martyr 261 Jerome of Prague 263 Jerome Speaking at His Trial 265 Jerome on the Way to Execution 266 Fac-simile of a Part of Wiclif 's Bible 269 Tower of Bridge of Prague, to Which the Heads of Martyrs Were AfSxed 271 Outrage of Prague 272 Taborites Selecting a Pastor 274 Taborites Worshipping in a Cave 276 XJU LUSTRATIONS. 15 Page Bohemian Women Fighting from Their Baggage Wagons 278 A Group of Mendicant Friars 281 Preaching the Crusade 283 Peasant with Her Water Jug 287 Sigismund's Army on the Way to Prague 288 After the Battle of Deutschbrod 290 View of Rome 292 Wayside Preaching in the Time of Huss 293 Celebration of the Lord's Supper by the Hussites in a Field near Prague 295 Procipius, the Great Hussite General 298 Crusaders on the Way to Bohemia 299 Soldiers Searching for Bohemian Protestants 301 Hussite Shield ^03 Arrival of Hussite Deputies at Basle 304 Crusaders Perishing for Lack of Water 3 6 Seal of Council of Basle 307 Lyons 308 Ancient Leather Cannon .• 310 Gate of the Castle of Penhade Cintha 311 Penitents Receiving Absolution 313 The Inquisition in Session 3 r5 Martin Luther 317 Catherine Von Bora, Wife of Luther 318 Luther's Cell, Erfurt 319 House in which Luther Lived 320 Thomas Bilney on His Way to the Stake 323 William Tyndale 324 Cathedral of Worms 326 Latimer Exhorting Ridley at the Stake 328 Archbishop Cranmer 331 Queen Elizabeth 332 Catherine Discussing Theology with Henry VIII. 333 Parting of Patrick Hamilton from His Friends. .. 335 Hugenot Peasant at Home . 338 Francis I 339 r ortrait of Calvin 341 Henry II 342 Catherine De Medicis in Youth 343 Burning of Protestants in Paris 344 Conde 346 A Lady of Ambeise 347 The Chateau of Amboise 349 The Hangings at Amboise 35 1 Mary Stuart 352 Rock of Caylus, an Old Huguenot Fortress 354 Shepherd Girl of the Pyrenees 356 Coligny at the Death Bed of Francis II 357 Mount St. Michael 359 Huguenots Destroying the Images 361 Christopher, Duke of Wurtembtu-g, Expounding the Lutheran Doctrine to the Duke of Guise and Cardinal Lorraine 364 Chateau D^Arques 366 Montluc Slaying Prisoners at St. Mezard 368 Page Burying the Dead After the Battle of Dreux 370 The Night Before the Siege of Rouen 372 Preparing for the Siege of Orleans 375 Assassination of Guise, by Jean Peltrot 377 Death of Cond^ 379 The Queen of Navarre Encouraging Her Troops. . 381 Battle of Moncontour 383 Chamber of Horrors, Time of the Inquisition 385 Cardinal of Lorraine 387 Attack on Coligny 's House 388 Assassination of Coligny 390 A Nobleman Seeking Refuge in Queen Margaret's Chamber 393 The Duke of Guise Viewing the Body of Coligny. 395 The Night of the Massacre of St. Bartholomew . . 397 Cardinal Lorraine Receiving the Head of Coligny 399 Visions of a Guilty King 401 Charles IX. and His Mother 402 St. Bartholomew Medals 406 Henry III 408 The Louvre 409 Duke of Guise 411 Montmorency 414 Sully 415 Navarre at the Battle of Coutras 417 Guise Attacking the Germans and Swiss on Their Way to Join Navarre 416 Woodman's Cabin in the Ardenne Forest 421 Murder of Duke of Giiise 424 Death of Henry III 427 Battle of Arques 431 Battle of Ivry 434 Henry IV. at Ivry 437 The Prince of Parma < 439 Maria De Medicis 441 Henry IV 443 Beauva's Cathedral 446 Rochelle, Once the Stronghold of French Protes- tantism 449 Entrance of Henry IV. Into Paris 451 Mount Pelvoux 452 Charlamagne 455 View of Nantes Where the Famous Edict was Is- sued by Henry IV. in 1598, for Nearly a Century the Charter of Huguenot Freedom 458 French Soldiers 460 Charles V 463 Town Hall, Veere 466 Emperor Charles V. Resigning the Crown 468 Protestants Driven from Their Homes Take up Their Abode in the Mountains 470 Clement Marot 472 Instruments of Torture from the Tower of London 473 Blois with Castle 475 Fountain in the Park of La Teto Do 477 A Field Preaching Scene Near Ghent 480 i6 ILLUSTRATIONS. Page Destroying Images and Altars. 483 The Town Hall, Hague 484 William the Silent Prince of Orange 487 Oriental Bishops with Long Seards 489 The Red Gate, Antwerp 490 After the Fall of Valenciennes 492 Castle of St. Angelo, Rome 493 Bntrance to Hall of Knights 495 Duke of Alva 497 The Dunes on North Sea Coast, Near the Hague . 499 Rear Facade of the Flesher's Hall 501 Costumes of Holland Women 503 Dutch Children in Their Working Dress 505 Death of Egmont 507 The Burgomaster's Room in Antwerp 511 Tower of Joan of Arc, Rouen 513 Alva and His Army Entering Brussels 514 At the Door of a Bouse in the Island of Marken.. 5 1 6 Crossing to Marken 5 iS Town Hall, Kampen 520 Kght between Spanish Fleet and the Ships of the Sea Beggars 524 A Quay in Rotterdam 526 Flashing 527 View of Utrecht, in Holland 529 Genlis and His Army Attacked by the Spaniards Near Mens 531 Dutch Protestants Worshipping in Caves 533 The Town Hall, Harlem 535 Entrance to the Zuyder Zee 538 Harlem 541 Dress of Zealand Women 543 Organ in the Great Church, Harlem 544 The Weigh House, Alkmaar 547 Alva's Last Ride Through Amsterdam 549 Interior of a House in Alkmaar. 551 Battle of Mook 553 NorthHolland Dykes 556 Monument at Alkmaar 55S Town Hall, Leyden 561 Senate Chamber, University of Leyden 562 A Canal in Leyden 564 Pagb The University of Leyden 566 The Water Gate 567 The Great Tower Zierickzee 569 A Dutch Officer 570 A Woman of Holland with Gold Head-dress 573 Zealand Jewelry 574 In the Jews' Quarter, Amsterdam 577 St. Anthony's Weigh House, Amsterdam 580 The Slaughter of the State's Forces at Gembours. 582 Children of the Protestant Orphanage in Amster- dam, Their Dress Being Half Red and Half Black 585 Pulpit in New Church, Amsterdam 589 Montalban's Tower, Amsterdam 591 The Night Before the Taking of Maestricht . .... 594 Alexander Famese, Prince of Parma 597 A Dutch Fisherman at an Unfamiliar Task 600 A Fisherman's Child 603 A Street Scene in Amsterdam 606 Dutch Courtship on the Isle of Welcheren 609 Jan Six Burgomaster of Amsterdam 611 Prince Maurice, of Nassau 616 First Wife of Rembrandt, the Great Dutch Painter 618 Death of William the Silent 620 Statute of William the Silent, at the Hague 623 William the Silent and His Wife 628 English Fireships Sent Into the Armada 631 Lauds End 633 Beachy Head 634 Lady Jane Grey 637 Elizabeth's Tomb, Westminster Abbey 639 High Street, Oxford 641 The Martyr's Memorial, Oxford 643 Glastonbury Abbey 646 Windsor Castle 651 Leicester Hospital, Warwick 654 Old House in Castle Street, Warwick 657 Magna Charter Island, Where the Great Charter of English Liberty was Signed 660 Covenantors Worshipping by the Banks of the WhiUdder 663 CHAPTER I. ANTIOCHUS THE PERSECUTOR. HE Jews were our forerunners. Their sacred books make the greater part of our Bible. Their history must always be of interest to Christians. Their lawgivers and prophets were the early mediums of divine revelation. They were the world's instructors in religion, and morals ; through them humanity was prepared for its Messiah. They were a fierce, proud, stubborn race, often unworthy of their privileges ; but they were the Lord's peculiar people. Of their ■wars of conquest, their many vicissitudes, their exile in Babylon, their final ruin and dispersion, we have nothing here to say ; but one era of their later experience afibrds a fitting introduction to the history of Christian sufferings and contests. The persecution by Antiochus and the noble rising of the Mac- cabees have served as precedent and model for many deeds of Christian heroism. Our Lord, His apostles, and their first converts were Jews. In the Church of the first centuries, the Hebrew element had a large and important part. When the followers of Jesus were called to " resist unto blood, striving against sin," the memory of ancestral martyrs and confessors supplied incentive and inspiration. Harassed by cruel enemies, summoned under Nero or Decius to deny Christ or die, they found strength and comfort in looking back to the long line of those who had struck or suffered for what they knew of truth. So in later ages : the Albigenses of Languedoc, the Hussites of Bohemia, the Vaudois of the Alps, the Calvinists of Holland, the Huguenots of France, the Puritans of Eng- land, the Covenanters of Scotland, were sustained in suffering by the remembrance of those who had suffered long before, and found encouragement to take up the sword in the examples of those who had fought valiantly for Jewish faith and freedom. In Israel or Christendom alike, it was one cause, one fellowship, one brotherhood of service and endurance. For aid against the powers of this ■world when these are on Satan's side, the Epistle to the Hebrews summons " a great cloud of witnesses " from the very beginning of human life on earth. (17) i8 Its eloquent list ends with the citation of rameless heroes and heroines "who through faith subdued kingdoms, wrought righteousness, obtained promises, stopped the mouths of lions, quenched the violence of fire, escaped the edge of theswordjOUt of weakness were made strong,waxed valiant in fight, turned to flight the armies of the aliens;" and of others whose suc- cess, less plainly yisi- ble here, won equal ap- plause in heaven; who "had trial of cruel mock- ings and scourgings, yea,nioreover of bonds and imprisonment; they were stoned, they were sawn asun- der, were tempted, were slain with the sword ; they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins, being destitute, afi&icted, tormented (of whom the world was not worthy) ; they wandered in deserts, and in mountains, and in dens and caves of the earth." Of this record, at once historic and prophetic, "looking before and after," illustrations are well-nigh innumerable. In collecting some of them, it would be unfair wholly to pass by the Jewish heroes of the second pre-Christian century. THE HOLY OF HOLIES. 19 PTOLEMY'S SACRILEGE. On the division of the immense empire of Alexander tiie Great, Judea was annexed to the Greek kingdom of Egypt, though much nearer that of Syria. For near a century this connection produced no discontent, the Jews being really gov- erned by their high priest, who sent an annual tribute to Egypt. But in 22 1 B. C. Ptolemy IV. (called in irony Philopator, or Father-lover) reached the throne by the murder of his father : his character and conduct in general were of a piece with this commencement. A few years later, having defeated Antiochus of Syria at Raphia, near Gath, he visited Jerusalem, and, being admitted to the court of the Gentiles, insisted on going further. An early record says that, " wondering at the good order about the holy place, he formed a design to enter the temple itself, even the Holy of Holies. But when they said that this could not be done, since it was not lawful for even the Jews to enter there, no, nor for the priests them- selves, but only for the high priest, and for him but once a year ; still he would by no means be dissuaded." His profane insistence caused a terrible commotion. People came running from all parts of the city: "The virgins also, who were shut up in private chambers, rushed out with their mothers, sprinkled ashes and dast on their heads, and filled the streets with groans and lamentations. Brides, leaving their marriage-vows and that decent modesty which belonged to them, ran about the city in disorder. Mothers and nurses left their charges and went in troops to the temple." The bolder citizens wished to prevent the sacrilege by violence, and were with difi&Culty restrained from so rash an attempt. The priests were praying, the people crying and wailing, till it seemed that "the very walls and the ground echoed again; as if the whole multitude chose rather to die than see their holy place profaned." The tyrant, after the manner of his kind, cared more for his whim than for the public feeling or the divine law. But as he moved to enter the sacred building, he was smitten by superstitious terror or by a Hand stronger than that of man. The Third Book of Maccabees says that " God chastised him, shaking him this way and that, as a reed is shaken by the wind; so that he lay upon the floor powerless and paralyzed in his limbs, and unable to speak, being overtaken by a just judgment." Being carried out, he presently recovered, no worse in body for his adven- ture, and certainly no better in mind. Disgusted or enraged at his repulse, he left the holy city, muttering curses against all Jews, but fearing to institute further experiments in Judea. Arrived at home, his malice found vent in a petty persecution of the Alexandrian Hebrews, whom he excluded from the palace, reduced to the lowest rank, and branded with an ivy leaf, the emblem of Bacchus, his favorite deity. Of many thousand Jewish citizens, but three hundred were thus prevailed on to renounce their faith, and these apostates were despised and shunned by their former friends. Angered by this resistance HEBREW SI a o M a w > (45) 46 to protect their brethren in these distant regions, the leaders adopted the wise measure of removing them to Judea, which, after the recent massacres and partial depopulation, could afford lands and homes to all. Two important ends were thus secured ; the refugees were comparatively safe, and at hand to swell the defending armies of Israel. When he marched from Jerusalem on this errand, Judas had of necessity left part of his force behind. This he committed to two brothers, Joseph and Azariah, strictly charging them to use it merely for the defense of the city, and to attempt nothing further. But these men, finding themselves in temporary command and pining for distinction, disobeyed their orders, and rashly planned the capture of Jamnia, a town on the sea-coast, south of Joppa. Gorgias, who commanded there — he who had been twice beaten by Judas — got wind of their attempt, and was not slow to improve his advantage ; the oflB.cious lieutenants were surprised and routed, with the loss of two thousand men. The moral effect of this disaster was worse than the material loss. It destroyed the prestige of the Jewish armies, hitherto invincible, and it mightily encouraged their enemies. Thus heartened, L-ysias, the regent, led forth the army he had been some time preparing, " thinking to make the city a habitation of the Gentiles, and to make a gain of the temple, and to set the high priesthood to sale every year." He sat down before Beth-sura, having eighty thousand foot, besides the cavalry and eighty elephants. As the Hebrew army went out to meet him "there appeared before them on horseback one in white clothing, shaking his armor of gold. Then they praised the merciful God all together, and took heart, insomuch that they were ready not only to fight with men, but with most cruel beasts, and to pierce through walls of iron. Then they marched forward in their armor, having a helper from heaven; and giving a charge upon their enemies like lions, they slew eleven thousand footmen, and sixteen hundred horsemen, and put all the others to flight." Demoralized by this reverse, the regent made peace on terms satisfactory to the Jews, granting amnesty and the free exercise of their religion, they to pay tribute as of old. But this peace was rather nominal than real. The king was a child, the regent's authority was little respected, and the generals commainding on the frontiers, instead of repressing the lawlessness of barbarous tribes, found it con- venient and safe to give vent to their own vindictiveness and to the hatred everywhere cherished against Israel. It was impossible to protect all the out- lying Jews, scattered in scores of towns and over innumerable plains and hill- sides; but Judas and his troops were kept busy with reprisals and punish- ments for repeated and varied acts of bad faith and cruelty. At Joppa two hundred Jews, under some pretence, were inveigled out to sea and drowned. At Jamnia a similar brutality was intended, but frustrated. Maccabeus, de- BURNING OF JAMNIA. (47) 48 scending in wrath on those traitorous towns, burned the ports and shipping, and slew many ; the flames at Jamnia were visible at Jerusalem, thirty miles away. At Raphon, Timotheus, the son of him who was killed at Gazarah, took the field at the head of an incredible army, said to have comprised a hundred and twenty thousand infantry and twenty-five hundred horsemen ; at sight of the terrible Judas these fled in panic rout, and one-fourth of them were slaugh- tered in the pursuit. Some, with their leader, took refuge in a fortified temple at Camion ; the city was taken and burned, and Timotheus purchased his life by releasing many captives from Galilee. Ephron, a strong city which refused to open its gates to the victorious Jews, was assaulted, plundered and destroyed. Everywhere the Maccabee succored his afflicted countrymen, and many of them followed his march homeward. Doubting. the fierce Scythians, settled of old at Beth-shean, he stopped to inquire into the condition of the true believers there ; finding that, contrary to the usual experience, they had received only kindness- from their pagan neighbors, he thanked the authorities of the city and made friends with its people. These acts of charity were in strong contrast to the general manner of that cruel age and of armies on their march. All these events, and many of minor note, are supposed to have taken, place in a single campaign. L/oaded down with non-combatants — rescued prisoners of war, refugees returning from dangerous quarters to the centre of their faith, women and children, the aged, the sick, the needy — himself riding with the rearguard that he might watch over the weak and lagging, the deliv- erer of Judea returned to the holy city in time for the feast of Pentecost. No sooner was it over than he went forth to meet Gorgias and his Idumeans in a stubborn and well-contested battle. Fortune at length decided against the heathen, and their leader narrowly escaped capture. The chronicler adds that when the bodies of the Jewish dead were taken up for burial, idolatrous emblems were found upon them : " then every man saw that this was the cause where- fore they were slain," and doubtless also of the duration and toughness of the contest ; for how should the Lord favor an army in which some false worship- pers were arrayed on His side ? On his way back Judas found time to take Hebron and Azotus, the latter a chief town of the Philistines, besides sundry fortresses, and to destroy many altars with their idols. Returning, he found that the royal garrison, which still held Mount Acra, disregarding the peace and taking advantage of his absence, had been threatening the temple and harassing the worshippers there. Therefore, turning his talents to military engineering, he invested the citadel so closely as to give hope of its ultimate fall. It was well provisioned and defended, holding, besides the Syrian soldiers, many apostate Jews ; but the idea was to prevent egress, so that no word might go thence to Antioch and no succor be sent to relieve the place. The renegades, however, saw through this 49 plan, and made a sally, by means of which some of them escaped and reached the court. There they gave a one-sided account of what had been done, laying all the blame on Judas and his men for the breach of the peace, The regent and the child-king, listening to these tales and believing according to their inclination, determined again to invade Judea, and with a larger and better appointed army than they had yet put into the field for that purpose. LYSIAS AND HIS ARMY. And now was Jerusalem threatened by a greater danger and a more formidable force than it had yet beheld. Beth-sura again was the point of attack ; there were Lysias and his young master with a hundred thousand foot, twenty thousand horse, and thirty-two elephants. (Another account gives the fig- ures respectively as a hundred and ten thousand, five thousand three hundred, and twenty-two elephants, adding three hundred chariots of war.) Since these huge animals bore a prominent part in this battle, as in many another in ancient times and Eastern lands, it is worth while to cite the account of their dis- position and of the appearance of such an armament. "To the end they might provoke the elephants to fight, they showed them the blood of grapes and mulberries. More- over, they divided the beasts among the armies, and for each they appointed a thousand men, ■ nied with coats of mail, and with helmets of jss on their heads; and besides this, for every beast were ordained five hundred of the best horsemen. These were ready at every occasion ; wheresoever the beast was, and whithersoever he went, they went also, neither departed they from him. And upon the beasts were strong towers of wood, which covered every one of them, and were girt fast unto them with devices; there were also upon every one two and thirty strong men that fought upon them, besides THE ELEPHANTS IN WAR. w H (0 W (A a (50) 51 the Indian that ruled them. As for the remainder of the horsemen, they set them on this side and that side, at the two parts of the host. Now when the sun shone upon the shields of gold and brass, the mountains glistered therewith, and shone like lamps of fire. So, part of the king's army being spread upon the high mountains, and part in the valleys below, they marched on in order. Where- fore all that heard the noise of their multitude, and the marching of the company, and the rattling of their harness, were moved ; for the army was very great and mighty." Against this terrible host the undaunted Judas went forth with a high and resolute heart, " committing all to the Creator of the world, and exhorting his soldiers to fight manfully, even unto death, for the laws, the temple, the city, the country, and the commonwealth. And having given the watchword to them that were about him. Victory is of God, with the most valiant and choice young men he went into the king's quarters by night, and slew in the camp about four thousand men, and the chiefest of the elephants, with all that were upon him. And at last they filled the camp with fear and tumult, aud departed with good success. This was done in the break of day, because the protection of the Lord did help him." In this extremely active reconnoisance the j ewish hero aimed chiefly to give notice of what he could do on occasion, and to take any advantage that might come of his exploit. As it turned out, the main value of the skirmish (if so one-sided an affair may claim that title) was in its moral affect, which Judas was by this time as well able to appreciate as any later commander. He was an extremely sagacious captain; he knew perfectly well that apart from strategy, or surprise, or violent attack and consequent panic on the other side, he could not expect to cope with a regular and disciplined army of ten times his strength, fighting under its master's eye. His faith was in Providence and the doctrine of chances, and it must be owned that his faith was never put to shame. He was very fitly taken as a model by Cromwell and his Ironsides. If he had lived in modern times he would have agreed heartily with the exhortation of that general, " Trust in God and keep your powder dry," though scarcely with the observation of Napo- leon, that " Providence is always on the side of the strongest battalions." He was never guilty of dictating to Providence and assuming success as certain ; all his prayers and preachments before battle had the saving clause, " If the Lord will." And thus he derived the strange successes he won through six most active and glorious years, and was kept safe in constant perils almost as long as he was imperatively needed on earth. HEROIC DEATH OF ELEAZAR. Nor did the Lord forsake him now, though deliverance came not at the usual time nor in the way he might most expect. The battle which ensued ^^TTYTifW id < n n < « H a; o a o P4 H h o H O z 3 D O SI H O ■< (52) Si was for the Jews neither a victory nor a disgraceful defeat. They made a good stand, inflicted some loss on the enemy, and then, " seeing the strength of the king and the violence of his forces, turned away from them." When a general has no chance of inducing vastly superior numbers to run, it is doubtless to his credit to get his men out in good order before they are surrounded and crushed. The occasion is chiefly memorable for the selfimmolation of Bleazar, fourth of the noble brothers. " Perceiving that one of the beasts, armed with royal har- ness, was higher than all the rest, and supposing that the king was upon him, he put himself in jeopardy, to the end he might deliver his people and get him a perpetual name. Wherefore he ran upon him courageously through the midst of the battle, slaying on the right hand and on the lefc, so that they were divided from him on both sides ; which done, he crept under the elephant and thrust him under and slew him : whereupon the elephant fell down upon him, and there he died." Why is not this sacrifice as worthy of remembrance as those of the Decii, or Curtius, or Codrus, or any other hero of classic history or myth ? It was not Eleazar's fault that his voluntary death inflicted no great injury on his enemies, did no particular service to his cause, and had no other notable effect than to " get him a perpetual name," and afibrd one of not too many examples of self-devotion. The highest Authority has said that " greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends." After reducing Beth-sura, where the garrison was compelled to capitulate, Lysias and the king besieged Jerusalem. It was the Sabbatical year of rest for the land ; preceding harvests had been small, the country being but partly tilled and in great measure desolate ; hence the city had been imperfectly provisioned, and numbers left it, owing to the scarcity of food. Its brave defenders were in extremity, when an unexpected cause, in no way of their producing, brought their relief Philip, whom Epiphanes on his death-bed had appointed regent in place of Lysias, returned from Egypt and was acknowledged by the troops who had been with the late king in the East, and who had now, by slow marches, made their way back : this party seized upon Antioch and prepared to keep it. This news, which Lysias prudently kept to himself, changed all his plans. It was by no means worth his while to go on besieging a provincial town when his power at home was threatened by a rival claimant. So, pretending that the king had come south with all his array merely to relieve the siege of his fortress Acra and to assert his authority, he made peace with Jadas and was admitted within the city. Here he destroyed the fortifications of the temple, which was not in the terms of pacifica- tion ; but they could be built again, and the Jews were probably glad to get rid of him at no greater expense. Returning to Antioch, he speedily put down Philip and his pr^'tensions, but foreign and domestic complications showed him the importance of having no more intestine strife along the eastern border of the 54 Mediterranean just then. To stop the tribal warfare and restore order, lie took the strong measure of appointing Judas royal governor. No man ever rose to power by a more genuine title. This is the way rulers were supposed to be made originally, a king being he who kens and can, that is, who knows and is able to perform. From the regent's standpoint too (if he wished to manage the affairs of the kingdom rationally), it was a wise and safe selection; for Maccabeus was loyal enough to the constituted authorities, so long as they would let him be so. He was no fanatic ; he had no illusions, no dreams of empire or national independence ; he knew the time for these was long past. All he wanted was the free exercise of their religion for Israel, to be allowed to worship God in their own way, according to the laws of Moses. This granted, he would be a far more honest and capable servant of the king than the self-seeking para- sites who usually held the posts of honor. But he accepted kings on sufiFerence and of necessity ; his Sovereign was in heaven. JUDAS GOVERNOR. The fugitive of the hills, the guerilla captain, the daring and defiant rebel, was now part of the system he had fought against, a king's ofl&cer, holding his post by grace of the powers of this world. But such promotion could not change his principles, nor elate the man who took good and evil fortune as from above. Nor does it make him more honorable in our eyes. We honor character and conduct — bravery and fidelity, and devotion to a great cause — not titles and the trappings of ofl&ce. And indeed the later history of this era is not so impressive as what has gone before. It is too complicated, too tangled with changing heathen politics to stir the mind as does the story of those first brave fights for freedom. There is a falling off, too, which estranges our sympathies from most of the men of Israel ; slackness here, foolish fanaticism there ; a decay of constancy and courage, not in the great leader, but in all except a few of those he led so well. It is sad to con- template these declensions ; yet where is the cause that has not had its ups and downs of spiritual as well as of carnal fortune ? What heaven-appointed captain in the hosts of Right has been served with uniform capacity and faithfulness ? And how many have left a record as spotless, as unbroken, as that of Judas Maccabeus ? It is with satisfaction that we take leave of Menelaus, the renegade the oppressor of his countrymen, the tool of heathen tyranny. When the first peace was made, he had attempted to resume his office as high-priest ; but the Jews would have none of him, and he was driven to the citadel of Acra, where he did as much harm as he could, promoting attacks upon the temple. At the second peace he wished to be made governor of Judea ; but Lysias, who had found him a doubtful adviser and an instrument apt to cut the hand that held it, was now convinced that one so detested by the Jews could be of no use to the government. He was convicted of treason and sentenced to the ash-tower at Berea, where he died, 55 probably by suflFocation. With the Persians this strange pun- ishment was confined to offend- ers of high rank; the Greeks of Syria used it more freely. He was succeeded by Alcimus, another priestly apostate, whom the men of Jerusalem declined to accept. Repulsed, he went to Antioch, to emulate the mis- chievous career of his prede- cessor. Demetrius, the legitimate heir to the throne of Syria, had been a hostage at Rome from childhood. Finding the senate unwilling to assert his claim, he escaped from Italy, returned home, was acknowledged by the army, and put to death his young cousin, Antiochus V., and the regent Lysias. By reason of his long absence he knew little of Eastern affairs, and was ready to listen to the interested, not to say slander- ous, accounts of Alcimus and other renegades, who easily persuaded him to believe that Judas was the creature of the late usurpers and the oppress- or of all loyal servants of the new king. The high priest ended his harangue with these words: "As long as Judas liveth, it is not possible that the state should be quiet." Inflamed by these misrep- resentations, the king sent forth Bacchides, governor of Mesopotamia, with a great SUFFOCATION OF MENEI5 The results of this lofty and generous policy were wonderful, as we shall see by frequent examples. From a mere human viewpoint, it was a rash and desperate experiment, to try to vanquish paganism by submitting meekly to all that it could inflict ; but it succeeded. The old rule of strife and violence was overthrown by its victims. Their dream, their Master's promise, that " into gentleness should rise The world that roughly cast them down," was fulfilled. Within ten generations the Church had conquered. But the ten generations had to pass, the "ten great persecutions" to be endured, before this end could be attained. " The noble army of martyrs " had to be enrolled, and through various crosses to win their crowns. The sad, and in one view monotonous, catalogue of cruel sufferings had to be written out on the pages of history. The first followers of Jesus knew what they must expect. They had seen their Leader bear the contradiction of sinners, the malignant hatred of Scribes and Pharisees, and die like a base-born murderer or a fugitive slave. The disciple was not above his Master. "If they have persecuted Me, they will also per- secute you," was, as has been well said, the warning of common sense. If any of them needed to learn this lesson, their eyes must ,. •" have been opened by the fate of deacon Stephen, and not long after, by that of St. James the elder. The source whence their earliest troubles were to come was plain in view. The temper of the Jews, as has been said, was fierce and narrow, ready on slight occasion to contract into bitter bigotry. Most of their ruling men, while rigidly adhering to the letter of their law, knew little of its spirit, and were eager to brand any innovation, any liberal interpretation even, as heresy and blasphemy. From first to last they were opponents and haters of the Gospel. The gentle elements which were not lacking in their sacred books had found no lodgment in their hearts. Slaves of tradition and of a frozen orthodoxy, the warm and wide teachings of the Son of Man appealed to ST. PETER. 66 them only to rouse angry repulsion and denial. So well was tlie national chat' acter known in the outside world, that the origin of Christianity long injured the reputation of its adherents, who were regarded as a Jewish sect, and credited with the Jewish vices of scarcely concealed disloyalty to government and hatred of mankind THE WORLD AGAINST THE CHURCH. This fact may in part explain the hostility of Roman officials everywhere, and of the mass of their subjects. But other causes were not far to seek. The ancient world knew nothing of the rights of conscience ; that an individual should presume to think for himself on matters within the range of custom and legislation was an offense almost unheard of The genius of the Greeks, and still more of the Romans, was political ; religion was an engine of the state ; the human being was first of all a citizen or a subject. Much has been said of the tolerant spirit of heathenism ; but this had its limits. Cicero, who did as much private thinking as any man of his time, states this rule : " No man shall have separate gods of his own, and no man shall worship new or foreign gods, unless they have been publicly acknowledged by the laws of the stated As Rome went on conquering the world, there was a gradual, though usually prompt, recognition of foreign deities, and a fusing of the religions of various tribes and provinces with that of the old republic ; but all these had the sanction of long continuance and acceptance, and new additions were forbidden. Judaism, among others, was tolerated, and in a way respected, though its votaries were greatly disliked ; but Christianity never was licensed or allowed until it was recognized by Gallienus as one of the religiones licitcs — it could not be, because it could not mix with the various forms of paganism. And thus it came under the condemnation of the eminent jurist, Julius Paulus : " Those who introduced new religions, or such as were unknown in their tendency or nature, by which men's minds might be disturbed, if men of rank, were degraded ; if in lowly station, were put to death." Maecenas, the patron of Virgil and Horace, a man of high character and great liberality, long the friend and favorite of the Emperor Augustus, thus advised that monarch, according to the historian Dion Cassius: "Honor the gods, by all means, according to the customs of your country, and compel others thus to honor them. Hate and punish those who introduce anything foreign in religion ; not only for the sake of the gods, since they who despise them will hardly reverence any others, but because they who bring in new divinities mis- lead many into receiving also foreign laws. Hence arise conspiracies and secret meetings, which are of great injury to the state. Suflfer no man either to deny the gods, or to practice sorcery." Such being the ideas which ruled the world at the era when the new faith began its career, it was impossible that it should escape the jealousy of monarchs and the lash of executioners. It was a novelty, and therefore against the laws ; 6; it was exclusive, and therefore it must be put down. However meekly submis- sive its followers, tbey were certain to be accused of treason ; though models of piety, they were long branded as atheists. It is to be remembered that heathens did not, and without illumination could not, understand the Christian position ; just as we, who breathe a Christian atmosphere and live in a society permeated by Christian influences, can only by some historical knowledge enter into the mental condition of the pagans of eighteen hun- dred years ago. With them, religion was a matter of outward ob- servance ; with us — ^if we have really heeded the Master's teachings — it is mainly a matter of heart and life. With us, individual freedom, within wide and defined limits, is a matter of course, and the interfer- ence of the state in the domain of thought, speech or worship would be an impertinence ; with them it was just the other way. The spirit- uality of the Gospel, its appeal to unworldly mo- tives, were to the heathen strange and incomprehensible ; they stood amazed before its lack of temples and images ; they deemed it marvelous that men, yes, and women and children too, should lay down their lives rather than go through a harmless (and possibly meaningless) form, like casting a little incense upon an altar. Of this obtuse- ness of theirs, this deep and wide gulf between the two positions, we shall see abundant illustrations. And yet this very strangeness of the Christian principles lielped to win many converts, and in time the general victory. ROMAN COURT IN EARLY TIMES. 68 It is not to be supposed tliat persecution was incessant: the Cliurcli had intervals of repose. Nor must we think that it was always formal and uni- versal. Now and then an emperor would issue edicts, and order his ofi&cials in every province to proceed against the followers of the Nazarene ; sometimes a proconsul or inferior officer, out of personal zeal or malice, might institute inquiries and apply punishments; often the fury of the populace would burst forth, and the believers in that region would suffer before tribunals incited to act, like Pilate, by the force or fear of local opinion. When Alexander of Pontus found that trade was dull and customers listless, he urged the people to stone "the atheists," and thus avert the anger of the gods. The similar device of Demetrius, who made images of Diana for the temple at Ephesus, is recorded in the nineteenth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles. A flood, a famine, an earthquake, or a pestilence would be ascribed to the wickedness of the new sect. St. Augustine quotes an African proverb, "If it does not rain, lay it to the Christians." And even a learned man like Porphyry, eminent in the third century as a new-Platonist, could credit an infectious disease to the spread of the new religion, which prevented Esculapius, the god of healing, from attending efficiently to his business. As for the literary enemies of the Gospel, who probably did no great harm, their mode of warfare was legitimate, and they were abundantly answered by the Christian apologists. We may judge of the force of their reasoning by this specimen from the famous Celsus : " One must be weak indeed, to fancy that Greeks and barbarians in Asia, Europe, and Africa can ever unite under the same system of religion." It was not argument that the Church had to fear, but the power of the sword, the strength of ancient prejudice, the intolerance of new ideas, and the depravity of human nature. After these introductory remarks, needful to explain the causes and motives of so much bitter enmity to the most inoffensive of beings, and to a scheme which aimed only to promote human welfare in this world and in the next, we go on to offer, in order of time, a view of the chief attacks and the most noted or notable victims. TertuUian, an African priest who lived from about i6o to 245 A.D., tells an impossible tale of the Emperor Tiberius having proposed to admit Christ among the deities of Rome, and threatened penalties against any who should accuse his followers as such. Passing this fable, we come to the expulsion of the Jews from Rome under Claudius, A. D., 53. Suetonius says they were " constantly raising tumults, at the instigation of Christus .•" this seems to indi- cate that the Christians were confounded with the Jews, and the Author of their faith with a man then living. At that time, and long after, the Romans,: even the best and wisest of them, had little real information concerning the new sect, and would have thought it beneath their dignity to inquire. w o H » M w 2 S so o » M «1 O !? •il O !« c! (69) 70 PERSECUTION UNDER NERO. This fact is curiously illustrated by a famous passage in tlie Annals of Tacitus, describing tbe first great persecution, under Nero, A, D. 64. That bad emperor was generally suspected of having caused the late conflagration in Rome. Tacitus says : " The infamy of that horrible affair still adhered to him. In order, if possible, to remove the imputation, he determined to transfer the guilt to others. With this view he inflicted the most exquisite tor- tures on a set of men detested for their crimes, and known by the vulgar appellation of Christians. The name was derived from Christ, who, in the reign of Tiberius, suffered under Pontius Pilate, the procurator of Judea. By that event the sect which he founded suffered a blow which for a time checked the growth of a dangerous super- stition; but it revived soon after ^ and spread with increased vigor, not only in Judea, the soil that gave it birth, but even in Rome, I the common sink into which every- f— -^j-s^^ thing infamous and abominable . ■'^' flows like a torrent from all quarters ST. PAXJL. of the world. Nero proceeded with his usual artifice. He found a crew of profligate and abandoned wretches, who were induced to con- fess themselves guilty; and on their testimony a number of Christians were convicted, not on clear evidence of having set the city on fire, but rather on account of their sullen hatred of the whole human race. They were put to death with extreme cruelty, and to their agonies Nero added mockery and derision. Some were covered with the skins of wild beasts, and left to be devoured by dogs ; others were nailed to crosses ; numbers were burnt alive • and many, smeared with inflammable materials, were used as torches to illu- mine the night. The emperor lent his own gardens for this tragic spectacle ; he added the sports of the circus, driving a chariot, and then mingling with the crowd in his coachman's dress. At length the cruelty of these proceed- ings filled every breast with pity. Humanity relented in favor of the Chris- tians. Their manners were no doubt pernicious, and their evil deeds called 71 for ptinisliment ; but it was evident tliat they were sacrificed, not to tlie public welfare, but to the rage and cruelty of one man." This extract from the great historian gives memorable witness both to the atrociaes.of Nero and to the slanders then generally believed. Neander thints that many of these "living torches" and other victims of the tyrant may have been accused as Christians without being so. There was evidently no regular inquiry, and no aim at what the laws called justice : the hated name of Christian might conveniently be bestowed on any malefactor or per- son of evil repute. Tradition connects the death of the two chief apostles, St. Peter and St. Paul, with this persecution ; and Canon Farrar fancies that St. John also may have beheld these horrid scenes, and described them, in a large poetical way, in the Apocalypse. We may cite an eloquent paragraph from Dr. Farrar's " Early Days of Christianity : " "A great French artist has painted a picture of Nero walk- ing with his lictors through the blackened streets of Rome after the conflagration. He represents him, as he was in mature age, in the uncinctured robe with which, to the indignation of the noble Romans, he used to appear in public. He is obese with self- indulgence. Upon his coarsened features rests that dark cloud which they must have often \^ worn when his conscience was most tormented by the furies of his murdered mother and his murdered wives. Shrinking back among the ruins are two poor Christian slaves, who watch him with looks in which disgust and detestation struggle with fear. The picture puts into visi- ble form the feelings of horror with which the brethren must have regarded one whom they came to consider as the incarnate instrument of satanic antagonism against God and His Christ, — as the deadliest and most irresistible enemy of all that is called holy or that is worshipped. ST. MATTHEW. 72 " Did St. Jolin ever see that frightful spectacle of a monster in human flesh ? Was he a witness of the scenes which made the circus and the gar. dens of Nero reek with the fumes of martyrdom? Tradition points in that direction. In the silence which falls over many years of his biography, it is possible that he may have been compelled by the Christians to retire from the menace of the storm before it actually burst over their devoted heads. St. Paul, as we believe, was providentially set free from his Roman imprison- ment just in time to be preserved from the first outburst of the Neronian persecution. Had it not been for this, who can tell whether St. Paul and St. John and St. Peter might not have been clothed in the skins of wild beasts to be torn to pieces by the blood- hounds of the amphitheatre, or have stood, each in his pitchy tunic, to form one of those ghastly human torches which flared upon the dark masses of the abominable crowd? " But even if St. John never saw Rome at this period, many a terrified fugitive of the vast multitude which Tacitus men- tions must have brought hinj tidings about those blood-stainej orgies in which the Devil, th-t '■A Beast, and the False Prophet — 'that great Anti-Trinity of Hell ' — were wallowing through the mystic Babylon in the blood of the martyrs of the Lord." It will be noticed that Dr. Farrar believes St. Paul to have escaped this persecution. His death, however, occurred about this time, or not long after, and by decapitation, probably without scourging or other torture ; that being the privilege of a Roman citizen, and he having been uxr — -u^,^ )) as he told the centurion (Acts xxii. 28). ST. JOHN. 'free bom, DEATHS OF THE APOSTLES. St. Peter is popularly supposed to have perished with St. Paul. The tradi- tional account, partly collected by Eusebius and St. Jerome, and not traced farther back than the third century, is that he was bishop of Antioch from A. D. 35 to 7i 43, and then went to Rome, where he presided over the local church. But he was not at the capital of the world when St. Paul wrote his Epistle to the Romans, A. D. 58, nor during St. Paul's imprisonment there, A. D. 61 to 63, nor at the date of his own Epistles, A. D. 66 and 67 ; and it is not absolutely certain that he was ever in Rome at all. A legend, wholly unreliable as history but beautiful as poetry, relates that he escaped from the city during the horrors under Nero, and on the road met a form bearing a cross. By the moonlight he recognized RUINS OF DOMITIAN'S PAI,ACE. the bleeding brow, the pierced hands and feet. Trembling, he asked, " Master, whither goest Thou ? " The apparition answered, " I go to Rome, to be crucified again, and in thy place." By this he knew his Lord's will, and returned to meet his doom. When his time came, he asked to be fastened to the cross head down- ward, saying, " I, that denied my Lord, am not worthy to sufiFer in the same posture as He." The probability is that he was martyred at Rome, A. D. 67 or later, after a mere visit or brief residence there. 74 Meantime St. James the Less, "the brotlier of the Lord," had met his fate in Jerusalem, where he was bishop, and greatly honored by the Jews for his lofly integrity and strict observance of the Law, being called "The Just." Josephus says that he was stoned to death, having been condemned by the Sanhedrim at the instigation of Ananus the high priest, a Sadducee, who for thus exceeding his authority was rebuked by Albinus the Roman governor, and deposed from his ofl&ce by King Agrippa II. This was in A. D. 63. Hegesippus, the earliest of church historians, who wrote about A. D. 175, and fragments of whose work were preserved by Eusebius, asserts (what seems improbable) that the Scribes and Pharisees asked St. James to restrain the people from " wandering after Jesus the Crucified." " And he answered in a loud voice, ' Why do ye ask me again about Jesus the Son of Man ? He both sits in the heavens on the right hand of the Mighty Power, and He will come on the clouds of heaven.' And when many had been fully assured, and were glorifying God at the witness of James, and saying: ' Hosanna to the Son of David ! ' then the Scribes and Pharisees began to say to one another, ' We have made a mistake in oflFering such a testimony to Jesus. Come, let us go up and cast him down, that they may be afraid, and not believe him.' And they cried out, saying, ' Alas, even the Just one has gone astray ! ' And they fulfilled the Scripture written in Isaiah, * Let us away with the Just, for he is inconvenient to us.' They went up therefore, and flung him down " [from the battlements of the temple]. "And they began to stone him, since he did not die from being thrown down, but knelt, saying, ' Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.' But while they were thus stoning him, one of the priests, 01 the sons of Rechab, cried out, ' Cease ! What are ye doing ? The righteous one is praying for you.' But one of the fullers, lifting up the club which he used to beat out clothes, brought it down on the head of the Just. So he bore witness ; and they buried him on the spot, beside the sanctuary. He was a true witness to Jews and Greeks that Jesus is the Christ. Immediately afterwards " [z. e., six or seven years later, A. D. 70,] " Vespasian besieged Jerusalem." The other St. James, the son of Zebedee, had been beheaded (probably at Jerusalem, about A. D. 45), as recorded in Acts xii. 2. Clement of Alexandria says that the executioner, moved by his example, professed himself a Christian, and tut two suffered together. For the earthly endings of the other apostles and their companions we are indebted to traditional accounts, which sometimes vary. According to these doubtful legends, St. Philip was tied to a pillar and stoned by the Jews of Hier- apolis in Phrygia (Asia Minor), A, D. 54. Barnabas, for some time the comrade and co-worker of St. Paul, perished at the hands of a mob stirred up by a Jewish sorcerer in the island of Cyprus, A. D. 64 ; after misusing him in various ways, they put a rope roundhis neck, dragged him out of the city of Salamiria, and 75 burned him. In the same year St. Mark the Evangelist, having labored at Alexandria in Egypt, endured similar treatment, and died on his way to the fire. Kpaphras, Aristarchus, Prisca (or Priscilla), Aquila, Andronicus, and Junia, all fellow-laborers of St. Paul and mentioned in his Epistles, are said to have suffered at Rome under Nero, A. D. 68 or earlier. About the same time Silas, otherwise called Silvanus, who had shared St. Paul's im- prisonment and escape at Philippi in Macedonia, as recorded in Acts xvi., was put to death at that place; Onesiphorus, with another named Porphyry, was torn by wild horses at the Hellespont, and the remain- ing apostles, except St. John (who long survived them all, and died a natural death), were martyred in various parts of the world. St. Bartholomew, having preached in Syria, Phrygia, Upper Asia, and (it is said) India, made his way to Armenia, and was finally brought before King Astyages ; this tyrant sentenced him to be beaten with rods, tied to a cross head down- ward, in that position flayed alive, and then beheaded. St. Thomas, who would not believe that his Master had risen from the dead till he had the evidence of the senses, is thought to have labored in India, where a sect of native Christians long bore his name. In that region, beyond the bounds of Alexander's conquests, the idol-priests accused him to their king. He was tortured with red-hot plates, then cast into an oven ; and when they saw (according to the legend) " that the fire did not hurt him, they pierced his side, as he lay in the furnace, with spears and javelins." St. Jerome says that his body, unconsumed, was buried there, at a town called Calamina. St. Matthew the Evangelist was sent to Ethiopia, and there, after zealous labors, was nailed to the ground and beheaded at Naddavar under King Hytacus. St. Simon the Canaanite, sumamed Zelotes, is said to have been crucified in Syria ; his brother Judas or Jude, sumamed Lebbeus or Thaddeus (the author of the Epistle), preached in Persia, and was beaten to death by the pagan priests there. ST. JAMES THE I:;^m'm FRAGMENT OF A ROMAN FRESCO. fessed himself a Christian, and was beheaded, these martyrs on the sixth of February. About 308 the persecu- tion slackened ; the am- fessors in the mines of Palestine were more mildly treated, and even allowed to erect rude buildings for theirworship. But soon the storm burst forth again : a new edict required that the pagan temples be re- stored which bad fallen to decay, end all citizens obliged to offer sacrifice.: the eatables offered in the markets were to be sprinkled with wine or water which had been used in idol-worship, so that the Christians might be forced into contact with what they abhorred, or compelled to FKCvl A ROMAN FRESCO. i8i starve. And now the old scenes were repeated : " those who submitted performed the hated ceremony with visible reluctance, with trembling hand, averted coun- tenance, and deep remorse of heart : those who resisted to death were animated by the presence of multitudes who, if they dared not applaud, could scarcely conceal their admiration. Women crowded to kiss the hems of their garments ; and their scattered ashes or unburied bones were stolen away by the devout zeal of their adherents, and already began to be treasured as incentives to faith and piety." EDICT OF TOLERATION. At length Galerius was seized by the hideous disease which has ended the lives of other persecutors ,and voluptuaries — Antiochus Epiphanes, Herod the Great, Philip II. of Spain. For months he lay in agony, and the palace was infected by the stench of his ulcers. While thus bearing tortures as great as any he had inflicted, he attempted at once to justify and to change his course in this extraordinary edict, in which the names of Licinius and Constantine are added to his own : "Among the weighty cares which have occupied our mind for the welfare of the state, it was our intent to correct and re-establish all things after the ancient Roman law and discipline. Especially we wished to recall to the way of reason and nature the deluded Christians, who had renounced the religion and usages of their fathers, and presumptuously despising the practice of antiquity, had in- vented extravagant laws and opinions at the dictates of their fancy, and collected a varying society from the different provinces of our empire. The edicts we have published to enforce the worship of the gods have exposed many of the Chris- tians to danger and distress : many have suffered death, and many more, who still presist in their impious folly, are deprived of any public exercise of religion. We are therefore disposed to extend to these unhappy men the effects of our wonted clemency. We permit them freely to profess their opinions, and to assemble in their conventicles without fear or hindrance, provided they keep a due respect to the laws and government. We shall declare our intentions to the magistrates by another letter ; and we hope that our indulgence will engage the Christians to offer up their prayers to the Deity whom they worship, for our safety and pros- perity, for their own, and for that of the commonwealth." Here was a strange thing — a persecutor asking the prayers of those he had striven to exterminate for what he still called " their impious folly." But Galerius was soon past praying for : he died in 311, leaving four emperors con- tending which should rule the world ; and of these the worthless Maxentius was drowned a year after. Constantine and Licinius were glad to protect the Christians ; but Maximin, whose name had not been added to the edict of toleration, was of another temper. A bigoted pagan and a ruthless despot, he planned new attacks while he seemed to i83 obey tlie edict of his uncle. " The prison doors were thrown open, the mines: rendered up their condemned laborers. Everywhere long trains of Christians were seen hastening to the ruins of their churches, and visiting the places sanc- tified by their former devotion. The public roads, the streets and market-places of the, towns, were crowded with long processions, singing psalms of thanksgiving for their deliverance. Those who had maintained their faith under their severe trials passed triumphant in conscious, even if lowly pride, amid the flattering congratulations of their brethren : those . who had failed in the hour of afflic- tion hastened to reunite themselves with their God, and to obtain readmission:. into the flourishing and reunited fold. The heathen themselves were astonished,^. it is said, at this signal mark of the power of the Christians' God, who had thus unexpectedly wrought so sudden a revolution in favor of His worshippers." For many years these battle-marked confessors, piteous remnants of men, with bodies scarred and twisted, many lacking an arm, a foot, an eye, held the place of honor in Christian assemblies, and were looked upon with reverence. CUNNING MEASURES OF MAXIMIN. But within a year Maximin, who now aimed to extend his dominions, had arrayed the pagan interest against the Christians. New and subtle devices were employed, and a profane ingenuity set to work to discredit their religion and its Founder. False Acts of Pilate were forged and circulated, the streets were pla- carded with slanders : these blasphemies were made text-books in schools, set to music, and sung or recited everywhere. The old libels were revised ; vile women of Damascus were induced to pretend that they had taken part in Christian orgies, and their false testimony, by Maximin's express command, was published through the empire. The judicious might not believe these tales ; but all were not judicious, and the faithful were thus wounded in two very tender places, — their purity, and their regard for the honor of the faith. They were used to being called atheists, impious, seditious ; but now, in the very hour of their victory, to have it believed that their sacred books taught them to conceive and practice foul- ness was hard indeed. The emperor next took pains to restore the old religion with new improve- ments, borrowed from the Church. He appointed persons of rank and wealth as priests in all the cities, and gave them power to compel the attendance of all citizens at the sacrifices, which were performed with unusual pomp. He procured addresses from Antioch, Nicomedia, Tyre, and other places, begging him to drive- out the enemies of the gods. With artful malignity, he invited Christians of position to feasts, and set before them meats that had been offered to idols. Many of humbler station were mutilated : a few, including the bishops of Alex- a;ndria, Antioch, and Emesa, were put to death, or died in prison. Maximin's answer to the petition of the people of Tyre is still preserved. He praises their zeal, laments the obstinate impiety of the Christians, cheerfully i84 agrees to the banishment of them, and authorizes the priests to inflict any punish- ment short of execution. In particular he points out the benefits received from the heathen gods, who have smiled upon the laud and kept off plague, drought, earthquake, and tempest. But it would not do. These very calamities were about to fall upon the Kast, exhausted by the emperor's tyranny, and enraged by his insolent vices.' His oncers went through the provinces to collect recruits for his harem, using force on occasion. The noblest families were not secure ; their daughters, where COLUMNS OF TEMPLE AT LUXOR. he had had his will, were married to slaves or barbarians. Valeria, the daughter of Diocletian and widow of Galerius, was handsome and wealthy ; he wished to marry her, and she refused. Her estates were confiscated, her servants tortured, lier friends put to death, her fair reputation assailed, and she and her mother Prisca banished, and at length, through the strange cruelty of Licinius, beheaded and their bodies thrown into the sea. Diocletian, from his retirement, in vain tried to protect them ; and the world beheld with amazement two empresses ^85 treated like common criminals. Their fate could hardly have been more cruel if they had been really Christians ; and we know nothing of their character to contradict the rumor that they were so. VICTORY OF THE CHURCHES. Meantime the evils which Maximin praised the gods for averting — drought, famine, pestilence — came heavily upon Asia. The court lived in luxury, and the soldiers plundered freely, while the people starved. In the general distress, pity and help came only from the Christians. ''They were everywhere, tending the living and burying the dead. They distributed bread ; they visited the infected houses ; they scared away the dogs which preyed in open day upon the bodies in the streets, and rendered lo them the decent honors of burial. The myriads who had perished and were perishing, in a state of absolute desertion, could not but acknowledge that Christianity was stronger than love of kindred." The Church, just emerging from long and fierce persecution, displayed her p oper character in loving her enemies and returning good for evil. Maximin had attacked the Christian Kingdom of Armenia with doubtful success ; he was still less fortunate in his contest with Licinius. He is said to have vowed, before the battle, to abolish the Christian name, if Jupiter would give him victory ; and, after his defeat, to have massacred the pagan priests who had flattered him. with vain hopes and urged him to the war. In the same spirit he issued an edict of toleration, more complete than one a little before, which the Christians had been too wise to trust : he now even restored their church-lands which had been taken from them. This was his last official act. Stricken with a sore disease, his body wasted away as from an inward fire. If we may believe Eusebius, he died the death of Galerius and other persecutors, crying in his agony, " It was others, not I, who did it," and imploring help from the Christ whom he had fought in vain. His death, in the year 313, removed the Church's last dangerous human enemy. The other emperors had already established toleration in Europe ; and Constantine, a year before, had seen, or pretented to see, a bright cross in the sky, with the inscription, " In this sign you shall conquer." From that time the cross was upon his banner, and the emblem of the Prince of Peace was carried in the front of every battle. The connection of Licinius with the Christians was merely a matter of policy. He afterwards put himself at the head of the pagan party, closed the churches of Pontus in Asia Minor, tore some of them down, and caused or allowed some of the clergy to be put to death ; but the battle of Hadrianople ended his power in 323, and the Church, no longer oppressed, became established throughout the empire. Except during the brief reign of Julian (361-36J) who inflicted only the mildest penalties, her enemies and dangers were thenceforth within : except i86 in remote and barbarous regions, Her ministers and people had nothing to fear from giant Pagan. The age of heathen rule was over. Our succeeding chapters must record the dissensions of Christians among themselves, the sufferings which — not understanding their Master's mind, or lacking His gentle and benignant spirit — they inflicted upon each other. CHAPTER XII. THE AGES OF DOCTRINE. HK establishment of Christianity as the religion of the Roman empire was attended by certain inevitable evils. It opened the door wide to all the corruptions of the world : it brought in the power, wealth, and pomp of a state Church, with the intricacies of an elaborate theology, in place of the simplicity of the first centuries; and it put the Christians in a position to inflict the punish- ments they had previously endured. The theories of government were unchanged, and non-conformity, in the shape of paganism or heresy, now became the objects of attack. The Jews were still protected, but it was thought necessary to fix heavy penalties for any who threw stones at a Christian convert from the synagogue, and for any Christian who became a Jew. Among the first measures of Constantine, after he got rid of his rivals and became sole emperor, was the attempted suppression of the Arian and Donatist sects. Their meet- ings were prohibited, their churches and writings destroyed, their bishops sent into exile, and death threatened against those who concealed their books.. Kxecutions were rare, for the Christian sentiment was at first strong against taking life. The heathen were still so numerous that it was not expedient to push them to extremes. Constantius II. did more in this direction than his father. Magic and divination were forbidden; those who practiced them were to be thrown to wild beasts in Rome, and in the provinces to be tortured and then crucified. This was carried further by Valeus, who was an Arian, and persecuted all wha (187) i88 diflfered from the views of that sect. Among his victims were a philosopher, who wrote to his wife to hang a crown over her door ; an old woman who tried to cure a fever by repeating a charm ; and a youth, who sought relief from sickness by touching a marble pillar, and saying a, e, t, o, u. If all who use such remedies in our own day and land were to be punished, our prisons and police-courts would be wofully overworked. We have no clear and full account of the suppression of paganism. It was not left to die a natural death, though no such systematic cruelties were exercised ARf^H OF CONSTANTINF. upon its votaries ss the Christians had endured under Decius and Diocletian. Edicts were aimed chiefly at the temples, rather than at their worshippers. The words pagan and heathen (countryman) both show that the old faith lingered in rural parts long after it had ceased to lift its head in the cities. Libanius, who had been the minister of Julian, protested in vain against the destruction of the temples. They were to the poor peasants, he said, " the very eye of Nature, the symbol and manifestation of a present Deity, the solace of all their troubles. 1 89 tlie holiest of all their joys. If these were overthrown, their dearest associa- tions would be annihilated. The tie that linked them to the dead would be severed. The poetry of life, the consolation of labor, the source of faith, would be destroyed." One may without shame own to a little human sympathy with those who had to stand by and see their sacred buildings torn down. Many may have lost their lives in trying to defend them ; and we read of one bishop who too zealously aided the work of destruction apd was killed in a riot of this JULIAN. kind. But the old religion was doomed ; it had been weighed in the balance and found wanting. It had to perish, with all its adjuncts ; and a decaying cause has no historians and leaves few friends. By the end of the fourth century all the pagan sanctuaries, except in the city of Rome, are said to have disappeared, or been turned to Christian use. St. Augustine, who died A. D. 430, says that a sentence of death was incurred by any who celebrated the old rites, and that this severity met the unanimous approval of Christians. igo RISE OF THEOLOGIES. There is no lack of information as to tlie divisions of the Church and their tragic consequences. The Theodosian code, compiled in the first half of the fifth century; besides many laws against pagans, Jews, magicians, and apostates, has sixty-six against heretics. It is probable that these were freely and vigor- ously enforced. But there was one embarrassing fact: what was considered heresy at one time or place might be orthodoxy under another emperor, or in another province. The term heresy, which at first meant division, schism, had come to indicate error in doctrinal opinion. The proverb, " Many men, many minds," was true then hardly less than now. Since " many minds" produce differ- ences of opinion, the only way to avoid heresy was to induce men not to use their brains with reference to their religion. Plain people might believe what they were told ; but the leaders of the Church were obliged to meditate deeply upon the doctrines they were evolving. No race has had such a gift for subtle and abstract thought as the Greeks, and no age has done so much work in hammer- ing out, theological systems as did the fourth and fifth centuries. It was a long time before this task was finished and a result substantially agreed on ; and till then there was much ill-feeling and not a little bloodshed over the varying human interpretations of divine truth. The most troublesome difference was between the orthodox, whose views were finally fixed upon Christendom, and the followers of Arius, a priest of Alexandria. The Arian doctrines have since been generally condemned, not only because the Church decided against them, but because, as one of the most eminent Unitarian divines of our day has pointed out, they made Christ neither God nor man, but something between the two. The famous Council of Nice, A. D. 325, inserted in its creed the word komoouswn, "of one (or the same) substance" with the Father. The Arians would not agree to this, but used instead the ex- pression komn'ousion, of similar substance. These long and closely resembling words were used as war-cries by the mobs of Alexandria, when the two factions rushed upon each other in the streets. Incredible as this may appear, it was but a sign of the times. The most delicate subtleties of doctrine, whether men could .understand them or not, were supposed to be vital matters, to be defended with life or contested at the peril of one's soul. Few modern worshippers could follow the minute distinctions of the so-called Athanasian Creed ; but for centuries it was held that " whoever would be saved must before all things believe " them. In all good faith and earnestness, the fathers of the fourth century " Fondly essayed to intertwine Earth's shadows with the light divine." "A prudent heathen," quoted by Jeremy Taylor, complained that the emperor Constantius "mixed the Christian religion, plain and simple in itself, 191 with a weak and foolish superstition, perplexing to examine but useless to con- trive, and excited dissensions which were widely difiPused and maintained with a war of words." As Mr. Lecky says, "However strongly the Homoousians and Homoiousians were opposed on other points, they were at least perfectly agreed that the adherents of the wrong creed could not possibly get to heaven, and that the highest conceivable virtues were futile when associated with error." JULIAN. The consequences of these changed views were obvious and inevitable. The Church in its beginning was a brotherhood, with faithful allegiance to BASILICA OF CONSTANTINB. Christ as its leading principle : it now became, especially in its chief assemblies, a debating-club and a battle-ground. It had been said of old, "See how these Christians love one another!" The emperor Julian had a saying, "No wild beasts are so ferocious as angry theologians." Too wise to persecute, it was his favorite amusement to get a few divines of diflferent sects together and set jgz them by the ears. A painting of our time represents hini tlivis occupied and smiling in cynical delight, while his guests nearly came to blows. To encourage these dissensions, to exclude the Christians from the schools and from some posts of honor, to satirize the wealth and fashion which had come in among them, and to restore the pagan rites and emblems, were the only revenge he took for the murder of his family and his own embittered youth. His temper and his con- duct were milder than those of many who looked on him as Antichrist. A fanatical Arian bishop, old and blind, once rudely interrupted him at a sacrifice. "Peace," said the emperor, "your Galilean God will not restore your sight." "I thank my God," the intruder cried, "for the blind- ness which spares me the sight of an apostate." Ju- lian gave no heed to the insult, but calmly went on sacrificing If some outrages ac- companied the restoration of the heathen wor- ship, especially in certain towns of Syria, it was not coNSTANTius II. by auy order of the emperor. A few soldiers were put to death for mutiny or breach of discipline, but in this reign no Christian suffered directly for his faith. Yet all the virtues and abilities of Julian could not turn the tide of destiny, nor galvanize the corpse of paganism into life. His early death caused vast rejoicing among the Christians, who feared another persecution. One would like to believe the legend that as he lay dying from a Persian javelin, he threw a handful of his blood into the air, and cried, "Thou hast conquered, Galilean!" But the tale is rather well 193 invented than well supported. His successors were not his equals, but at least they were on the side of Providence. The best opinion of the Fathers of that age is thus expressed by Chrysos- tom : " We should condemn heresies, but spare and pray for heretics." St. Am- brose of Milan went so far as to say, " Neither the state nor the Church has a right to forbid your saying what you think." But this was by no means the prevalent Ariew ; indeed, he would have probably gone on to say that you ought to think only what is orthodox. The great St. Augustine held for awhile that it is wrong to do any violence to misbelievers ; but he afterwards modified that judgment, and settled upon this : " No good men approve of inflicting death on any one, though he be a heretic." When two obscure French bishops, in the year 385, procured the execution of some members of an equally obscure sect, St. Martin of Tours indignantly denounced their conduct, and refused to hold communion with them ; and Sulpitius very justly said, "The example was worse than the men. If they were heretical, to execute them was unchristian." The hu-| manizing influence of the gospel had produced, at' least in its best disciples, a feeling against all shed- ding of human blood, and especially that the Church and the clergy ought to medai, of theodorius. have no hand in it. In later ages this degenerated into the hypocritical farce of handing over a culprit to the secular arm, with a formal plea for mercy — which meant that he was to be burned alive. But the emperors, their officers, and the baser sort of private persons, were not always restrained by these sentiments. Gibbon, who habitually makes the most of the cruelties of Christians, and as little as possible of those inflicted on them by the heathen, has filled pages with the brutalities and disorders of this era. An Arian bishop, receiving authority from Constantine, used strange methods to force the Catholics of Thrace and Asia Minor into his communion. "The sacraments were administered to the reluctant victims, who denied the vocation and abhorred the principles of Macedonius. The rites of baptism were conferred on women and children who for that purpose had been torn from the arms of their friends and parents. The mouths of the communicants were held open by a wooden instrument, while the consecrated bread was forced down their throats. The same extraordinary missionary attempted to convert — or else to exterminate — 194 the Novatians of a district in the north of Asia Minor, and took with him four thousand soldiers for the purpose. The peasants, driven to despair^ attacked the troops with their scythes and axes, and killed almost all of them, with heavy loss to themselves. In western Africa the members of a Donatist sect, angry at the banishment of their bishop and other interferences, took to the desert, became brigands, slew many with their clubs, and kept two prov- inces disturbed for some time. Julian, who succeeded his cousin on the throne, says in one of his letters that in this reign " many were imprisoned, abused, and driven into exile. Whole troops of those who were called heretics were massacred, particularly at Cyzicus and at Samosata. In Paphlagonia, Bithynia^ Galatia, and many other provinces, towns and villages were laid waste and utterly destroyed." ATHANASIUS. The adventures of Athanasius, the great champion of orthodoxy against Arius, would, as Gibbon says, furnish "a very entertaining romance." He was repeatedly banished and constantly in danger. Many of his followers were slain in defending him from attack. Once, when the troops broke into the church, he refused to escape till he had dismissed the congregation, and then slipped away in the darkness. Once he hid in a dry cistern, and had just left it when the place was disclosed by a slave. Once, at midnight, he suddenly appeared in the house of a maiden of rank and wealth, famous for her beauty, and said a vision had sent him there : she kept him, in innocence and absolute secrecy, till the danger was over. From his hiding-places he wrote innumerable letters, and kept his finger on the pulse of the time. In disguise, and protected by friends in every city, he traveled over half the world, and witnessed the proceedings of two councils, unsuspected by his enemies. Dean Milman thinks that his immense •energies and indomitable spirit were spent on too small a cause. " During two reigns he contested the emperors' authority. He endured persecution, calumny, exile ; his life was frequently endangered in defense of one single tenet, and that, it may be permitted to say, the most purely intellectual, and apparently the most remote from the ordinary passions of man : he confronted martyrdom, not for the broad and palpable distinction between Christianity and heathenism, but for the fine and subtle expressions of the creed. He began and continued the contest not for the toleration, but for the supremacy, of his own opinions." But this is not the view usually held. He has generally been revered as a rare moral ihero, as the greatest character, if not the greatest intellect, of his age, standing, •^'the world against him, he against the world," for what he believed the truth • of God and the honor of his Master. And if success be the test of merit, his rmerit was of the highest, for he succeeded in imposing his opinions upon the •great bulk of Christendom, Catholic and schismatic, Roman, Greek, and Protest- DISATH OF JUUAN, THE APOSTATE. 195 196 ant, to our own day. If we do not now use the Athanasian Creed (which is of later date), at least nine-tenths of Europe and America still profess the faith of Athanasius. The Arian controversy, however, gave much trouble throughout the fourth century. Valens, who ruled the East from 367 to 378, persecuted the orthodox; and some of the barbarian tribes, who were now overrunning the western prov- inces, received Christianity in an Arian form, and displayed much ignorant and. disorderly zeal in its behalf. But these disturbances formed a very small part, of the miseries which fell upon the empire. A time of change had come : the old civilization had to perish, that on its ruins, after the lapse of many hundred years, a new and better order might arise. Christianity could not save the old system of government and society, doomed by its own vices. "The glory that was Greece " had long been but a memory ; " the grandeur that was Rome " was rotten with the satiated lust of conquest and of luxury. These mighty races had had their day : their successors needed to receive the slow education of ages. During the dreary process learning, literature, the arts, almost the power of thinking, died out, or became the lonely prerogative of a few. THE DARK AGES. During this long period, from the sixth to the twelfth century, "religious per- secution was rare. The principle was indeed fully admitted, and whenever the occasion called for it it was applied ; but heresies scarcely ever appeared, and the few that arose were insignificant." A collection of canon laws compiled about 101 8. contains none on the punishment of heresy. Certain executions in the eleventh century were conducted by princes or mobs, and seem to have been disapproved, by the Church. About 1045 ^^^ Bishop of Liege, being appealed to conceming- some Manicheans, urged that their lives should be spared; since God had patience with them, men might do the same. Abelard, a famoi^s French the- ologian and one of the ablest men of his time, taught dubious opinions about the Trinity ; but when St. Bernard procured his condemnation in 1140, there was no thought of putting him to death ; to destroy his reputation and take away his liberty was enough. Dean Milman says that many of the well-fed bishops and. abbots who condemned Abelard, having dined or been hunting just before, took little interest in the proceedings. While the fiery Bernard arrayed his proofs and. poured forth his indignant eloquence, they slumbered in their seats ; and being- roused to pronounce on each successive count in the indictment, they would lift, their heads, half open their eyes, murmur " Damnamus^^ ("we condemn him"), "^namus,^^ and go to sleep again. Abelard was a heretic, and heresy was not to be allowed : that was enough ; they did not care for the particulars. But these mild measures were soon to be exchanged for sterner ones. Arnold of Brescia, a pupil of Abelard, boldly rebuked the wealth and vices of BURNING OF A HERBnC. 197 198 the clergy, and was burned at Rome in 1 154, leaving many followers, wlio were condemned by several popes and soon united with the Waldenses. THE WALDENSES. Peter Waldo, a rich merchant of Lyons, had the New Testament and some extracts from the Fathers of the early Church translated into the Ro- mance language. Becoming convinced that these precepts were not obeyed, he gave away his property, took to the work of an evangelist, traiiied or started many other preachers, and exerted a wide influence. For a time he was recognized by the pope ; but the Poor Men of Lyons, as his disciples called themselves, soon became obnoxious, and were condemned by several councils in VALLEY OF ANGROGNA, A HIDING PLACB OP THE WALDENSES. 'S-i^W^^^ '99 1184 and later. They denied the authority of popes and bishops, and some of them disbelieved in purgatory. They held that God is to be obeyed rather than man ; that laymen and women may preach ; that prayers may be offered as well in a private room, a stable, or anywhere else, as in church ; that masses and prayers for the dead are unavailing ; and that the services of the clergy are of value only in proportion to their characters. These doctrines struck at the root of the whole Church system as it then existed. The Waldenses, who were extremely active and spread everywhere, soon became objects of general attack. In Spain they were outlawed by Alonzo II. of Aragon in 1194, and three years later condemned to the flames by Pedro II. In the south of France they were confounded with the Albigenses, a different sect, of which we shall hear more presently, and involved in their destruction. They were burned in Strasburg in 1 212. Some of them fled to Bohemia, where their bishop, long after, consecrated those of the United Brethren. . For centuries they were heard of in northern Italy, where their descendants survive to the present day. An early inquisitor thus describes these people: "Heretics may be known by their customs and speech, for they are modest and well ordered. They take no pride in their clothes, which are neither costly nor vile. They avoid lies and oaths and frauds ; they are not traders but mechanics; their teachers are cob- blers. They gather no wealth, but are content with things needful. They are chaste, and temperate in meat and drink. They do not frequent taverns, dances^ or other vanities. They refrain from anger. They are always at work. They are to be known by their modesty and precision of speech ; they hate light, pro- fane, and violent language." St. Bernard, who delighted to persecute them, and who died in 1153, has given similar testimony as to the followers of Arnold: "If you question them, nothing can be more Christian : their talk is blameless, and. what they speak they prove by deeds. As to the morals of the heretic, he cheats no one, he oppresses no one, he strikes no one. His cheeks are pale with fast- ing; he eats not the bread of idleness, his hands labor for his livelihood." But in those days an error of opinion was counted far worse than any faults of character. CHAPTER XIII. THE ALBIGENSES. HE most dreaded sect of tlie Middle Ages was that of tlie ManicHees. Its founder, Manes, wlio lived in Persia in tlie third century, believed in the existence of two equal Principles, good and evil, who divided the universe between them. Matter, he taught, was accursed ; this world was made and governed by the devil, who had also inspired the Old Testament. The gospels, on the contrary, were the work of God, whose Son assumed the mere appearance of a man to overthrow the kingdom of evil. These wild notions, somewhat modified in the course of time, spread through southern Europe. In spite of frequent persecutions, these people, the Paulicians, or the Cathari, as they were afterwards generally called, gathered multitudes of converts, who clung to their doctrines with fanatical enthu- siasm. They were numerous in what is now Bulgaria, and in the whole region between the Black sea and the Adriatic. When the first crusaders were on their way to the Holy Land in 1097, they heard of a city called Pelagonia, belonging to these people ; so, by way of practicing their swords for the slaughter of Mo- hammedans, they destroyed and massacred all its inhabitants. But a calamity like this had little effect on their progress. They had founded Tran, on the gulf of Venice, which became their headquarters : and by the end of the tenth century they were established in the south of France, where they grew and throve mightily. Their views were almost as peculiar as at the start. Believing in a warfare of the spirit against the flesh, they rejected marriage (except under narrow restrictions), animal food, and the gratification of the senses in any form. That is, the stricter among them did ; for it is hardly to be supposed that most members of the sect took these precepts literally. Yet, strange to say, their lives were pure and innocent. (aoo) THE FIRST CRUSADBRS, ON THEIR WAY TO THE HOI,Y LAND, DESTROYING THE PAUI LI J % u. W 1 ^L.J. _.^ TMlHlTTft T aT i ill " J. _ j* ^ m^ ■? . V »> 'J'^tK^S THE CRUSADERS ENTER MINERVE SINGING THE TE DEUM. 215 2l6 I iis custom, on taking a town or castle, to kill the garrison and burn the people "who would not submit to Rome. "Lavaur, Minerve, Casser, Termes," says Mr. X,ea, " are names which suggest all that man can inflict and man can suffer for the glory of God." At one of these places a zealous ofiicer complained against the sparing of such as should recant. "You need not fear," said the legate Arnold; "there will not be many such." And so it proved. Perrin, the old listorian of the Albigenses, gives this account of what was done at Minerve: " The place was by nature very strong, on the frontier of Spain. It surren- ctered, for lack of water, to the discretion of the legate ; he ordered the crusaders, to enter with cross and banner, singing the Te Deum. The abbot of Vaux wished to preach to those who were found in the castle, exhorting them to acknowledge the pope. But they, not waiting till he had ended his discourse, vcried out with one accord, ' We will not renounce our faith ; we reject that of the "Church of Rome. Your labor is to no purpose ; neither life nor death shall :inove us to forsake our religion.' Upon this answer Earl Simon and the legate •caused a great fire to be kindled, and cast therein a hundred and forty persons of both sexes, who approached the flames with alacrity and joy, thanking and praising God that He had vouchsafed them the honor to suffer death for His name's sake. Thus did those true martyrs of Christ end their frail and perish- ing lives in the flames, to live eternally in heaven. Thus did they triumph over the pope's legate, opposing him to his face, threatening Earl Simon with the just judgment of God, and that he would one day, when the books should be opened, pay dearly for the cruelties which he then seemed to exercise with impunity. Several of the monks and priests exhorted them to have pity on themselves, promising them their lives if they would obey the rule of Rome ; but three women •only accepted life on condition of abjuring their religion.'' Apart from these official butcheries, many outrages were doubtless com- mitted by the " Pilgrims," who had absolution beforehand for all they might ■do — though none was needed for slaying or mutilating a heretic. Thus at Bol- bonne they blinded certain Catharans, "and cut off their noses and ears till there was scarce a trace of the human visage left." Years after, in a sermon, Foulkes of Toulouse spoke of the faithful as sheep and the heretics as wolves. A man who lacked eyes, nose, and lips rose in the congregation and interrupted the preacher by asking, "Did you ever see a sheep bite a wolf like this?" "Well," the ready bishop answered, " Montfort is a good dog, to bite a wolf so hard." Count Raymond, who ought to have been at the head of his nobles, was kept idle for two years by the tricks and false promises of the pope and the legate. In 12 ii Montfort, with another force of forty-day crusaders, suddenly besieged Toulouse, which had more than once protested its orthodoxy, and had. even helped to take a neighboring town. When the citizens were required to 21/ renounce their prince and drive him out, they manfully refused, and made such a stout resistance that the besiegers drew off in the night, leaving their wounded behind. The city and the count were now excommunicated — it was not the first time — for their "persecution" of the Church's servants. It was the sheep biting the wolf again. PEDRO OF ARAGON. This siege was Montfort's only failure. Sometimes with large forces, some- times with small, he steadily increased his dominions, and his enemies dared not meet him in the field. It was a desultory but most destructive war, aggravated on his side by all the horrors which bigotry could suggest. Raymond in vain asked to be tried for his alleged offenses, and his wife's brother, Pedro II. of Aragon, who had a claim on some of his possessions, took up his cause. After fruitless negotiations at Rome and in Provence, this king, already called "the Catholic,'' and a vehement supporter of the Church, entered the field against the Church's TOUI,OUSE. armies, and with a thousand cavaliers aided Raymond's troops in the siege of Muret, near Toulouse. He was an accomplished prince, a poet, and a mirror of chivalry, renowned alike for his magnificence, his prowess, and his gallantries. When Montfort started in haste to relieve his garrison, a priest asked him if he 2i8 did not fear to meet so famous a soldier on such unequal terms. He showed a letter whicli his scouts had taken from the messenger who bore it. In it Pedro declared to a lady of Toulouse that he was coming to drive the French from her country for love of her. "Fear him!" cried the crusading general, who cared for no woman but his wife, and was as far from sensuality as the Cathari: "fear him who comes for a woman's sake to undo the work of God ? May God help me as much as I despise him ! " On September 13th, 1413, Montfort, having entered Muret from the rear, came forth with about a thousand horsemen to attack twice that number, not counting the numerous militia of Toulouse, who were laboring at the siege. Raymond, with whom discretion was always the better part of valor, would have waited for them in the intrenchments ; but the Spaniard insisted on charging in the style of a tournament, leaving the infantry behind. His courage was better than his wit, for, according to his son's testimony, he was so exhausted from recent dissipation that he could not stand that morning. As they galloped on without regard to rank or order, the French attacked them in their squadrons, carefully disposed. Two knights made for Pedro, who was soon killed. Ray- mond and the others then ran for their lives. The crusaders, after pursuing them and slaying many, turned back to the infantry, and made clean work of them. With a loss of less than twenty, Montfort' s men slew fifteen or twenty times their own number. None escaped but such as managed to cross the Garonne, and many were drowned in the attempt. The Catholics credited this slaughter to a procession and fast for the cause in Rome, two weeks before, RAYMOND DEPOSED. After this reverse Raymond submitted entirely to the legate, and went to England. . , The honesty of Italian priests at this era, and their success in dup- ing a victim, are lauded by a writer of the day in terms perhaps more accurate than he intended : " O pious fraud ! O fraudulent piety ! " Fraudulent as well as truculent piety was more to the taste of the thirteenth century than it is to ours ; it mattered not how base a trick might be, how many lies were told, what natural feelings of humanity, decency, loyalty, were outraged, so long as an end was attained. A council called by the legate in January, 121 5, deposed poor Raymond and installed Montfort in his place. The pope confirmed the count's sentence, alleging heresy— which meant no more than its toleration— as the cause ; he left the settlement of the lands to a general council, called the twelfth. This great assembly met at Rome November 1st. Raymond was there to plead his cause, with his son and his tributary counts of Foix and Comminges, who had been despoiled like himself; but they sought justice in vain. The council assigned to Montfort all his conquests, with the cities of Toulouse and Montauban, which he had not conquered. Any remaining lands were to be held by the ATTACK ON TOULOUSB REPULSED. 219 220 Churcli in trust for tlie younger Raymond, who was then eighteen, and handed over in time if he proved satisfactory. The wishes of the people of those realms, and their pathetic and even fanatical attachment to their legitimate sovereign, were not considered ; if a prince had no rights that popes and bishops need re- spect, what could be said for the great number of tradesmen and mechanics ? This decision might have been supposed to settle the matter ; but it had exactly the opposite effect. If the people of Provence and Languedoc had looked for justice in Italy, they were now disenchanted. The avarice and perfidy of the chief officials, not to mention their cruelty, were fast bringing the Church into contempt. In spite of so many disasters, national feeling was still strong ; all that was needed to call it forth was a leader. Nor was the leader wanting now. RISING OF YOUNG RAYMOND. Young Raymond, though but a boy, was more of a man than his father. Inheriting his father's pleasing traits, he had won the pity and regard of the elderly pope, who at parting had advised him "not to take what was another's, but to defend his own." This counsel he accepted for more than it was probably intended to be worth. The lands which the council had declared to be his, and which had not yet been involved in the war, lay east of the Rhone, and included the cities of Marseilles, Aries, Tarascon and Avignon. He now proceeded to amend the verdict of the council by putting himself in charge of these. The people " rose as one man to welcome their lord, and demanded to be led against the Frenchmen, reckless of the fulminations of the Church, and placing life and property at his disposal." Meantime another crusade had been harrowing the wretched districts of the west, and Montfort had quarreled with Arnold, who wished to be duke as well as archbishop of Narbonne. The champion of the Church now found him- self excommunicated — a strange contradiction, to which this confused period offers many parallels. Religion foiled his efforts to relieve Beaucoise, for the chaplain of the besieging army promised full pardon to those who worked on the intrench- ments, and many were glad to save their souls so easily. Indulgences and inter- dicts, the hopes and terrors which the Church could raise, were now at the com- mand of both parties, and equally effectual in the hands of either. SIEGE OF TOULOUSE. Hearing that Toulouse was treating with its former master, the earl attacked it, and after some fighting in the streets exacted a large sum as the price of its safety, disarmed the people, and destroyed the walls. But these precautions were in vain. Karly in 12 17 he had crossed the Rhone to attack young Raymond, when news reached him that the elder count, with troops from Spain, had been welcomed in his old capital, and that the nobles whom he had so often defeated 22r were gathering to support their deposed sovereign. In September he beleaguered the town, which he may have expected to fall an easy prey. But the spirit of the citizens had risen, as once before in extreme danger. They had the fate of Beziers in fresh remembrance, and knew that the inhuman order to kill all and spare none might be repeated in their case. Women as well as men worked by day and night to renew the fortifications, and the vehement remonstrances of the new pope had no effect. Perrin has a rather full account of this, which is here condensed. Accord- ing to him, Raymond would have been in straits if Montfort had come at once ; the delay saved him and the city. He appointed a provost to have charge of the 223 defenses, keep tlie ditclaes clear, repair breaches in the walls, and assign every man his post. , Those who desired vengeance for injuries done by Montfort, and they were numeroiis, came from all parts to help the count. The general's brother, Guy, led an attack, but was put to flight. The forty-day men, having had enough for that season, went home. THE CRUSADERS MEET DISASTERS. Montfort, after his arrival, was discouraged by furious sallies of the besieged. At a council, the legate Bertrand strove to hearten him with promises that the town would soon be taken and its inhabitants all killed, while any of the crusa- ders who fell should go direct to paradise. But one of the chief officers said, "You talk with great assurance, Lord Cardinal. If it be so, the war will not much benefit the general. For you and the rest of the prelates and clergy have stirred up all this strife, and would fain make more trouble." The legate took no notice of this affront, which it was not then convenient to resent ; and they determined not to assault the city, but to blockade it on the west side, which looks upon the Garonne. As part of the army was moving toward the river, they were attacked from within the walls. The count of Foix, coming up with reinforcements, drove the enemy to the water, so that they sprang pell-mell into their boats, and many were drowned : Montfort himself had a narrow escape. Raymond called an assembly, invited the people to thank God for this beginning of victory, and exhorted all to help prepare the engines to play against the castle outside the walls, which had been yielded to Montfort years before. They speedily got ready slings, crossbows, mangonels, and other devices for sending forth stones and arrows ; these they directed against the castle, to the great dismay of those within it. Bishop Foulkes of Toulouse, who loved to oppress his flock, assured the general that the legate had sent letters and messengers throughout the world, and that succors would soon come in such force that he might do whatever he wished. On this -the same cavalier who had berated the cardinal turned on the bishop and treated him to a yet more vigorous scolding. Cold weather coming on, the besiegers went into winter-quarters ; but Ray- mond raised a rampart about the city, and s^nt his son to beat up recruits. Both sides awaited the arrival of a new army of the cross, which came in the spring of I2i8 to the number of one hundred thousand. Montfort and the legate, "being resolved to make them earn their pardons," ordered an assault for the next day. The people of Toulouse, not waiting for this, sallied out in the night, surprised the camp, which was in disorder and poorly guarded, and covered the ground with corpses. Weary of slaughter, they returned in safety to thank God for His gracious help. Two of the newly arrived lords, not pleased with this reception, urged the general to make peace. The indignant legate rebuked them, saying that the ANCIENT WAR MACHINERY. 224 225 Churcli needed no help from men wlio favored heretics. Then a noble, one of those who loved to repress the insolence of the clergy, replied, "Sir Cardinal, why should you rob Count Raymond and his son of what belonged to them ? If I had known as much of these matters as I know now, I would have stayed at home." The old chroniclers whom Perrin followed were evidently full of national feeling, and recorded everything that made for the credit of their side and the- discredit of the enemy. If they have not improved the facts, Raymond showed far more spirit and ability during this nine months' siege than in his previous career, and Montfort vastly less. The general was sick at heart, and the legate blamed him for his want of success, ascribing it to indifference or inca- pacity. The hatred which the whole country, or what he had left of it, felt toward the earl, now caused a lack of supplies, so that "the camp was near starving, while the city felt no such want." But the end of this contest, and of all earthly things for the persecutor, was at hand. DEATH OF MONTFORT. Early on the morning of June 23d, 1218, Raymond's troops made a sally, utter- ing the war-cries of their several cities, and drove the foe before them. A messen- ger ran to the earl, who was at mass ; he said he would come when the service was over. Others followed, crying that they were undone, since the army was with- out a head ; but he answered that he would not stir, though he were slain on the spot, "till he had seen his Creator" — meaning the consecrated bread, raised on high by the ofl&ciating priest. But the chaplain, more prudent than his master, hurried the mass to an end, " clipping and curtailing it, for fear his ears should be clipped." After the earl had mounted, his horse was wounded by an arrow. Being in pain, the beast would not be controlled, and bore his rider too near the ramparts. There he was shot with a crossbow in the thigh, so that he lost much blood. He called for his brother, and wished to be taken to the rear. While they were talking, a stone from a mangonel, said to have been worked by a woman, struck him on the head and severed it from his body. On this the crusaders withdrew, their forty days having expired. During the confusion of their de parture, Raymond made another sally and a great slaughter. The remains of the army soon abandoned the castle and fled to Carcassonne. Montfort's end was differently estimated by the two parties. The Catho- lics called him a martyr, the bulwark of the faith, and even the new Maccabee. The latter title was most inappropriate, for Judas Maccabeus, as we have seen, was the defender of liberty and of his country. However sincere the motive in either case, there is a vast difference between him who stands for his altars and his fires, and those who go into other men's lands to meddle, to rob, and to repress by violence a faith which by right concerns only those who hold it. 326 Montfort's work now went to pieces, for his son and heir, Aylmer, or Amanri, Tiad little of his ability. The counts of Foix and Comminges recovered most of the lands that had been wrested from them. Foix was returning from Lauragues with prisoners and spoil when he was pursued by French troops, who claimed to fight "for Heaven and the Church." Young Raymond came to his aid and shouted : " We fight against thieves who use the Church for a cloak. They have ^stolen enough ; let us make them vomit it up, and pay off old scores." They ■charged, and cut the foe to pieces. Captain Segun, " an eminent robber," was laken and hanged on a tree. Aylmer besieged Marmande, with little success at first, for the defenders were brave, and the ditches filled up with corpses. Prince Louis of France came in 1 2 1 9 with thirty earls and a great force. The town, which had but five thousand inhabitants, surrendered on his promise that all lives should be spared. This displeased Aylmer, who called the prelates together and said that these people had killed his father, and he wanted blood for blood. "The bishops, after their manner, agreed that heretics and rebels were unworthy to live. Aylmer brought his troops within the walls, and charged them to kill :all. It was done ; men, women, and children perished in an indiscriminate slaugh- ter like that of Beziers. Louis was off"ended, but not beyond forgiveness, as we shall see. On his way home he summoned Toulouse to surrender, but it declined. During the next few years Aylmer, the pope, and a new legate called in vain for more crusaders, while the national party gathered strength. Protestant- ism raised its head again ; its fugitives came out of their hiding-places, its mis- sionaries resumed their old activity, and its bishops defied those of the Church. Yet when the elder Raymond died at Toulouse, in August, 1222, his body was -denied burial. Though no heretic, he had not been diligent enough in repressing heresy, and such crimes the Church never forgave. His son, a quarter of a century later, presented to the pope abundant evidence of the dead man's religious character, but in vain. His bones long lay above ground, "the :sport of rats," in the building of the Hospitallers, whom he had endowed ; and iis skiill was preserved for near five hundred years. CRUSADE OF LOUIS Vm. Aylmer, unable to maintain his position, made repeated offers of all his claims to Philip Augustus of France. That king died in 1223, and was succeeded by his son, Louis VIII., who in February, 1324, accepted the cession. He pre- pared a new crusade, and only disagreement over the terms supposed to be agreed on with the pope, who tried one of the usual tricks, saved the count from prob- able destruction. Unable to cope with the power of France, Raymond VII. met the bishops at Montpellier on June 2d, 1224, and promised to support the Church, punish Protestants, and do whatever else was asked of him. But this was not enough ; he had been a rebel and was not to be trusted. The pope wrote to p •Li -3 I L «^* J. 1^ K;.-x«: -* s* ' i^J •Hf'^ ^»*«'-ti DEATH OF MONTFORT AT SIEGE; OF TOULOUSE- 227 228 Louis that I/anguedoc was "a land of iron and brass, from whicli the rust could be removed by fire only." The customary shuffling, juggling, and over- reaching went on, to the disgust of sundry delegates at the council of Bourges, who openly protested against the greed of the papal court. In 1226 the king put his crusade in motion, having forced his own terms on the pope. Like most monarchs, he was generally on his guard with the clergy- He was to stay as long as he saw fit, with his nobles and men-at-arms, thus securing far more continuous and efiicient work than had been possible on the forty days' plan. He was to receive a tenth of all Church funds for his ex- penses ; the abbots and other dignitaries protested against this, but he would accept no less. The crusade was thus much less popular with the clergy than among the laity. "The legate was busy dismissing the boys, women, old men, paupers, and cripples, who had assumed the cross. These he forced to swear as to the amount of money they possessed ; of this he took the greater part, and let them go after granting them absolution from the vow — an indirect way of selling indulgences which became habitual and produced large sums. Louis drove a thriving trade of the same kind with a higher class of crusaders^ by accepting heavy payments from those who owed him service and were not ambitious of the glory or the perils of the expedition." The army, said to comprise no less than fifty thousand cavalry and infantry in proportion, gathered at Bourges in May, 1226. This formidable array filled the land with terror, and most of the cities, including Albi, sent to notify Louis of their submission. But Avignon, which was among the number, plucked up a spirit at the last moment, closed its gates, and refused to admit the king, say- ing that he could pass around it. It contained many Waldenses, who feared to trust themselves in the power of the crusaders. The army besieged it through the whole summer, and suffered much from insufficient food and succeeding pestilence ; for Raymond was active, wasting the adjoining lands and attacking any who set forth for forage. If Avignon could have held out a little longer, it would have saved its walls and the ransom which was exacted on its surrender. It also agreed, of course, to suppress heresy, and received a bishop who was likely to carry out this provision. Within a week after this a freshet occurred, and the site of the royal camp was under water. Passing to the west, Louis began the siege of Toulouse, but soon abandoned it, and died on the way home, in November. All that had been accomplished by these vast preparations was the leaving of various garrisons, and a royal gov- ernor, De Beaujeau, who in 1227 ^0°^ ^ castle, put the garrison to the sword, and burned a deacon and some other Christians. SUBMISSION OF RAYMOND VIL After two years more of desultory warfare, the spirit of Raymond, or his power of resistance, was exhausted. He went to Paris, made peace with young r IBS' jJ'iW^'^^^ '^^^j ^^■.\^-A y,- -ifK SIEGE OF AVIGNON. 229 230 Louis IX., and his mother the regent, did public penance, and was formally reconciled to the Church. As the old historian of Languedue remarks, " It was a lamentable sight to see so brave a man, who had stood out so long against so many, come barefooted and half-dressed to the altar, in presence of two cardinals, one the legate to France, the other to England. But this was not all the ignomini- ous penance inflicted on him ; for there were many articles and conditions in that treaty, any one of which should have been sufficient for his ransom if the king of France had taken him fighting in the field against him." It is needless to detail the eighteen articles of this treaty, which are given in full by Perrin. One of them required him to spend five years at Rhodes or in the Holy Land, and "to fight against the Turks and Saracens ;" this he never fulfilled. But he was confined in Paris for some time, and obliged to sign a de- cree against the persons and estates of Protestants. They were to be sought out by the Inquisition, their lives taken, their goods confiscated, their houses demolished. As Mr. Lea observes, "It was a war between the two opposing principles of persecution and tolerance, and persecution was victorious." A marriage was patched up between Raymond's daughter and a brother of Louis IX., two children of eight years old. After securities had been taken, the count was granted a life-interest in some of his former territories. The cities and castles were dismantled, and he was to maintain peace on the Church's terms. Amnesty was proclaimed to all but heretics, and his old comrades, who had with- stood Montfort, the legate, and the pope, might hope to escape beggary by becom- ing persecutors. THE COUNT OF FOIX. This turn of affairs was far from pleasing to the Albigenses ; but all that remained for them was the choice between hiding-places, apostacy, and martyr- dom. The count of Foix, an old and childless hero, was minded to resist to the last, and met Raymond's persuasions by saying that he could not renounce his party or his faith, but would face the next crusade and leave the event to God. He yielded at last to the entreaties of his subjects, who feared to be exterminated and longed for peace. The noble and pathetic speech in which he announced to the legate his reluctant submission is as far as possible from a recantation, or from the self-abasement of his late feudal superiors, at whom he glanced with manly scorn : "I have long since bid adieu to rhetoric, being used to plead my cause by the point of sword and spear. My cousin the Count of Toulouse has earned my thanks by procuring from our enemies a hearing, which they would never grant till now ; and he desires us to desist from opposing and making head against those who would do us mischief, assuring us that the king of France will gov- ern according to justice. It was ever my desire to maintain and preserve my liberty. Our country owes homage to the Count of Toulouse for making it an MASSACRE OF THE VAUDOIS. 231 232 earldom, but it owns no other master than myself. As to the pope, I have never oflfended him, for, as a prince, he has demanded nothing of me in which I have not obeyed him." (Roger's ideas were evidently not clear on this topic.) "He has no call to meddle with my religion, since in that every one ought to be free and to use his own pleasure. My father did always recommend. to me this liberty, so that, continuing in this state and posture, I might be able to look up with confidence when the heavens were dissolved, fearing nothing. This alone it is that troubles me. ... It is not fear that makes me stoop to your desires, and con- strains me to humble my will so far as coward-like to truckle to your purpose ; but being moved by benign and generous dread of the misery of my subjects and the ruin of my country, and wishing not to be counted factious, opinionated, and the firebrand and incendiary of France, it is thus I yield in this extremity. Otherwise I would have stood as a wall, and proof against all assaults of ene- mies. I therefore give you a pledge of friendship, for the sake of general peace. Take my castles, till such time as I have made the submission you require." In 1240 Trancavel, a natural son of Roger of Beziers, headed a rising against oppression, besieged Carcassonne, and took one of its suburbs. Anxious to avenge his father, who was thought to have been poisoned there by his cap- tors in 1 209, he slew thirty priests who had been promised their lives. In 1242 a band of eleven inquisitors, going cheerfully about the country on their bloody errand, were set upon and murdered at Avignonet. The Catharan stronghold of Montsigno, perched on a cliff among the mountains, held out till 1244, when the difficult approaches to it were betrayed by shepherds, and the outworks taken in the night. A huge funeral pile was built, and two hundred and five of the "Perfect," both men and women, refusing to recant, were thrown into the flames. Raymond, who had been forced into the position of a persecutor, be- came such sincerely in his last years: in 1249 ^^ ordered eighty persons, who had acknowledged their belief, to be burned. Shortly after this, he died, and was succeeded by his son-in-law, the French Alphonse, who was entirely accept- able at Rome, and needed no urging to punish heretics. Among his first ex- penses were a large grant to support the Inquisition and purchase wood for its burnings. Protestantism had now more than ever to hide its head. Some of its votaries fled to Lombardy, some recanted, and many perished. For a hundred years the Inquisition had its way, completing the evil work which the crusaders had begun. As always and everywhere, the result of its efforts was to crush in- telligence, to corrupt and weaken the national character, to impoverish and ruin the country. Yet some embers of the old free faith lurked amid the ashes, and in the sixteenth century the Reformation was eagerly received through all that war-harried and blood-soaked region. CHAPTER XV. WICLIF AND THE LOLLARDS. NGLAND, surrounded by the seas, escaped some of the evils whicli afflicted the continent ; for instance, the Inquisition never found a lodgment there. Its people were marked by a sturdy spirit and a love of liberty, which often showed themselves in con- tempt for the corrupt lives of the clergy and opposition to the greedy exactions of Rome. In the fourteenth century a great man arose to give voice to these feelings, and reasons why they should go further than they did. If Wiclif's immediate results were small, if his fame is still less than it ought to be, it is because he was bom too He was a reformer in an age that sorely needed reforms but was not ready for them, a Protestant when ST/- protests were little understood, a Puritan two hundred '*' years before Puritanism took a name and became a recognized power in the world. "Orthography was optional" in those days, and Wiclif's name has been spelt in as many different ways- as that of Shakespeare. It is not the lettering of his name, but his opinions, his writings, and their influence, that made an era in religious history. His spirit was mainly practical and political, for which reason some severe theologians, as Mr. Milner, have found in him "not much that deserves the peculiar attention of godly persons," and " could not con- scientiously join with the popular cry in ranking him among the highest worthies of the Church." He retained a few notions now generally discarded, such as a partial belief in purgatory, so that rigid Protestants find him not quite up to their standard. He thought little — perhaps too little — of some points of order and discipline still retained by many, and therefore he does not satisfy thoroughgoing churchmen. But if we allow for the fact that he died a hundred years before Luther was born, we shall find it remarkable enough that he anticipated in most matters not only the opinions of the men who changed the religion of half Europe, but those which prevail to-day. (233) 234 Jolin Wiclif was bom in Yorkshire about 1324, and became famous at the University of Oxford for learning, and for qualities then somewhat less highly esteemed, eloquence and courage. His first book, "The Last Age of the Church," appeared in 1356, and attacked the covetousness of the papal court. Nine years later, when Urban V. demanded the arrears of a large tribute which King John had promised to the pope in 1213, but which had not been paid in a long time, Edward III. referred the question to Parliament, and it was much disputed, many of the clergy taking the pope's side : Wiclif now dis- tinguished himself by maintaining that no monarch could pledge the revenues of England without consent of Parliament. He fully shared the general dis- gust felt toward the begging friars. He disapproved the wealth and temporal power gained by the Church, and held that priests should be allowed to marry like other men. The universal practice of confessing to them he deemed unne- cessary Growing bolder as his thoughts traveled further, he rejected the pope's supremacy as the source of all the Church's evils, and the cause of mixing up carnal and spiritual things in hopeless confusion. He re- garded excommunications and interdicts as mere im- pertinent abuses — not powers liable to be abu.sed, but usurpations and wrongs in idea and in fact. As for pardons and indulgences, he called them "a subtle mer- chandise of anti christian clerks, whereby they magnified their own fictitious power, and, instead of caus- ing men to dread sin, encouraged them to wallow therein like pigs." In short, he denied the claims and despised the practices which Protestants reject to-day, but which prevailed in his time and long after. Scripture was in his view the only exponent of divine truth, and -reason its only interpreter. These principles he diligently taught in his writings, in his preaching at Oxford, Lutterworth, and London, and through missionaries or "poor priests," whom he sent out to preach the gospel, in its apostolic simplicity and purity, throughout England. In his later years he translated the New Testament and WICLIF. 235 most books of the Old : this version was completed by a friend, and published not long after his death. These bold efforts at reform made him a marked man, whose downfall would be welcome to many ; and his denial of transubstantiation could not but offend most. In any other country his life would probably have been sacrificed. Indeed, it is still a marvel that he escaped a violent death ; but England, as we have seen, was then unused to trials for heresy, and he had a powerful pro- tector in "old John of Gaunt, time-honored Lancaster." This famous duke stood by him when, by the pope's order, he appeared before the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of London, in 1377, to answer to certain charges. The next year, when he was dangerously ill at Oxford, a committee of the notorious begging monks, or mendicants, entered his room and asked him to purge his conscience by taking back his slanders upon their order before he died: on this he raised himself in bed, and with blazing eyes cried out, "I shall not die, but live, and declare the evil deeds of the friars ! " Other charges were brought against him, and referred by the bishops to the university, which took no action of importance ; but in 1382 the storm raised by his opinions about the mass caused his banishment from Oxford. In 1384 he was summoned to Rome ; but he did not go, and died peacefully in his bed on the last day of that year. The Council of Constance, while it was consider- ing the case of his disciple Huss, in 1415, took an impotent revenge on Wiclif by ordering his bones to be dug, up and burned, and this sentence was carried out in 1428. His ashes were cast into a stream called the Swift, which flows into the river Avon. Thence, as Luther said, they passed into the Severn, and from the Severn to the ocean ; and so his doctrine was to be spread abroad through all lands. SPREAD OF LOLLARDRY. Wiclif s teachings took strong hold at Oxford and throughout England; it was claimed that every other man you met was a Lollard, as his followers were called. "Women as well as men became the preachers of the new sect. Lol- lardry had its own schools, its own books ; its pamphlets were passed everywhere from hand to hand." The clergy were freely satirized, and a petition sent to Parliament in 1395, reflecting severely on the corruptions of the Church, and claiming that its income, beyond what was necessary for working purposes, would enable the king to endow a hundred hospitals, and to support fifteen hundred knights and six thousand squires. This close estimate was adopted by a Parliament of the next reign, though the proposed confiscation was not carried out till that of Henry VIII. The first attempts at persecution only raised the spirit of the Lollards, for their cause was more popular than that of their opponents. '* Few sheriffs would arrest on the mere warrant of an ecclesiastical officer, and no royal court •i:ts l-l ^1 21,6 237 would issue the writ 'for tlie burning of a heretic' on a bishop's requisi- tion." They grew yet bolder with this impunity, and " delighted in outraging the religious feeling of their day. One Lollard gentleman took home the sacramental wafer, and lunched on it with wine and oysters. Another flung some images of the saints into his cellar. The preachers stirred up riots by the violence of their sermons against the friars." The new sect had its own way for a time in London, and was strong at Lincoln, Salisbury, and Worcester. When Henry IV. came to the throne in 1399, he found it expedient to secure the support of the clergy by putting down their enemies. This king was the son of John of Gaunt, Wiclif's old protector ; but Archbishop Arundel made it plain to him, that "to make his throne secure, he must conciliate the Church and sacrifice the Lollards." The first victim was William Sautre or Sawtrey, a preacher of London. On February 12th, 1401, he was accused by Arundel of having once renounced his errors and afterwards returned to them. The eight charges against him contain chiefly these dangerous doctrines : that he would not worship the cross, but only Christ who suffered on it ; that a vow to go on pilgrimage was not binding, but the expenses of the intended journey might be given to the poor: "that every priest and deacon is more bound to preach the word of God than to say the canonical hours ;" and that the conse- crated bread does not cease to be bread. Confessing these crimes, especially the last named, and refusing to change his opinion, he was handed over to the king and by him to the sheriffs, with command that he "be put into the fire and there really burned, to the great horror of his offense aud the manifest example of other Christians." The sentence was carried out soon after; and this was the first fire kindled in England for a Protestant. The next martyr, so far as we are informed, was John Badby, a plain lay- man. In March, 1409, he was condemned, like Sautre, for accepting the evi- dence of his senses about the bread. They led him to Smithfield, a suburb famous long after as the scene of similar atrocities, put him in an empty barrel, chained him to a stake, and piled dry wood about him. The king's eldest son, who chanced to be present, urged him to renounce his errors and save his life ; but he would not. When he felt the flames, he called on God for mercy : the prince, misunderstanding him, ordered the fire to be put out, and promised him a pension if he would recant. Rejecting this, he was again put in the barrel, and the torch again applied. He was a long time dying, but bore his torments with great fortitude. William Thorpe, a preacher of the new doctrines, has left a long account of his examination by the archbishop, which occurred in 1407 ; but there is no record of his execution. Probably he died in prison. 238 LORD COBHAM. The most famous of all these victims was Sir Jolin Oldcastle, who by mar- riage became Lord Cobham. A man of war and of affairs, he stood high in the favor of king and prince, though known as the captain of the Lollards. Their preachers were openly entertained at his houses in London and in Wales ; his main seat. Cowling Castle, near Rochester in Kent, was their continual resort ; and he was the firmest adherent of their doctrines. When the House of Com- mons in 1404 and 1410 urged the king to meet his needs by confiscating the abbey lands, Cobham was probably their moving spirit, for the clergy charged him with "arming the hands of laymen for the spoil of the Church." His char- acter was above reproach ; his enemies owned that his heresies were concealed WICLIF'S CHURCH. "under a veil of holiness." In 1413 the Convocation accused him as "the prin- cipal receiver, favorer, protector, and defender" of the sect, and alleged that he had sent out their missionaries and attacked or threatened their opponents. The bishops demanded his trial : Henry V., who had come to the throne in this year, was the same prince who had cast Badby back into the flames, but in his friend's case he asked for delay, and promised to undertake his conversion in person. Cobham was not to be convinced, and in September he was arrested and confined in the Tower of London. The language he used concerning the pope was indeed so violent as might easily offend the king beyond forgiveness : Foxe says that, hearing it, Henry "would talk no longer with him, but gave him up to the malice of his enemies." 239 At his first examination, he handed in a paper wherein the sacrament of the altar, penances, images, and pilgrimages were moderately and prudently- treated of. On this he wished to rest his case, though the archbishop told him other points should be inquired into. A few days later his opinion was asked as to four articles which had been sent to him in prison. He was again offered absokition if he would submit : instead of doing this, he knelt, raised his hands and eyes, and confessed the sins of his youth. Then rising and turning to the audience, he exclaimed in a loud voice, " See, good people ; these men never yet cursed me for breaking God's commandments, but for their own laws and tradi- tions they handle me and others most cruelly. And therefore both they and their laws, according to God's promise, shall be utterly destroyed." This unpromising beginning produced some confusion in the court. Order being restored, a long discussion ensued, in which the prisoner showed a good degree of knowledge and acuteness. Having declared that he believed all the laws of God, all the contents of the Bible, and all that the Lord wished him to believe, he was asked whether any material bread remained after the words of consecration were pronounced. " The Scriptures," he replied, " make no mention of material bread. In the sacrament there are both Christ's body and the bread : the bread is the thing we see with our eyes, but Christ's body is hid, and to be seen only by faith." On this they all cried out, "It is heresy." Said Cobham, " St. Paul was as wise as you, I am sure, and he called it bread in his epistle to the Corinthians. 'The bread that we break,' said he, 'is it not the partaking of the body of Christ ? ' Lo, he calls it bread, and not Christ's body, but a means whereby we receive His body." Being asked whether he would worship the cross on which the Lord died, he inquired where it was. "Suppose it to be here," the friar answered. "This is a wise man," said Cobham, "to ask me such a question, when he knows not where the thing is. But how should I worship it ? " "Give it such worship," one of them answered, "as St. Paul speaks of, ' God forbid that I should glory save in the cross' " — a lanie and stupid explanation, which Cobham thought fit to brush aside with contempt. Spreading his arms wide, he said, " This is a cross, and better than your cross of wood, for God made this, and man the other ; yet I will not seek to have it worshipped." "Sir," said the Bishop of London, "you know that Christ died on a material cross." "Yes," he replied, "audi know also that our salvation came not by the material cross, but by Him who died thereon. And I know too that St. Paul rejoiced not in the cross itself, but in Christ's sufierings and death, and suffered himself for the same truth." This was enough ; anxious to prove that " the letter kills," the prelates condemned Lord Cobham as a heretic, and sent him back to the Tower. But as " a man of integrity, dearly beloved by the king," his execution was delayed, and one night in November he found means to escape. While in hiding he sent 340 241 messages to his brethren : secret meetings were held, and a revolt on a large- scale organized. Few will blame the Lollards for conspiring to defend their faith ; but rebellion against the lawful king, especially on merely religious grounds, was seldom successful in England. The rising was put down in St.. Giles' Fields, January 6th, 14 14. This broke the power of LoUardry, and CROUCH OAK ADDLE6T0NE, UNDER. WHICH WICMF PREACHED. henceforth trials and executions were frequent. Near forty, including Sir Roger Acton, a knight, and Beverley, a preacher, were promptly hanged or burned near the spot where they were taken in attiis. Had they entered. London and effected a junction with their friends there, the result might have 242 been different ; but tbe leaders were taken one by one, and all furtlier attempt at resistance prevented. Cobbam had again escaped, and lived as an outlaw for near four years longer. In December, 141 7, be was caugbt on tbe Welsb border, sent to London by Lord Powis, dragged on a burdle, "witb insult and barbarity," to St. Giles' Fields, and tbere bung in cbains over a slow fire. In 1424 William White, a godly man and eminent preacher, was burned at Norwich, and with him or soon after, two others, Abraham of Colchester and John Waddon. Many others suffered ; and Lollardry survived only " in scattered and secret groups, whose sole bond was a common loyalty to the Bible and a common spirit of revolt against the religion of their day." They were still objects of persecution in the middle of the fifteenth century ; but the cause of free conscience and public reform was practically lost, and the good work had to be all done over again a hundred years later. fU._ I I'-^.i.L CHAPTER XVI. BOHEMIA AND JOHN HUSS. HE doctrines of Wiclif spread less widely, and had , far less visible effect, in England than in another and distant land, where the soil was better pre- pared to receive them. Bohemia, which is now the northwestern province of the Austrian empire, is almost in the middle of the map of Europe ; military writers have called it the key of that continent, and many important battles have been fought within its borders. Its natives, though surrounded by Germans, are not of German stock, but Czechs, a branch of the great Slavonic race ; their ancestors came from the east in the fifth century of our era. When they received Christianity, which was not till four or five hundred years later, it was not from Rome, but from the Greek Church. Two missionaries, Methodius and Cyril, were sent from Constantinople in the year 862, and labored with success in Moravia, which adjoins Bohemia on the east and was settled by the same tribe. They preached and held ser- vices in the tongue of the people — whereas Latin was always and everywhere the language of the Roman Church : they also translated the Scriptures into Czech. In 871 Borzivoy, duke of Bohemia, visited Moravia, listened to the new teachings, and was baptized with his wife Ludmilla. Within the next hundred years the country was gradually Christianized. The people of that region were therefore trained in the usages of the East- ern Church, which in three important points differed from those of the Western. Their prayer-books and services were in their own language ; their priests were allowed to marry ; and they received the communion in both kinds, bread and wine — whereas Rome denied the cup to the laity. The last difference was the one on which both sides laid such stress as to cause a fierce persecution and a bloody war in the fifteenth century. The popes, never content to permit any departure from the uniformity of their ritual and discipline, made various efforts to suppress these irregularities, (243) 244 Gregory VII. declared in 1079 tliat it was "the pleasure of Almighty Gofi that divine worship should be held in a private [or dead or unknown] language, though all do not understand it." And he gave this curious reason : "for if the singing were general and loud, the service might easily fall into contempt." The ideas which govern public religious services in our day are the exact opposite of this. Congregational singing, which is now desired and cultivated almost everywhere, was then a thing to be dreaded and avoided. But it was the usual policy of Rome to let the clergy do all, and keep the people mere spectators. CHAMBER IN I<" W (A o 2. -S 247 Germans wished to condemn them, and carried their point. The Bohemians defended them in part only, bu.t said that others did not fairly represent the Englishman's views. Five years later these proceedings were repeated, and both parties appealed to King Wenzel or Wenceslaus, who decided in favor of his own countrymen. This brought matters to a crisis. The Germans would have no' more to do with Prague, and founded new schools at Leipsic and Krfurt. John Huss now came more than ever to the front. This famous reformer and martyr was born July 6th, 1373, amd took his second name, after the fash- ion of the time, from his native village of Hussinecz. His parents were poor but respectable people, and his main desire was to get an education. He managed to enter the Uni- versity at sixteen, and made his way through it, as many great men hav e done since in many lands, by means ot nis own . charity of others. His abilities were solid, his application steady, and his life so blame- less that his enemies could say nothing against it ; but in those days a man's opinions were considered far more important than his character. We, who have reversed this way of judging, can approve both his character and his opinions, and remember him with honor as a great light shining in a dark place. He took his degrees of B. A. and M. A. in 1393, and 1396, was ordained, became a tutor in the college, minister of the Bethlehem chapel, and won much fame as a preacher. In 1 402 he was. made rector of the University. The king was his friend; his feet seemed firmly planted on the THE I,OI« p n 2.sr 252 assemblage, whatever else it did or left undone, is chiefly famous for the j udicial murder of its best and best-known man — of the man, at least whose memory is now cherished beyond any other of that period, who stood, in advance of all others, for the truest thoughts and purest cause of his time. Ask any schoolboy who has dipped far enough into history, or any student familiar with the later middle ages, " What did the Council of Constance do ? For what is it chiefly remem- bered ? ' ' He will answer, " For breaking a safe-conduct and burning John Huss." The Emperor Sigismund, brother of King Wenzel, cited Huss to appear before the council. To go was to take his life in his hand, and a selfishly prudent man might have disobeyed the summons. Being what he was, he had no choice, and no desire other than to give his testimony and to abide the result. He doubtless expected from the professed reformers at Constance more sympathy than he found ; but he was warned by friends, and knew at least the possibility of the fate before him. By papers left in Bohemia he indicated this fear, disposed of his little property, and expressed remorse for trifling sins of his youth, such as losing his temper at chess before he was ordained — the heaviest offenses his con- science could acknowledge. Before starting he took such precautions as he could. He procured a certificate of his orthodoxy, strange to say, from the grand inquis- itor of Bohemia, and saw the archbishop and papal legate, who said he knew nothing against Huss except his being under excommunication. He did not wait for the emperor's safe-conduct, but received it later ; it was in these words : THE SAFE-CONDUCT. " We have taken the honorable Master John Huss under the protection and guardianship of ourselves and of the Holy Empire. We enjoin on you [t. e., all imperial officers] to allow him to pass, to stop, to remain, and to return, freel}- and without hindrance ; and you will, as in duty bound, provide for him and his, whenever it shall be needed, secure and safe conduct, to the honor and dig- nity of our majesty." The later treatment of this paper and its bearer showed what the faith of kings is sometimes worth. He began his journey October nth, 1414, with three noblemen, his friends and protectors, and an escort of some thirty horsemen. Everywhere he put up notices that he was going to Constance to defend his faith against any who should attack it. The bishop of lyubeck, who went over the road the day before, spread the false tidings that "Huss was being carried in chains" to the council, and urged the people not to look at him, for he could read their thoughts. Multi- tudes came to stare at the great heretic ; but he was treated with respect and courtesy at every stopping-place, and disputed freely with priests and magistrates. He reached Constance November 2d, when the council had not opened. Pope John and his cardinals, who had it all their own way at that time, suspended his excommunication, and let him go where he pleased. Deceived 253 by these civilities, he celebrated the communion at his lodgings, and meditated a sermon to the clergy, which should expose their vices and attack the whole established order of the Church. The latter would have been a scandal not to be allowed even in thought ; the former was forbidden, but he replied that he had a right to consecrate and administer the elements, and meant to do it. On November 28th he was summoned before the cardinals, and after a slight examination was detained and kept under guard. This was at the instigation of two of his bitterest enemies, Stephen Palecz, a former friend and associate in the university of Prague, and Michael Deutschbrod, called de Cansis, a priest who had absconded with moneys entrusted to him by King Wenzel for mining opera- tions, and with the proceeds of his theft had bought an interest in the trade of indulgences. These worthies now came to Huss, and told him that they had him and meant to hold him. Another conspirator was Tiera, who had brought the in- dulgences to Prague. THE SAFE-CONDUCT DISREGARDED. The reformer's friends protested against his arrest, but to no purpose. The emperor, who arrived on Chrismas day, was indignant, ordered his release, and threatened to withdraw his protection from the council. But the cardinals said they would break up the council if the heretic was let loose. Under this prospect of a collision between Church and state, and of heavy penalties against himself, Sigismund yielded, breaking his plighted word and losing his honor. All his later career was of a piece with this beginning ; he was a faithless and dishonest monarch. The doctrine that no faith was to be kept with heretics, and that one plausibly accused of heresy was to be counted guilty, though then new in Germany, was long familiar in the Latin countries, and even regarded as a prin- ciple of the canon or Church law. The fact has often been denied of late, but this denial proves only that our modern views of triith and duty are happily dif- ferent from those of the Middle Ages. On this ground the emperor excused himself, June 7th, 1415: "Many say that we cannot under the law protect a heretic or one suspected of heresy." In answer to indignant protests fro'm the nobles of Bohemia and Moravia, he strove to excuse himself by claiming, in effect, that in such matters civil authorities and secular conscience must give way to the Church. " On this account," he wrote, "we even left Constance till they declared to us that if we would not allow justice to be done, they knew not what business they had to be there. Then we con- cluded that we could do nothing, not even speak of the affair." The council itself used the plainest possible language in a decree passed September 23d, 1415, declaring that "whatever safe-conduct may be given by emperor, king, or prince to heretics or persons accused of heresy, it cannot and ought not to cause any harm to the Catholic faith or hindrance to the Church's jurisdiction ; but that it is allowable, in spite of the safe-conduct, for any competent 254 ecclesiastical judge to inquire into the errors of such persons, and to punish them as they deserve if they will not recant, even though they come to the place of judg- ment trusting to the safe-conduct^ and would not have come otherwise^ These eminent guides of the blind can hardly have been acquainted with St. Paul's severe sentence (Romans iii. 8) on those who say, " Let us do evil that good may come." Another precious decree of this council justifies the emperor for breaking his word, since ''John Huss had by his heretical opinions utterly forfeited all j:,utterworth church. right and privilege, and no faith whatever, either by natural, human, or divine right, ought to be kept with him to the prejudice of the Catholic faith." It goes on to say that all true Christians must cease to complain of the acts of the coun- cil toward Huss, and that any who continue grumbling will be punished as ene- mies of the Church and traitors to the emperor. It would perhaps be too much to claim that religious bodies have in our time neither will nor power thus to pervert men's consciences and play ducks and drakes with right and wrong; but happily they can no longer (unless in Russia) call in the state to enforce their decrees with chains and fagots. CHAPTER XVII. THE MARTYRS OF CONSTANCE. ROM December 6th to March 24th, Huss was kept in a cell of the Dominican convent Here he was kindly treated, and allowed the use of pen, ink, and paper, but not of books. Hoping to intercept some of the letters he sent out secretly, one of his chief foes, Michael de Cansis, spent much time about the gate, with the remark, " By God's grace, we shall burn this heretic who has cost me so many florins." This same Michael drew up, or lent his name to, the articles of accusation against the prisoner. The chief crimes charged were these : asserting that the bread in the eucharist remained bread after its consecration ; denying the power of the keys and the validity of the sacraments when administered by wicked priests ; " holding that the Church should have no temporal possessions ; disre- garding excommunication ; granting the cup to the laity ; defending the forty-five condemned articles of Wiclif ; exciting the people against the clergy, so that if he were allowed to return to Prague there would be a persecution such as had not been seen since the days of Constantine." His former friend, Palecz, made a list of forty-two alleged errors found in his writings : these he answered at length. He was several times examined in his cell, and replied to all questions mildly and moderately, denying much that was imputed to him. His opinions were not in all respects so advanced as those of later reformers. But his fate was determined on beforehand ; he was con- demned, as his friends loudly insisted, on the testimony of his mortal foes, and largely on grounds foreign to the real issue between him and the pope. On March 24th he was transferred to the castle of Gottlieben, across the Rhine. Here he soon had for a fellow-prisoner John XXIII., who, seeing mat- ters going against him at the council, fled, but was caught and carried back. The pope, who was shortly condemned for the very vices and corruptions which (255) --^1 ' ^=>^~~ SOTI\1K^^ '"^^SifHtW^WII >7 about; among the p^ ^^ '*'\^^^^^^^. ^^'^lUlr 11' clergy were many vicars of Bray , whose principle was to hold their places ; and a large majority of priests and people still at heart preferred the old ways. Of tlie Reformers such as were at liberty, and had prudence and cash to spare, fled to their friends on the continent : Geneva and Germany welcomed some noted exiles, who were to be useful in the next reign. Those who remained set their lips together and awaitpd what was to come. Early in 1555 began a series of WILUAM TYNDALE 325 exhibitions such as England had not seen before, and was never to see again. Let it be remembered that there was no complication of foreign war or domestic rebellion. One or two risings had been easily put down, the few traitors were executed or outlawed. In a time of profound peace, surrounded by a submissive and loyal people, the queen began to commit her subjects to the flames for a mere difference of religious forms, professions, and opinions. In her mother's country, Spain, this would have been a matter of course : in Italy, France, or parts of Germany, it might not have occasioned much com- ment : in England it was an unusual proceeding, and a grave mistake. It was her own work, first and chiefly. Her new archbishop, Pole, a cardinal and pope's legate, agreed to it with reluctance. Of course she found spirits like her own, to attend to the details of judicial murder. Bonner, bishop of London, was the chief assistant-butcher: Gardiner of Lincoln, then lord chancellor, helped at first to sharpen the stakes and gather fagots : both passed for learned and able men. . Edward's bishops, or most of them, had been deposed, and were now to be tried as by fire. It was a bad day for England, but worst of all for the persecutors and for their cause, that sought to stand on innocent blood. TRIAL OF THE BISHOPS. It took but a year to undo what had been done under Henry and Edward, to unite the realm — or at least the government — to Rome, more closely than it had ever been united before, and to pass the requisite laws against heresy and heretics. In April, 1554, Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer were taken from the Tower to Oxford, and there examined at length by certain theologians of the old school. The dispute, as with Cobham and the other Lollards, turned chiefly on the Real Presence in the mass or communion. All engaged in it were learned men, and the three Reformers were among the ablest in England. Latimer, being unduly urged, replied, "No. I pray you, be good to an old man. If it please God, you may come to be as old as I am." But respect for age or venera- ble character was not a trait of the persecutors. As to the doctrine of the eucharist, he said that Christ "gave not His body to be thus received; He gave the sacrament to the mouth. His body to the mind." It is to be noted that all the trials were mainly on this point : to deny tran- substantiation was the unpardonable sin. The princess Elizabeth, half-sister to Mary and afterwards queen, being at this time in confinement and under grave suspicion on political as well as religious grounds, and much badgered by divines who sought to get evidence against her from her own mouth, is said to have given this prudent and admirable answer : " He was the Word that spake it : He took the bread and brake it ; And what that Word did make it I do believe and take it." 3^6 The lines were probably written by Dr. Donne, who was born' some years after Elizabeth's acces- sion ; but they doubtless give the substance of her reply to the inquisitors. When the three bishops were condemned, Cranmer arose and said. From this your sentejice I appeal to the just judg- ment of God Almighty, trusting to be present with Him in heaven, for whose presence at the altar I am thus con- demned." Ridley came next; "Though I be not of your company, yet I doubt not that my name is written in another place, whither this sent- ence will send us sooner than in the course of nature we should have gone." Latimer added, I I I CATHBDRAt, OF WORMS. heartily, that He hath prolonged my life to this end that I may glorify Him by that kind of death." THE ENGLISH MARTYRS. The fires of Smithfield were not lighted till the next year, and these leaders were not the first to suffer. The roll of Marian martyrs was headed by John Rogers, whom Ridley had made one of the clergy of St. Paul's cathedral in. London. As he was led out on February 4th, 1555, repeating the fifty-first psalm, his wife and eleven children met him, "ten able to walk and one at the breast ;'^ for the Reformers had long since cast aside the rule that priests may not marry. As he was chained to the stake his pardon was brought, signed and sealed, and oifered him if he would recant, but he refused. A great crowd had gathered to see him bum, and wondered as he washed his hands in the flame. Four days later Lawrence Sanders, a preacher who had been educated at Eton and Cam- bridge, met the same fate at Coventry, embracing the stake and crying: "Wel- come, the cross of Christ ! Welcome, everlasting life !'' On the ninth a more distinguished victim, John Hooper, late bishop of Gloucester, died by lingering agonies in his cathedral city, the fagots being green and the wind violent. The account of his sufferings, which lasted near an hour, is too horrible to repeat;, but they were borne with perfect patience and fortitude. Dr. Rowland Taylor, vicar of Hadleigh in Suffolk, having been arrested in: London, was taken to his parish to be executed. His wife and children watched, by night in the street for his coming, and took a tender farewell. On. tl^e way he was "merry and cheerful as one going to a banquet or bridal." The sheriff asked how he fared ; he answered, " Never better, for I am almost at home. But two stiles to go over, and I am even at my Father's house." The streets were- full of his parishioners, weeping and lamenting. " God save thee, good Dr. Taylor," they cried: "Christ strengthen thee and help thee ! The Holy Ghost, comfort thee ! " When the fire was kindled, a man cruelly cast a fagot at him,, which struck his face, so that the blood ran down. "Friend," said he, "I have harm enough ; what needed that ?" He had not been allowed to speak to the people ; and as he was repeating the fifty -first psalm, a knight struck him on the lips, saying: "You knave, speak in Latin, or I will make you." Having com- mended his soul to God, "he stood still without either crying or moving, with his hands folded together, till one with a halberd struck him on the head, so that the brains fell out, and the corpse fell down into the fire." LATIMER AND RIDLEY. These four perished in February. In March eight followed, among them Robert Ferrar, who had been bishop of St. David's, and was burned at Carmar- then in Wales. By the end of September sixty-two had perished. October i6th, 1555, was the last day on earth of Ridley and Latimer, the famous and godly LATIMER EXORTING RIDLEY AT THE STAKE. "Be 0/ good comfort. Mailer EbUey, and flay the man; we shall thit day light mch a candle by God's grace as I trust shall nerer le put out." 328 329 ex-bishops of London and Worcester ; Oxford, which had been their place of trial and imprisonment, witnessed their last confession. The dying words of Latimer were a prophecy : " Be of good comfort, Master Ridley, and play the man ; we shall this day light such a candle by God's grace in England as I trust shall never be put out." We are told that he "received the flame as it were embracing it. After he had stroked his face with his hands, and, as it were, bathed them a little in the fire, he soon died, as it appeared, with very little pain, or none." These triumphs over death were not confined to great prelates and learned divines. Plain tradesmen and mechanics, women and boys, shared the spirit as well as the fate of Latimer, Ridley, Taylor, Bradford, and Rogers. Bonner asked a youth if he thought he could bear the fire : for answer, he placed his hand in the flame of a candle and held it there, like Mutius Scsevola of classic fame. Another, when chained to the stake, requested the bystanders to pray for him. One of them brutally replied, "No more than I will pray for a dog." "Then," cried the young martyr, "Son of God, shine upon me!" It was a dark day, but at once the sun shone out from a cloud. CRANMER. The most eminent, though not the noblest, of the victims was the late arch- bishop of Canterbury. Cranmer was not of heroic mould, and under long imprisonment his courage failed. Like Jerome of Prague he recanted shame- fully, and said or signed whatever was required of him. But his sentence, as primate of England, had been left to Rome, and Rome knew no forgiveness. When he found that his doom was still the stake, he called out all his latent manhood, and made as imposing an end as that of Jerome. On March 21st, 1556, a dignified assemblage waited in St. Mary's Church at Oxford to hear his last recantation ; but they were sorely disappointed. Almost in Jerome's words he said, "Now I come to the great thing that troubles my conscience more than any other thing that ever I said or did in my life, and that is the setting abroad of writings contrary to the Truth ; which here 1 now renounce and refuse as things written by my hand contrary to the Truth which I thought in my heart, and written for fear of death to save my life, if it might be. And forasmuch as my hand oifended in writing contrary to my heart, my hand therefore shall be the first punished ; for if I come to the fire, it shall be the first burned." And so it was: at the stake, exclaiming, "This was the hand that wrote it: this unworthy hand!" he held it steadily in the flame, and "never stirred nor cried" till his atonement was finished with his life. The series of object-lessons they were getting could not be lost upon the English people. The old British love of liberty and justice was roused by the ferocity of government and the firmness of its victims. The smoke of each 330 succeeding sacrifice carried abroad seeds of the new doctrines : the martyrs preached more effectually by their deaths than they had done with living lips. Yet the latest and best historians agree that the archbishop's fate, alike from his promi- nence and his weakness, made the deepest impression. Says Mr. Green : " It was with the unerring instinct of a popular movement that, among a crowd of far more heroic sufferers, the Protestants fixed, in spite of his recanta- tions, on the martyrdom of Cranmer as the deathblow to Catholicism in England. For one man who felt within him the joy of Rowland Taylor at the prospect of the stake, there were thousands who felt the shuddering dread of Cranmer. The triumphant cry of Latimer could reach only hearts as bold as his own, Avhile the sad pathos of the primate's humiliation and repentance struck chords of sympathy and pity in the hearts of all. It is from that moment that we may trace the bitter remembrance of the blood shed in the cause of Rome, which still lies graven deep in the temper of the English people." MARY'S FAILURE. A new and fanatical pope was doing his best — and for such purposes he was wellnigh omnipotent — to embarrass the most devoted servant of Rome that ever wore a crown. Paul IV. refused to accept the submission of England till the queen had restored all the property which her father had wrested from the Church. This was far beyond her power. The monasteries had been long dis- solved, their buildings were in ruins, their lands had passed into other hands ; and the nobles, who came cheerfully back to the old faith, had no mind to give up any of their plunder. So the island remained but partly reconciled to Rome. But Mary, in profound discouragement, kept on offering human sacrifices to this implacable Moloch. Disheartened but dogged, she insisted that the burnings should continue, and they did. Gardiner had withdrawn from them in disgust before his death ; the bishop of London was the only high instrument left to her hand. Some have attempted to defend Bonner, but it is easier to make excuses for Torquemada and Alva, since England had not the history or the temper of Spain. When Elizabeth came to the throne, this butcher offered his obeisance with the rest, but she refused to let him kiss her hand, and under a justice far more merciful than that which he had administered, he spent his last ten years in prison. It would be tedious and useless to repeat the list of Mary's martyrs. Not that we depend for them, as in the first Christian centuries, on scattered docu- ments or doubtful tradition. The flames of these unjust judgments burnt their mark into history : the names, the dates, the places, often the minutes of the trials and incidents of the executions, were preserved, and have been made familiar through that long-famous book, Foxe's "Acts and Monuments." In 1555 there were seventy-two burnings, or rather that number of victims ; in 33^ 1556, ninety-four; in 1557, seventy-nine; and in 1558, thirty-nine; in all two- hundred and eighty-four, over forty of them in London. " In a single day thirteen persons, two of them women, were burnt at Stratford-le-Bow. Seventy-three Protestants of Colchester were dragged through the streets of London, tied to a single rope." THE REACTION. Yet all was unavailing. " The old spirit of insolent defiance, of outrageous violence, rose into fresh life at the challenge of persecution. A Protestant hung a string of puddings round a priest's neck in derision of his beads. The restored images were grossly insulted. The old scurrilous ballads against the mass and relics were heard in the streets. Men were goaded to sheer madness by the bloodshed and violence about them. One wretch, driven to frenzy, stabbed the priest of St. Margaret's as he stood with the chalice in his hand." Nor were the burn- ings merely ineffectual ; they produced just the opposite result from that intended. One wrote to Bonner, " You have lost the hearts of twenty thousand that were rank papists within these twelve months. " Such as had not parted from the old opinions felt that the bonds of humanity and nationality rose superior to those of creed. On July 28th, 1558, when the queen, between disappointment and disease, was near her end, " there were seven men burned in Smithfield, a fearful and a cruel proclamation being made that, under pain of present death, no man should either approach nigh unto them, touch ARCHBISHOP CRANMER. (Prom a portrait in the BibUotheque Nationale.) 332 tHem, speak to them, or comfort them. Yet were they so comfortably taken by the hand and so goodly comforted, notwithstanding that fearful proclamation and the present threatenings of the sheriffs and sergeants, that the adversaries were astonished. The crowd round the fire shouted " Amen " to the martyrs' prayers, and prayed with them that God would strength- en them." Scandalized by these horrors, and yearning for them to end, the nation felt that its sovereign was of a temper alien to its own — rather Spanish or Italian than English. A long poem of that doleful time re- cites the suffer- ings of the many martyrs, giving a word or a verse to each, and ends every stanza with "We longed for our Eliza- beth." On No- vember 17th, 1558, Mary died, and England, though not yet QUEEN ELIZABETH. half c onve rtcd from the old ways, welcomed Elizabeth as it had never welcomed her sister. The burnings stopped at once : the prison-doors opened : the exiles came back ; and the land drew a long breath of relief, knowing that the changes which had to come would be brought in with a due regard to reason, justice, and decency. CATHERINE DISCUSSING THEOLOGY WITH HENRY VIII. 33% 334 ELIZABETH. Elizabeth was a heroic rather than an attractive personage. Prudent, reso- lute, and imperious, a "Henry VIII. in petticoats," she justified the confidence of her subjects, and embodied the national cause, much more than any approved type of feminine character. She was no lover of liberty for its own sake, and had no warm attachment to the doctrines of Luther or of Calvin. The Puritans she always disliked and treated harshly, though they were her firmest supporters. She would have preferred to rule with the high hand as her father had done ; but she was well aware that times had changed, and that the strongest motive she knew, self-interest, bound her tight to the Protestant cause. Why ? For an obvious and most domestic reason. She was the daughter of Anne Boleyn, whom Henry had married (and beheaded) while Katharine, his first wife, was living. Both marriages could not be legal, and therefore either she or her sister Mary was illegitimate and no heir to the throne. The pope had decided for Katharine and Mary : his successors could not if they would, they would not if they could, acknowledge Anne's marriage or Anne's daughter : therefore Elizabeth and Rome were mortal foes. On such personal causes often depend the fate of nations and the complexion of churches : and these complications, with a good ■deal of help from Mary's too zealous burnings, made England Protestant. The national Church received its character of happy compromise mainly from the •embarrassed position aud strong will of the last Tudor monarch. The nation, which had already experienced much violent jolting from her royal relatives, was willing to be governed as she saw fit. The politic were ready to change again their prayer-books and their principles : court, parliament, and ■convocation were little more than puppets in the hands of so vigorous a queen. The Protestants rejoiced, expecting to have their own way — which they did not get so completely as they expected. Most of the Catholics were used to dealing with the pope at long range or not at all, and content to learn new ways of doc- trine and devotion if they were obliged to. A small faction, acknowledging a foreign sway, went abroad or remained at home to engage in deep and dangerous plots against Elizabeth's throne and life : this fact, and the constant perils to which it exposed her, increased the loyal love of her people, and explain the severities and cruelties to which she was sometimes driven. The deplorable fate of the poet Southwell, and some other events which shock our modem sensibili- ties, were in part excused by the belief that every secret emissary of the pope carried — as many of them really did — a concealed dagger to aim at the breast of the heretic queen. In reorganizing the Church, as she speedily did, her trouble was with the clergy in general. Men enough could be found of the sort she wanted for the few bishoprics : but the mass of the parish priests were so ignorant, if not so wedded to the old ways, that they could not be trusted to concoct their own 335 336 sermons. For this reason the Homilies were imposed ; they make dreary reading now, and have long ceased to be needed. Edward's Prayer-Book was revised, and the Articles, which were then considered an important part of it, served as a carefully prepared body of doctrine. With these safeguards to restrain or guide the zeal of certain licensed preachers, the cause and its progress might be trusted to the healing influences of time. Dissent was not then dreamed of, though its materials were accumulating. The established order was fenced in with penal- ties, though religious killing was happily gone out of fashion. During a long, able, and successful reign, though by no means one of perfect peace and quiet, the Reformation completed its work, and England became Protestant forever. We shall have to see later something of the steps by which tolerance and liberty of conscience won their slow and painful victories. IN SCOTLAND. The Scottish Reformation was another aflfair, and deserves more space than we can give it. Its first martyr, Patrick Hamilton, was a youth of the highest connections, a great-grandson of King James II. At thirteen, after the corrupt fashion of that day, he was made abbot of Feme. While studying abroad, he received the new learning from Erasmus. Accused of heresy at home, he fled to Germany, came under Tyndale's influence, but soon returned to preach in the rural parts. Cardinal Beaton, the primate of Scotland, enticed him to St. An- drew's under pretence of a conference, and then treacherously arrested him. He was condemned for "detestable opinions," and burned February 29th, 1528, being hardly twenty-four years old. As one of the papists expressed it, his " reek in- fected as many as it did blow upon." Eighteen years later George Wishart suffered at the same place. At the stake he predicted the death of the tyrannical archbishop, who was soon after murdered. Wishart' s influence had secured to the cause a most important recruit in the person of John Knox, whose fiery sermons, especially after his return from Geneva in 1559, resulted in the speedy destruction of the monasteries, the removal of images and pictures from the churches, and the general overthrow of the old system. On August ist, 1560, the Parliament, following the popular impulse, threw oflf" the papal yoke and established the reformed religion in its Presbyterian form. Queen Mary, who returned from France a year later, did her best to undo this work, with only partial success. She tried her fascinations on Knox in vain : enraged by his fierce denunciations, she exclaimed, " I cannot get quit of you : I vow to God I shall be once revenged !" She had him tried for treason and otherwise harassed ; but in 1568 she was a prisoner, and in 1587 her death-warrant was signed by Elizabeth. With Mary Stuart expired the last hope of renewed Romish suprem- acy in Britain. CHAPTER XXIII. IN FRANCE. E have seen that the revolt against Rome, and'' in good degree the doctrines of Ivuther and Calvin, were anticipated in the south of France, three hundred years before, by thei Cathari and Waldenses. Savagely persecuted and driven from one hiding-place to another, these sects were never wholly extirpated. Soon after the Albigensian wars a colony of Vaudois, finding their lot intolerable- in Piedmont, had fled across the border and settled between Nice and Avignon. Their descendants, very early in the sixteenth century, were reported to Louis- XII. as heretics. He ordered an investigation, and as its result directed the- accusations to be thrown into the river, and said, "These people are much better Christians than I am." A little later they sent delegates to confer with the German and Swiss Reformers, and raised fifteen hundred crowns to print the first. French version of the Bible. Meantime a doctrinal reform had begun at the other end of France with- Jacques Faber, or Lefevre, who in 1512 put forth a Latin commentary on St. Paul's epistles. He was afterwards forced to take refuge in the south, at the- court of Navarre, while Farel and other learned men of similar views found it. best to leave a country in which they were not safe. The cause was thus left- in the hands of the poor and humble. Bernard Palissy, famous for discovering and perfecting the process of enameling pottery, and afterwards a sufferer for his faith, tells thus of his own efforts at Saintes, near the west coast, which were like those of many : " There was in this town a certain artisan, marvelously poor, who had so- great a desire for the advancement of the gospel that he explained it day by day to another as needy as himself, and with as little learning — for they both knew scarcely anything. Yet the first urged upon the other that if he would occupy himself in making some kind of exhortation, it might do much good. Thus per- suaded, one Sunday morning he collected nine or ten persons, and read to them. (337) 338 some passages from tlie Old and New Testaments, wliicli he had written down. These he explained, and added that as each had received from God, he ought to distribute to others. They agreed that six of them should speak thus, on suc- cessive Sundays. That was the beginning of the reformed church at Saintes." As Dr. Hanna has shown, in his sketch of the Huguenot wars, France was then in a condition different from other countries, and peculiarly unfavorable to the Reforma- tion. "The Church was not groaning there under the same bondage that elsewhere op- pressed her ; she had already fought for and so far achieved her independ- ence that no foreign priests were intruded into her highest offices, nor were her revenues liable to be di- verted at the pope's will into Italianchannels. Philip the Fair had two centu- ries before eman- cipated the mon- archy. Neither Church nor state had in France the same grounds of quarrel with Rome which they had in other lands. There was less material there for the Re- formers to work upon. With little to attract either king or clergy, the Reformation had in its first aspects everything to repel them. The Church saw in it a denial of 3ier authority, a repudiation of her doctrine, a simplification of her worship, an HUOUENOT PBASANT AT HOME. 339 overturn of her proud and ambitious hierarcliy. The royal power was in conflict with two enemies — ^the feudal independence of the nobles, which it wished; to destroy, and the growing freedom of the ,v^^'''S^ n% great cities, which it wished to curb. To '* ~'"' ' both these enemies of the crown, the Reformation, itself a child of liberty, promised to lend aid. Absolutism on the throne looked on it with jealousy and dread. Alone and unbe- friended, it had from the beginning to confront in France bitter persecution, a persecution instigated at first by the clergy alone, afterwards by the clergy and the monarch acting in willing concert." FRANCIS I. Francis I., the most popular sovereign in Eu- rope, who ruled from 15 15 to 1547, was for some time indifferent to the spread of heresy in his dominions. He invited not only Eras- mus but Melanchthon to his court, and applauded a play in which the pope and his cardinals were ridiculed. He patronized Eefevre, and twice saved Louis de Berquin, who by his books had roused the wrath of the orthodox Parliament, and who at last, in 1529, was seized and hastily executed in Francis' absence, "lest ' francis 1. recourse should be had to the king." His sister, Margaret of Valois, had much influence over him ; she favored the new doctrines, and he sharply 340 resented reflections made upon her by monks, preachers, and tlie theologians of the Sorbonne. But in after years he came to believe, what there were plenty to assure him of, that "Lutherans" were dangerous to the government, and that nothing but harm could come of tolerating them. After he had married his son to the pope's niece, he announced that France should have but one king, one law, and one faith. But his first severities were provoked by the foolish action of an enthusiast who, in the early morning of October i8th, 1534, covered the walls of Paris with placards reflecting in offensive terms on the "intolerable abuses of the popish mass." One of these was placed at the door of the king's chamber in the castle of Amboise. Always jealous of his dignity, Francis was very angry, and his wrath involved the innocent with the guilty. Many now suffered by the "estrapades," a horrible device presently used to strike terror to the heart of heresy. THE ESTRAPADES. In the morning of January 21st, 1535, all Paris was agog to see a very splendid procession, surpassing anything ever known before. In front marched priests bearing little chests which contained the most precious relics — the head of the spear which pierced the side of Christ ; the crown of thorns ; a piece of the true cross ; the skull of St. Louis, and many more. Next came a multitude of clergy of every rank, from cardinals and archbishops down, all in their richest robes. The king walked bareheaded, holding a huge wax candle, and was fol- lowed by princes, nobles, ambassadors, the parliament, the court, the ministers of state. The procession halted at six places, which offered the chief attractions of the day. At each of them stood an altar with its decorations, and beside it — instead of children dressed to represent angels, as usual — a pile of blazing wood, with an estrapade above, and a Protestant fastened in it. By this fiendish contrivance the victim was alternately lowered into the fire and hoisted out of it. The affair was so ordered that when the king stopped before the altar and knelt in prayer, the fastenings should give way and the poor sufferer be dropped into the fire and left there, the royal devotions keeping time to the victim's agonies. In this same month Francis attempted to abolish the use of the printing press — a measure which should have been taken by all persecutors. The estrapades produced an effect not only in Paris, but in foreign lands. The Lutheran princes of Germany sent letters or messages of remonstrance to the king, who replied that he had only been punishing " certain rebels who wished to trouble the state under the pretext of religion." Calvin's "Institutes of the Christian Religion," which appeared six months later, was dedicated to Francis, and aimed "to relieve the brethren from an unjust accusation," and to be the means of "opening to them a shelter" in other lands. The author was then but twenty-six, and had already left France, to settle, after a year or two of wandering, as theological professor in Geneva. His influence soon became JOH^f CA.LVIN. 34* 342 dominant, not only in Switzerland, but among the friends of reform in France. His books were read by peasants and nobles alike, and gave definite dogmatic character to the movement. SLAUGHTERS IN PROVENCE. For tbe next ten years there was not much, persecution ; but in 1545 a hideous crusade was directed against the Vaudois of Provence (already mentioned) in the southeast corner of France. The Parliament of Aix had decreed that "the villages of Merindol, Cabrieres, and Les Aigues, and all other places that were the retreat and receptacle of heretics, should be de- stroyed ; the houses razed to the ground, the forest trees cut down, the fruit trees torn up by the roots, the chief men put to death, and the women and chil- dren banished forever." In this typical sentence the character and the effects of bigotry are well set forth : the fury of anti- heretical zeal raged alike against human life, in- telligence, industry, and the very fertility of the ground. What mattered it that a colony of peace- ful and laborious farm- ers had caused the desert to rejoice and blossom?' Turn it into a wilderness again: let no habitation stand, no crops grow, with- 1545- Xs&aBs^.s. HENRY II. out the Church's blessing. Such was the spirit of After some hesitation the king assented to this infainous decree, and D'Op- pide, a nobleman, was sent with six hired regiments of cutthroats to kill and 343> burn. They carried otit their instructions even beyond the letter. One or two> villages were taken by surprise and mercy shown to none ; the others were mostly deserted. In Merindol only an idiot remained ; he was tied to a tree and. shot Cabrieres was defended for a day by sixty men, who surrendered on prom- ise of safety, and were at once massacred. Thirty women, who had stayed with their husbands, were driven into a barn and burned there ; when any tried tO' escape, they were pushed back by the soldiers' pikes. Twenty-two towns and hamlets were destroyed, with every vestige of civilization. But few of the in- habitants escaped across the border. A number, perishing in the hills, begged to be allowed to leave the country with only the clothes they wore. The ruth- less commander refused. "I know what I have to do with you," he said: "I will send every one of you to hell, and make such havoc of you that your memory will be cut off forever." Two hundred and fifty were put to death in a batch. Six hundred of the strongest young men were sent to the galleys, and. one-third of these died within a few weeks. HENRY IL The king, who was not without human feelings, was displeased with these severeties. An inquiry was begun some years after, but nothing came of it. Henry II. succeeded his father in 1547. His wife was Catherine de Medici,, afterwards too famous; but he was gov- erned by his mistress, Diana of Poitiers, a woman old enough to be his mother. She and his favorite Montmorency alike hated the Reformation, and the conse- quences of this hatred were soon manifest In January, 1551, a new law was made, reviving the old one which condemned all heretics to death, and adding several unusually sharp provisions. Both the state courts and those of the Church re- ceived full power to act, so that one might catch what the other missed. Those who owned or brought in books of the Re- formers were liable to heavy penalties. All property of refugees was to be con- fiscated. The informer was to receive one-third of the goods of these people. Sentences were to be carried out speedily and without appeal. Another edict, introducing the Inquisition, was less successful. The Par- liament withheld its assent, and its president was bold enough to use these noble "^o^"'' < CATHERINE DE MEDICI, IN YOUTH. 344 -words : "Since these punisiiments on account of religion have failed, it seems to -us conformable to the rtiles of equity and right reason to follow here the foot- steps of the early Church, which never employed fire and sword to establish or ■extend itself, but a pure doctrine and an exemplary life. We think, therefore, that your majesty should seek to preserve religion only by the means by which it was first established." This was certainly not the teaching of Rome, nor the view which prevailed anywhere — unless among the persecuted — ^then and for a long time after. In spite of the new law and the means taken to enforce it, the new opinions spread in France. In 1555 a Re- formed congregation or church was organized in Paris, and within two years the example was followed in ten other cities. On the night of September 4th, 1557, the Protest- ants were attacked as they came out from a secret service. Some of them cut their way through the mob : many remained in the build- ing, and were with difi&culty rescued by the police. Seven were burned soon after: others were saved by BURNING OF PROTESTANTS IN PARIS. foreigu luterveution. On April 3d, 1559, a treaty was signed between France and Spain, which bound Henry to imitate the furious course of Philip II. Nine days later the king sent letters to the various provinces, saying, "I desire nothing more than the total extermination of this sect— to cut its roots up so completely that jiew ones may never be formed. Have no pity then, but punish them as 345 they deserve." Yet, a month after, the reformed churches held their first national synod in Paris. An unduly lenient sentence, condemning four persons to exile only in- stead of death, caused a suspicion of unsoundness in one section of the Parlia- ment of Paris. The cardinal of Lorraine, after the manner of such dignitaries, urged Henry to invite certain senators to a conference, encourage them to speak •out freely, and then, by a little useful treachery, arrest and punish them on evi- dence of their own supplying. " The burning of a few heretic members of Parliament," he remarked, " will be a pleasant spectacle to the Duke of Alva and ■other Spanish grandees, who are now in Paris." This advice was followed, and several fell into the trap set for them. Du Bourg went so far as to say, "One sees every da}'- crimes left unpunished, while those who have done no wrong are dragged to the stake. It is no light thing to condemn to the flames those who in the midst of them invoke Christ's name." He and four others were sent to the Bastile. But Henry was not to see their execution. In a tournament the lance of a Scottish knight entered his brain, and he died July loth, 1559, to be succeeded by a child. THE GREAT FAMILIES. To understand the confused events which follow, we must pause to explain the condition of France at this juncture, and to introduce some of its chief per- sonages. The house of Valois was on the throne ; the next heirs were the Bourbons, a name soon to become famous. They were descended from the sixth son of Louis IX.; Antony, the head of the family, by marrying a niece of Francis I., had become king of Navarre. He had called himself a Protestant, but the threats and promises of Philip 11. induced him to return to the Roman communion. His brother, Louis Prince of Conde, was a stronger character, and more useful to the cause of reform. The new doctrines, as we have seen, gained their earliest converts in the -working classes. " Painters, watchmakers, goldsmiths, printers, and others who, from their callings, have some mental superiority," says a writer of the other party, "-were among the first taken in." The accession of the great lords changed the face of things, and caused the movement to become no less political than religious. Under a strong monarch like Francis I. the nobles were kept in their places ; but during the feeble reign of Henry II. corruption came in like a flood, the royal authority was despised, and occasion given for personal jealousies and ambitions which, not less than opposing principles, were soon to fill the realm with disorder, violence, and bloodshed. The chief rivalry was between the Bourbons and the Guises. The latter house was founded by Claude of Lorraine, who was made Duke of Guise and married his daughter to James V. of Scotland. He had six sons, all eager sup- porters of Rome ; the two eldest played leading parts in the history of the time: 346 Francis, second Duke of Guise, was an able soldier and a fierce bigot. His brother Charles, cardinal of Lorraine, tbougb a coward, was an accomplished scholar/ courtier, and intriguer. One bold, the other subtle, and both grasping, these men became for a time the power behind the throne ; they were close allies of Philip II., leaders of the papal party, and foremost in persecution. On the other side, with Cond6 and others, were the three sons of the Mar- quis of Chatillon and nephews of the Constable Montmorency. The eldest had been made a cardinal at sixteen ; the second, Coligny, in 1556 became Admiral of France, an ofi&ce next to that of Constable. He and his younger brother D'Andelot were men of grave and earnest character ; both, as soldiers, had been prisoners of war. In the tedium of confinement both had made acquaintance with the Scriptures and some works of the Reformers; as a consequence, both, with their brother the cardinal, embraced the Protestant cause. The versified psalms of Clement Marot were to France what those of Stemhold and Hopkins were to England, and those of Rous, a century later, to Scotland — and per- haps somewhat more tunable than either. They were much sung in the streets of Paris, and the fact alarmed the clergy. D'Andelot was accused of taking part in these exercises, of protecting ministers of the new faith, and of keeping some of their books. The king sent for him and asked him what he thought of the mass. With more frankness than prudence or politeness, he called it "a detestable profanation." Henry accused him of ingratitude, and said, "I have given you honors and promotion. You are my servant; you are bound to follow my religion." D'Andelot replied that his person and property were the king's, but his conscience was his own. Enraged, the monarch caught up the first object at hand, flung it at his head, and placed him in confinement.. The dignitaries of the Church would have made an example of him ; but his. friends were too powerful, and the times were not yet quite ripe for the burning of a prominent nobleman. He was released on the simple condition of witnessing a mass in which he took no part. Even for this moderate compliance he was blamed by Calvin and other severe religionists. FRANCIS II. Francis II., who came to the throne in 1559, was a boy of fifteen, married the year before to Mary Stuart, queen of Scotland, claimant of the English Vj CONDfe. Wit ntntbinlnunp brr llibB'DsiQl'biidirt) Q)fi(01iba|t Ip ^ilin A I,ADY OF AMBOISE. 347 348 throne, and niece of the Guises. While the Bourbons and Chatillons were at a '■distance, her imcles were at hand, and took charge of her whole administration. The nobles of older creation and prior rights, including the great Protestant princes, were indignant at this intrusion of men whom they considered parvenus. They met at Vendome ; Cond6 and D' Andelot were for war at once, but Coligny ;and the cooler heads restrained them. It was agreed that the king of Navarre, as their natural chief and nearest to the throne, should go to Paris and claim his rights. But his weakness was no match for Guise and the cardinal, who soon scared him into submission with threats from their ally, Philip II., to invade so much of Navarre as had not been previously seized by Spain. The new government soon showed its temper. Du Bourg, the judge of Parliament arrested some months before, was refused a trial by his peers, enclosed in an iron cage, and burned December 23d. His rank, his character, his confession, "his bearing in confinement, on his pretended trial, and at the stake, placed him liigh on the roll of French martyrs. His execution, as a papist said, "did more harm than a hundred ministers could have done by all their preaching." Bven apart from this example, the sixteen-months' reign of the boy-king, ■or rather of the Guises in his name, was the most terrible period France had known. The edict of 1551 was revived in all its force, with new provisions .against the lives of those who attended any private religious meeting, or knew -of such and did not report them. Large rewards were offered to informers : Chambres Ardentes or courts of burning were founded to make way with Huge- nots : some of the methods of the Spanish Inquisition, though happily not its forms, were introduced. "In Paris, Bordeaux, Lyons, Grenoble, Dijon, and other •cities where the Calvinists abounded, private houses were broken into upon the :slightest suspicion, and whole families hurried to prison ; espionage, pillage, confiscations, executions, multiplied day by day." Such proceedings, in a civilized land and age, against so large a faction, with some of the chief men of France at its head, were not long to be tamely borne. Eminent theologians and jurists of the new views, at home, in Switzer- land, and in Germany, were asked "whether, provided no violence were offered to the king and the lawful magistrates, men might with a good conscience take up arms for the safety and liberty of the country, seize Francis of Guise ,and his brother the cardinal, and compel them to resign their usurped authority." ■Calvin, who always taught non-resistance, answered in the negative ; but others -counseled revolt, if sanctioned by a prince of the royal blood and by most of -the states of France. The inquirers attached less weight to the second condition than to the first. Navarre was of no use ; his brother Cond6, the case being put before him, said that he did not wish to begin a civil war, but if any one else would give the ris- ing a fair start, he would then place himself at its head. 349- RENAUDIT'S CONSPIRACY. Renaudit, a man of good family, undertook the task. After vainly seeking- aid from Elizabeth of England, who was too prudent to interfere, he carried out his mission with great diligence and entire secrecy at home, visiting the leading- malcontents and stirring up their zeal. A meeting was held at Nantes, February ist, 1560, attended by many gentlemen of position and estate, though by none of the chief nobles. All agreed to meet in arms at Blois on March loth, state their grievances to the king, and if he refused redress, to seize the two Guises and call upon Cond4, who was to be at hand. The plans were carefully laid and promised well; but when many are parties to a conspiracy, all are seldom to be trusted. A Calvinist lawyer in Paris,, •"r \r — ^r -^ /.i.«.^ii CHATE4U OK AMHOISE. The scene of dark events in Ilaguenol history. in whom Renaudit was obliged to confide, was base enough to send the news to the cardinal. Guise at once removed the court from Blois to Amboise, which had a strong castle, and summoned Conde, Coligny, and D'Andelot. They came, and Coligny, being asked for advice, said that the way to stop revolt was to grant liberty of worship. Renaudit, unwilling to give up his plans, simply postponed the attack six days, and notified his friends of the change of date and place. But he was again'betrayed. Guise, who learned his intentions in detail, prepared to meet them ; he was defeated, killed in the fight, and his body, according to 350 the statute against traitors, hung and quartered, and its parts exposed with his head in public places of the town. The other conspirators, being met by forces greater than they expected, were slain or taken, and this first rising came to naught. EXECUTIONS AT AMBOISE. It was bitterly avenged. Within the next month twelve hundred men were hanged, drowned, or beheaded in the small city of Amboise. There was not room enough for so many gibbets, so they hung the victims from the castle walls. The duke of Guise was at table, when a messenger from another great noble came to ask after his health. "Tell your master that I am well," he said, "and report to him the kind of viands I am regaling myself with." As he spoke he pointed to the window, where a man of lofty stature and fine appearance was then dangling from the bars. This brutality was not confined to the commander, nor to the sterner sex. Bvery day, at a fixed hour, the ladies of the court, arrayed as for a ball, seated themselves at the windows to enjoy the hangings and beheadings which were conducted there for the entertainment of the fair. Among them, and in the place of honor, was the queen, Mary Stuart, then little past seventeen. Reared in this school of tigers, it is no wonder that on her return to her own realm she agreed but poorly with the grim Calvinists of Scotland, and that they had little love for her. Her child-husband, a year younger than she, and feeble in body and in mind, was of a less savage temper. It is on record that he once burst into tears and said to his uncles, "What have I done to my people, that they hate me so? I would like to hear what they have to say. I don't know how; it is, but I am told it is you the people are so angry at. I wish you would go away, that I might learn whether they complain of you or of me." The Guises answered, "If we were to leave you, the Bourbons \yould soon make an end of us." Unscrupulous ■devotion to the interests of their family was indeed a ruling motive with these men ; but they — or at least the duke — had another nearly as strong, in fanatical attachment to the Church of Rome. As for religion, in the modem sense of the word, it is not uncharitable to assume that they knew very little of it. Both were for blood, but that was a soldier's trade. The duke was fearless, and not without a sense of honor : the cardinal, while always counseling extremes, took great care of his own safety. Anxious that the ladies might miss none of the sport, he would sit with them at the windows, explaining details of the execu- tions, making jests upon them, and commenting on the impudent obstinacy of the victims. Sixteen men of rank, leaders in the insurrection, had surrendered on prom- ise of safety — a promise it was not thought necessary to keep. At his trial, the Baron of Castelnau showed such knowledge and ability that the chancellor, THE HANGINGS AT AMBOISE. 351 352 Olivier, inquired with a sneer at what school of theology he had studied. He answered by another question : " Do you not remember asking me, when I came back from Flanders, how I had passed my time in my imprisonment there ? I told you I had been reading the Bible. You approved my studies, advised me to attend the assemblies of the Reformed, and expressed a wish that all the nobles of France had chosen the better part like me." Olivier had no more to say, and the cardinal took up the debate, to be presently worsted. " You see," said Castelnau to the duke, "we have the better reasons." "I know nothing of arguments," the man of blood and iron replied, "but I know how to cut ofiF heads." In a vain effort to elicit confessions, the sixteen were put to the torture: they all declared they had risen against the Guises, not against the king. When they were condemned for treason, Castelnau scornfully exclaimed, " So the Guises are kings of France, then ? They have violated our laws and liberties : if it be treason to resist them, proclaim them kings at once." Mary Stuart and the court were at the windows as usual, to enjoy the beheadings, which for their accommodation took place close by. Castelnau said his last prayer and died like a man. Another, Villenorgue, dipped his hands in the blood of his friends, raised them aloft, and cried, "Lord, it is the blood of Thy children unjustly slain : Thou wilt avenge it ! " At this one of the ladies ran shrieking from the room : it was the Duchess of Guise. " I have seen the blood of the innocent flowing," she wailed : " I fear that cry for vengeance will fall heavy on our house." Olivier, the chancellor, took to his bed. The cardi- nal came to see him. " You have damned yourself and all of us," the remorseful man cried. Two days later he was dead. MAKY STDART. linr >J CHAPTER XXIV. WORDS AND BLOWS. *ifi^ 4-/ AR from repressing tlie movement toward liberty^ . tlie severities at Amboise aroused a fury of re- sentment, and tbe numbers .of the Protestants grew dail5^ From this time tbey began to be called Huguenots, a name of obscure and doubtful origin, applied at first by tbeir enemies in reproach or ridicule. As the stench of the unburied bodies drove the court from Amboise, so the savor of" those evil deeds spread through the land, and the: Guises found themselves obliged to temporize.. An assembly of notables was convoked at Fon- tainebleau August 2ist, 1560. The Bourbons, were not present, but the Chatillons were, with, eight hundred of their party. Coligny offered a petition from the Protestants of Normandy, pro- testing their loyalty and offering to pay double taxes if they could have their own places of wor- ship and use them undisturbed. It was objected to as having no signatures. " For obvious reasons,' ^ said the admiral; "but fifty thousand can be had in a few days." The Duke of Guise answered in his own spirit : "And I can as easily get a million good Catholics to lead against these fellows,, and break their heads." But the tide was too strong to be thus checked, and even the cardinal found, it best to counsel milder measures. No mercy- should be shown to rebels or traitors, he said, and for the king to allow heretical conventicles would, be to insure his own damnation ; but "as to those poor fanatics who, without arms and for fear of being damned, went to their preachings and psalm- (353) 35; singings and things of that sort, since punishment had as yet accomplished nothing, he was of opinion that the king should no longer pursue them in that way." It was agreed that the States-General should meet at Meaux December ROCK OF CAYLUS, AN OLD HUGUENOT FORTRESS. :10th, and a national council, for a possible reformation of the Church, at Paris January 20th. As to the last, the cardinal with an air of great fairness said that 355 lie saw little need of it, but would not oppose it. He was a cunning knave, and could preach almost in the strain of a reformer on occasion. Meantime the Prince of Conde was under grave suspicion as the secret leader of the late rising, and the almost certain head of others that were to come. While he was with the court at Amboise, the cardinal had wished to have him arrested and tried ; and he, hearing these rumors, had boldly demanded audience of the king, denounced his accusers, whoever they might be, as liars, and flung down his gauntlet in challenge to any such. The Duke of Guise, with whatever motive, had offered to be Condi's second. Nothing more was done just then ; but after the assembly in August, the cardinal, whose moderate talk was a mere blind, devised what he called a " rat-trap." The States-General were to meet at Orleans, a fortified city, instead of Meaux. Large forces were collected there, with troops from Spain and Savoy. The king was to present a Confession of Faith such as no Protestant could honestly sign ; this was to be passed and made a law of France. The precious document was then to be carried about the country, and every adult who declined to place his name to it was to be put to death at once. PLOT AGAINST THE BOURBONS. To make this fine plan the more secure, the two Bourbons, as the most dangerous men in the kingdom, were to be got rid of beforehand. Working in the dark, the cardinal had probably gathered evidence enough against Cond6 ; as for Antony, he, though a king, was of less consequence, and could easily be attended to. They were summoned to Orleans. Trusting too much to their great name and their royal descent, they went. At Limoges they were met by over seven hundred Huguenots of rank, who urged them to head an insurrection, and promised to raise a force of sixteen thousand speedily. Cond6 would have done it, but Navarre was still unwilling, to appear in arms against the throne. Then the prince was entreated to remain with his friends ; but he was too high- minded to let his brother go on alone. Disregarding all warnings and declining an offered escort, they went to what was meant to be their doom. "As they approached Orleans, a vague terror came over them. No one came out to meet them. They found the city crowded with military. Between two files of soldiers, drawn up as if to guard them as prisoners by the way, they reached the house in which the king was lodged. Its main entrance they found closed ; they had to pass in by the wicket. As soon as they were in his presence, the king proceeded to accuse Cond6 of treasonable designs upon his person and crown. The dauntless prince flung back the charge upon his accusers. "In that case," said Francis, "we shall proceed according to the ordinary forms of justice." Conde found himself a prisoner, closely guarded, and soon condemned. His haughty spirit disdained to bend. He refused to receive a priest who came to celebrate the mass, and said to one who urged his 35^ submission to the all-powerful uncles of the queen, " My only way of settling with them is at the lance's point." NARROW ESCAPE OF NAVARRE AND CONDE. Antony had been allowed to go, and his remonstrances were treated with contempt. Bearing a king's title, he could not be arrested like his brother, or executed as his brother was to be. So the Guises, who had their pupil thoroughly under control, devised a plan — the cardi- nal's finger in it is plain — to attain their end without public scandal. Navarre was to be invited to the cabi- net of Francis, who was then to pre- tend to be angry and draw his dag- ger on the visitor: the attendants,, watchful of their monarch's safety, were then to finish the work. Such methods, long used in the politics of Italy, were now familiar through- out Europe, espe- cially where the intrigues and in- terests of Philip II. extended. This SHEPHBRD GIRL OF THE PYRENEES. most zealous Cath- olic had a deep and active interest in French affairs, and what he could not teach in the way of lying, trickery, and murder was not worth learning. COUGNY AT THB DEATH-BED OF FRANCIS II. 357 358 Navarre had warning of the plot against his life, and neglected a first sum- mons from Francis. Another came, and he obeyed. As he placed his foot upon the steps, a friendly voice whispered, " Mount not, sire: you go to perish." He turned to his attendant and said, " I go into a place where I know they have sworn my death ; but my life shall be dearly sold." But the intended tragedy was not enacted. The visitor bore himself too royally, and the boy-king was not equal to his part. Guise stood in the antechamber, his hand on his sword- hilt, waiting to hear raised voices and the sound of a blow ; but he was disap- pointed. As Navarre passed out untouched, the duke muttered, "The baby, the coward ! He has let the prey go." Conde'shead was to fall December loth, just before the States-General met ; but he was saved by what seemed an interposition of Providence. On Novem- ber 17th the king was taken ill. The Guises literally moved heaven and earth to prolong his life : the duke swore at the doctors, the cardinal had prayers said, masses sung, and processions moving, everywhere. They begged the dowager-queen, Catherine de Medicis, to agree to anticipate Conde's sentence, if not to execute both the Bourbons ; but she had her own ends in view, and refused to interfere. The dying Francis sought at first to purchase a reprieve by vows such as his directors recommended : he would not spare " mothers, infants, wives, any who bore the taint of even the suspicion of heresy." Finding this useless, he put up a wiser and more Christian prayer. " Pardon my sins, and impute not to me those of my ministers." He died December 5th, and his death was as useful as his reign had been pernicious. It changed the situation completely, and relieved France, for the time at least, from outrageous and intolerable oppression. CHARLES IX. AND HIS MOTHER. The States-General met December 13th, and sat till the end of January. They found the finances in a terrible condition, which they proposed to relieve by using the Church's wealth. They urged various reforms, including free permission of the Reformed worship, and put on record their conviction that another year of persecution would ruin the country. The new king, Charles IX., being a child of ten years, they would have made Navarre regent, as next to the reigning family in blood ; but he had allowed himself to be set aside, and Catherine de Medicis installed This woman, who for the next twenty years was one of the leading powers of Europe, had a curious history and a no less curious character. A pope's niece, and married in youth to a king's eldest son, for more than twenty yeai^ she was apparently content to be a cipher and to see her husband ruled by an elderly mistress. Through all those years she was gathering knowledge and biding her time : that time had come at last. Greed of the power of which she had been so long bereft was her ruling motive. She cared for her sons chiefly 359 for what slie might get by them, and used them as tools toward the attainment. of her purposes. In politics and religion she wavered and swayed between the parties, having neither heart nor principle to bind her to either, and ready- to deceive both in turn. She gained the regency by persuading Coligny and D'Andelot that she was a friend to reform, and then promised the clergy to sup- port the Church, in return for their assuming a large share of the national debt. The estates insisted on a council, or colloquy as it was called, between the ministers of both opinions. The news of this disturbed the pope, and Catherine, who had not then chosen a side, and was trying to steer a middle course, wrote '^^^ , .u V**j MOtTNT ST. MICHEL. to him to explain it. "The numbers of those who have separated from the. Church of Rome," she declared, "are so great, the party has become so poweful through the multitude of nobles and magistrates who have joined it, that it is, formidable in all parts of the kingdom. But among them are no libertines, ana- baptists, nor holders of any opinions regarded as monstrous ; all admit the twelve- articles of the Apostles' Creed as explained by the seven oecumenical councils.. On this account, many zealous Catholics think that they ought not to be cut oflF from the communion of the Church." She went on to say that "frequent. 366 conferences between the learned on either side " was the best way to recall dissenters, and that to keep others from leaving it was necessary to remove abuses and scandals, such as image-worship, private masses, communion in one kind, and the use of Latin in the churches. One is almost forced to believe that this amazing letter was written for Huguenot eyes, and that she sent another privately to the pope to explain her explanation. COLLOQUY OF POISSY. The colloquy began at Poissy September 8th, 1561. The regent, the king, and their court were present, with a great array of clergy. After the proceedings Avere opened, twelve Protestant ministers were admitted. At. their head, sent to represent Calvin, was Beza, one of the ablest theologians of that school. He •offered prayer, and then began to state and defend their doctrines. It was the £rst opportunity of the kind the Huguenots had enjoyed, and may be compared to the council of Basle, where the Hussite leaders discussed their faith with dig- nitaries of the old Church. But the two parties were not here on equal terms, and the priests had small idea of pure debate; for when Beza said that Christ's I'eal body and blood were as far from the bread and wine as heaven from earth, ■cries of "blasphemy" arose, and some wished to leave the assembly. The Cardi- Tial of Lorraine took a week to prepare his answer, which convinced all those who already held to its two points, the Church's authority and the real presence ■of Christ in the consecrated elements. The bishops cried out that the advocate? ©f reform were vanquished and must submit. Beza wished to reply at once, but the meeting was adjourned. The pope's emissaries now urged, rightly enough from their standpoint, that such public discussions would do more harm than ^ood, and that if the debates were carried further, it had better be on a much smaller scale. Thus no more definite result was reached than on any similar ■occasion, when each side is perfectly satisfied at the start that it has the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. A few efforts, honest or pretended, Tvere made to draw up a formula on which both could agree, but nothing came of these. At more than one crisis in history, laymen have grasped the idea of tolera- tion when divines have missed it. De I'H&pital, who had succeeded Olivier as chancellor of France, when opening the States-General in 1560, had called it folly to expect differing religions to dwell together in peace. But the progress of events had taught him something. At a meeting of notables and deputies in the first days of 1563, he used some remarkable language. For a king to lead one religious party of his subjects against another, he said, would be "unworthy not only of Christianity, but of humanity. Whichever side gained, the victory would be as sad for the conquerors as for the conquered. A moral evil will never yield to mere physical remedies. Do not waste your time in inquiring HDGDEN0T8 DESTROYING THE IMAGES. 361 362 which of the two religions is the better. We are here not to establish a dogma of faith, but to regulate an affair of state. Ought the new religion to be toler- ated, according to the demand of the nobles and the Third Estate ? Must one cease to be a good subject when he ceases to worship after the king's fashion? Is it not possible to be a good enough subject without being a good Catholic, or even a good Christian ? Cannot citizens of different beliefs live in harmony in the same state ? These are the questions you are called on to decide." It being an assemblage of laymen and not of priests, the far-seeing orator carried his point, though against much opposition. On January 17th, 1562, an edict of toleration was passed. Under certain restrictions, the chief of which excluded them from the limits of the cities, the Protestants were allowed to hold their own assemblies, and recognized and protected by the law. CONFERENCE OF SAVERNE. But the fires of religious strife were not so soon to be extinguished. The Huguenots had committed some imprudent and violent acts, seizing a few churches, destroying the images and whateyer seemed to them to savor of idola- try. The Guises and their friends, on the other hand, were not to be reconciled to toleration. • Born intriguer as he was, the cardinal had already devised a scheme to cut off his enemies from any foreign aid in the wars which he foresaw, and to put them in a false light before their natural allies, the Lutheran princes of Germany. At the colloquy of Poissy, he had tried to entrap Beza and the others into a refusal to sign certain articles from the Augsburg Confessioiz which were unlikely to satisfy Calvinists : but Beza had prudently answered that . he and his friends would consider these if the bishops signed them first. Foiled in this effort, the wily prelate reflected on the usefulness of lies when truth was not at command, and proceeded to instruct his brother in a part to be carried in the scheme. They then invited Christopher, Duke of Wiirtemberg, to a con- ference at Saveme. He came in February, 1562, bringing his ablest theologians. The cardinal preached two sermons in which these could find nothing to object to ; the rough duke, saying that he was a man of war and knew little of such matters, opened doctrinal topics, and seemed to agree heartily with his new in- structors. Next morning early he awoke his guest to say, "I could not sleep for thinking of our conversation. I told my brother some of it, and he wants to talk with you and Brentius." Christopher was pleased, of course. After listening to a long exposition of Lutheran doctrine, the cardinal swore by all that was holy that he agreed with every word of it. His Church had gone too far about the Real Presence. Melanchthon and the rest were quite right ; but he could not tell all he knew at home on account of the weaker brethren. De- lighted, the Germans urged him to work for a pure gospel and religious peace and unity. "I will," said he: "I mean to. But those pig-headed Calvinists are 363 hard to manage. If they would only have accepted the Augsburg Confession as a basis, I could have got the bishops to sign it." Thus he talked till the honest Wiirtemberger went home satisfied that the cardinal and his brother were sound in the faith, and that the Huguenots were dangerous and impracticable people. And thus the wretched gulf was deepened between Calvinists and IvUth- erans, so that the German princes would hardly ever help their brethren across the French or Dutch border, regarding them as of an alien sect, nearly or quite as far from the truth as Rome. If Protestants had been united, the area of Protestantism in western and central Europe would to-day be far larger than it is. MASSACRE AT VASSY. The duke and the cardinal also turned homeward, chuckling over their easy victory. They stopped at Joinville to visit their mother, who was a Bourbon, though no friend of Navarre and Conde. She complained of a Reformed con- venticle that had risen at Vassy : it was nine miles away, but even the rumor of so much plebeian psalm-singing shocked her Catholic and aristocratic nerves. On the morning of Sunday, March i, her sons, with a large retinue, were rid- ing toward Paris, when they heard bells ringing. "What is that for?" they asked. "The Huguenot service," they were told. The duke became furious. "We will Huguenot them," he cried. "March ! We must take a part in that meeting." The humble worshippers were gathered in a large barn, and their minister had begun his sermon, when Guise and his men rushed in, using their weapons freely. Some of the congregation tried to escape by the roof, and were picked off from outside: one man boasted that he had "brought down half a dozen of those pigeons." Sixty were killed outright, over two hundred wounded. The minister, his head and shoulder bleeding from sabre strokes, was dragged before the duke, who called him a seducer, a teacher of sedition, the cause of all this bloodshed — it was the sheep biting the wolves again — and ordered him to be hanged at once ; but the order was not carried out. If the cardinal took no part in this butchery, he did nothing to hinder it. He was resting outside, when his brother brought him the pulpit Bible, saying, "Here, look at one of their cursed books." The churchman, who had all the learning of his family, ran his eye over the title. " Why, there is no great harm in that: it is the Bible." "The Bible!" the duke roared. "Isn't it fifteen hundred years since Christ died ? And that book was only made last year : look at the date. Call that thing the Bible ! " The cardinal said carelessly to a bystander, "My brother is in error." The duke sent for the judge of the dis- trict: " Why have you allowed this sedition-shop?" The magistrate referred to the edict of January 17th, six weeks before. "It is a damnable edict!" Guise cried: "this sword shall cut it to pieces! " In fact, he had already done so. CHRISTOPHER, DUKB OF WURTBMBERfJ, EXPOUNDING THE LUTHERAN DOCTRINE TO THE DUKE OF GUISE AND CAROINAI, LORRAINE. 364 365 The news of this massacre spread everywhere, and excited varying feelings. When the Duke of Wiirtemberg heard it, his confidence in the sound Christian character and peaceful temper of the Guises was perhaps modified ; but he may have thought that the Huguenots of Vassy had deserved their fate for being un- willing to subscribe to the Augsburg Confession. Almost everywhere points of creed were still valued above human lives. The French Protestants, being the injured party, felt much as we would in such a case — except that we might leave vengeance to the law, whereas their laws were mainly with the strong arm. Pictures of the outrage, widely circu- lated, helped to rouse their fury. Equally natural, though harder for us to com- prehend, was the exultant and fiendish joy of the old party. Though Guise afterwards insisted that what he did at Vassy was the result of a sudden impulse and not of a preconceived plan, he had rightly calculated on the support of half France. He now approached Paris like an ancient emperor returning from glorious victories. "His entry into the city was a triumphal ovation. On his right hand rode the Marshal St. Andr^, on his left the constable ; more than twelve hundred noblemen and gentlemen followed in his train. The mayor of the city met him at the gate of St. Denis, and presented him with a congratu- latory address. The assembled multitudes rent the skies with their acclamations, hailing him as the champion of the faith " The regent, oflFended at this bold law-breaker, summoned him to Monceaux, where the court then was ; but he would not go. Deputies of the Reformed hastened there to ask her protection. They showed her a list of over two thou- sand congregations, and said they could raise fifty thousand men. Still in doubt which side to take, but justly dreading the Guises most, she invited C.ond6 to Fontainebleau, and would have put herself and her son in his hands. He made the mistake of his life in delaying to accept the offer ; for whoever had charge of the king's person possessed a vast advantage over the other side. This advantage Guise was quick to grasp. When Catherine refused to move to Paris, the duke roughly said that she could do as she pleased, but the king should go with him. Yielding to force, she was again helpless in the lawless hands that were stronger than law. OUTRAGE BREEDS OUTRAGE. The massacre at Vassy was but the beginning of similar scenes. At Chalons, Tours, and elsewhere, Papists attacked Protestants ; in a short time three thousand were said to have been slain. Nor were the violences all on one side : those of the new faith rose against their enemies, and not always in self-defense. Four years before this time Beza had placed their numbers at four hundred thousand, and they were making converts every day. They were strongest in the south and about Orleans, and numerous in Normandy and Bur- gundy ; Picardy and Paris were the parts most bitter against them. "For weeks 366 and months," says one of their historians, "the blindest, wildest, bloodiest fanat- icism ran riot over France. Where the Huguenots had power, the Catholic wor- ship was abolished. The priests were driven away or killed; the churches were sacked, their altars overturned, their images broken, their relics scattered and •defiled, their baptismal fonts turned to the vilest uses. The shrines of saints, the tombs of kings, whatever monument was venerable by age or association, were marked for ruin. The ashes of Irenseus were flung into the Rhine, those of St. Martin of Tours into the Loire : the sepulchres of Louis XI. at Cleri, of Richard Cceur de Lion at Rouen, of William the Conqueror at Caen, were rifled and desecrated. The Catholics had no churches of their opponents to pillage, CHATEAU D'ARQUES. no images of theirs to break : their wrath directed itself not against dead monu- ments, but against living men. In the north, spurred on by the priests, and encour- aged by a terrible edict of the Parliament of Paris, which doomed every Huguenot to death, and called upon the faithful everywhere to rise and execute that doom without form of law, it was a frightful havoc that they wrought. We read of a stream of Huguenot blood running in one place nearly a foot deep." Open war could hardly be worse than these irregular and lawless horrors ; and war was inevitable. Admiral CoHgny, the best and ablest man in France, 367 was reluctant to leave liis peaceful retreat at Chatillon. A proved soldier and firm patriot, he dreaded tlie desolations of civil strife ; an instructed disciple of Calvin, he more than disliked to mix the sword of the Spirit with earthly weap- ons. His brave and faithful wife decided his course. He asked her, "Are you ready to hear of our defeat, to see your husband condemned and executed as a rebel, and your children disgraced and ruined, begging their bread of their ene- mies ?" She answered, "Go, in God's name." He joined Conde at Meaux, with a force like Zisca's Taborites or Cromwell's Ironsides : they had their chaplains, their religious exercises, their daily instruction in faith as well as arms. Coligny would have marched at once on Paris ; but Condfe was the general- in-chief, and the whole summer and fall were spent in negotiations and prepara- tions. Meantime the mutual slaughter went on in the various provinces. Mont- luc was sent to ravage Guienne in the southwest. Years after, without the least remorse, he wrote an account of his first exploits on this expedition. "I got two hangmen, whom they called my lackeys, because they were always at my heels. I was determined to use all possible severity, for I knew gentle means would never reclaim these hardened scoundrels. At St. Mezard three prisoners were brought to me bound in the churchyard, by a stone cross which they had broken. I seized one by the collar with harsh words. 'Ah, sir,' he cried, 'have mercy on a poor sinner!' 'What?' said I in a great rage; 'have mercy on you, a villain who had no respect for the king? ' With that I pushed him roughly to the ground, so that his neck fell exactly on the broken cross, and called on the hangman to strike with his axe. The word and the blow came together : off went the fellow's head, and with it another half foot of the cross. The other two I hanged on an elm close by. This was my first act after leaving home." Such were the manners of gentlemen and soldiers, or some of them, in the year of grace 1562. Montluc evidently thought he had done a fine thing; and so did the pope, who wrote him a letter of thanks for many similar barbarities, and the home government, which made him a marshal of France. On the other side, Des Adrets was harrying the Catholics of Dauphiny, in the east. His name became a terror ; none could stand before him, and cities made haste to open their gates at his summons. One specimen of his temper will suf&ce. After taking a castle and butchering most of its defenders, he reserved a few for his evening amusement. Seated on the top of a high tower, he made the wretches, one by one, take a short run and then jump to certain death. The last made three starts, and each time stopped on the edge. "Bah !" said the conqueror, "you are a coward." The man turned like a flash, and said: "Baron, brave as you are, I will give you ten trials to do it in." His wit and spirit saved his life. Not only Coligny, but Conde too, was instructed enough to see that such excesses as those of Des Adrets brought no credit to the cause KONTl,UC SlyAYINO PRISONERS AT ST. MEZARD, 369' of reform, and had better be left to the Papists. They blamed him for his cruel- ties, and he afterwards left their party in disgust. Coligny objected, on principle, to receiving foreign aid, until he saw that Guise was drawing troops from Spain and Switzerland. The English queen, who always drove a sharp bargain with her allies, promised six thousand men and a supply of cash in exchange for Havre, a valuable port on the Channel ; and D'Andelot recruited in Germany a body of heavy cavalry to set over against the SavIss mercenaries. Paris was reinforced before Cond^ was ready to attack it, and there was no open action till December i8th. Then the armies met near Dreux, fifty miles west of the capital. BATTLE OF DREUX. For two hours they stood looking on each other, without moving. The old Constable Montmorency was on one side, his two nephews on the other; and. many families of minor note must have been likewise divided and opposed. Guise had nineteen thousand men, five-sixths of them infantry ; the Huguenots had eight thousand horse, and but five thousand foot. The battle raged for seven hours, and at first was contested with equal stubbornness. Then the roy- alist centre and right wing gave way ; Conde broke and drove the Swiss, and. Coligny with the Germans pressed Montmorency hard. Of the so-called trium- virs or chiefs of the old party, the marshal, St. Andre, was killed, the constable wounded and a prisoner. His son begged the duke to rescue him, and received the answer, "Not yet." Guise showed himself the best general there. Holding- his division together, and biding his time till the enemy's cavalry were scattered in pursuit, he at last shouted, "Come on, the day is ours," and made a charge which fulfilled the words. The admiral and his brother were driven back, and Cond4 was made prisoner. He was treated like a prince, and lay that night — though not to sleep — in the same bed with his captor. Antony of Navarre was not in the fight. He had been won over — not for the first time — by the enemy, and killed in besieging Rouen, which was held by his brother's English allies. His son was destined to become the leader of the- cause he had deserted, and one of the most famous kings of France. AN INCIDENT. At the siege of Rouen occurred one of the most remarkable escapes, or series of escapes, recorded anywhere. Francis Civile, an officer of the garrison,, was shot in the head while standing on the ramparts ; he fell, and was buried with others. His servant, on hearing this, wished to take the body home. Montgomery, the Scottish knight who had killed Henry II. in the tournament three years before, was in command of the town : he led the servant to the place. The pit was opened and a number of bodies disinterred, but that of Civile was .;»", BURYING THE DEAD AFTER THE BATTLE OF DREUX 370 371 not found among them. They were covered up again : the faithful valet went ■off in dismay, but returned to take a last look. Near the pit he saw a hand protruding from the earth ; on one finger sparkled his master's diamond ring. He ipade haste to dig up the body, found it yet warm, and carried it to a hospital. The surgeons, who had more than they could do, would not touch such a hope- less case. The servant conveyed Civile to an inn, dressed his wound, and with much labor brought him back to consciousness. While he lay helpless, the •city was taken and sacked by Bourbon's soldiers, who threw him out of a window. He fell on a heap of manure beneath, and lay there three days, again supposed to be dead, and really very near it, till his brother found means to carry his sense- less form out of Rouen. After all these strange experiences, he received medical aid and proper care ; and he was alive forty years after, when the historian Thuanus (de Thou) wrote his story. DEATH OF GUISE. After his victory at Dreux, Guise besieged Orleans, which had become the stronghold of the Huguenots, and was now held by D'Andelot. Cond6 was a prisoner, and Coligny was raising troops in Normandy. The southern suburb ■of Orleans was taken: the city seemed doomed, and with it the cause. All was ready for an assault to be made on February 19th, 1563 ; but on the evening before, as the duke was riding to his quarters, chatting with a friend, he was shot from behind by a Huguenot named Peltrot. He cried, "They owed me this ! " Indeed, from the standpoint of his party, such actions were to be not only ■excused but praised. The assassin risked and lost his life to deliver Prance from a tyrant, and the Protestants from their most terrible foe. Guise lingered six days, and they were the most creditable of his life. His approaching end raised, calmed, and purified his thoughts; whatever nobleness was in his character came out as it had seldom done before. If we may believe the chroniclers, he urged his eldest son, then a boy of thirteen, not to avenge his murder, and to take warning by his example. It was all in vain, for the young duke was destined to repeat his father's career and to meet a similar fate. More effectual was his advice to the regent to make peace at once : this she was well disposed to follow. Conde and the Constable Montmorency, each lately held prisoner by the other's friends, arranged the preliminaries. Seventy-two Protestant ministers, meeting at Orleans, wished to make no concessions, and insisted on the burning of "all atheists, libertines, anabaptists, and disciples of Servetus," who had him- self been burned for heresy at Geneva in 1553. Cond6 brushed these bigoted suggestions aside with contempt, and on March, i8th, 1563, the Edict of Amboise proclaimed partial toleration. It allowed every Frenchman "to live at liberty in iis own house, without being forced or constrained for conscience's sake;" but it :?y=.^Ti" :',"'V^''' ^T W^"^ TUB NIGHV BEFORE THE SIEGE OF ROUEN. 37? 373 restricted the public worship of the Huguenots, and forbade it iu Paris. A peace of four years' duration followed, marred by the intrigues of Philip II., and broken by frequent violences and riots, in which those of "the new religion" were usually the chief sufferers. CHAPTER XXV. ^^\r THE QUEEN OF NAVARRE. HE little kingdom of Navarre, including tlie principality of Beam and five counties, lay- on both sides of tlie Pyrenees ; but in 15 15 tlie southern portion was annexed to Spain,, wbich in after years often threatened the remainder. More than once its sovereignty passed to new hands through failure of a, male heir. Catherine, the heiress of the house of Foix, famous in the Albigensian wars, was married to a D'Albret in 1491. "^^■^ Her son Henry, who lived till 1555^ espoused Margaret of Valois, the pious sister of Francis I., who was half a Protestant. At their court, as has been mentioned, Farel, Lefevre, and other early Reform- ers found refuge and welcome. Their only child was Jeanne D'Albret, born in 1518 and married at twenty to Antony of Bourbon. A woman of strong character and unusual attainments,, she became a Huguenot in 1560, as a result of careful and dispassionate study. On her husband's death, two years later, she established the new worship, and then or later suppressed that of the Catholics in her dominions. A papal legate was sent; she refused to receive him. He wrote her a threatening letter; she replied in extremely plain language, saying : " I use no compulsion, and condemn no one to death or imprisonment, penalties that are the nerves and sinews of a, system of terror. I blush for you when you falsely say that so many atrocities have been committed by those of our religion. Purge the earth first from the blood of so many just men shed by you and yours. Your words are not sur- prising, considering whence they come ; but they are far from suiting me. Use other language, or, better still, be silent." Much more of the same sort she wrote to the amazed cardinal. In October, 1563, the pope summoned her to Rome, on pain of excommunication and out- lawry. She appealed to Catherine de Medicis, who made Gregory understand that he had gone much too far, since in France he had no authority over kings or queens, and it was not for him to give away their dominions. The pope took his snubbing meekly, and rescinded his hasty action. After this Philip II. set (374) PREPARING FOR THE SIEGE OF ORLEANS. 375 376 on foot a plot to seize Jeanne and her children, carry them to Spain, and have her condemned by the Inquisition ; but she heard of it, and took refuge in a strong castle. She worked for seven years on a code of laws for her little kingdom ; it "was published in 1571, remained in force for more than two hundred years, and showed her to be, as some have claimed, "the wisest and most enlightened sover- eign of her age." Several of its provisions equalled or surpassed the best legis- lation of later times ; thus begging was forbidden, needy widows and orphans provided for, education made a public cha,rge, murder alone punished with death, interments kept apart from towns and churches, the sale of public offices (which went on openly in France for another century or two) abolished, and all subjects regarded as equal before the law. The religious provisions of this code made a hearer approach to toleration than was then customary. It seems monstrous in modem eyes that all were obliged, under penalties, not only to attend the Reformed services, but to partake regularly of the communion ; but nowhere, then and long after, was any divorce between Church and State dreamed of; everywhere the civil authorities were thought responsible for order and conformity in spiritual things. In Navarre no one could be executed, or even tried, for heresy. The last vestiges of Roman worship had been suppressed in 1569, because the priests, previously allowed in a few districts, had stirred up sedition. The property of the Church was now devoted, in equal parts, to education, charity, and the support of the new religion. The Bible was translated into the dialects of Beam and Gascony, and a ministry supplied through a seminary at Orthez, with funds for fifty students of divinity. Calvinism was now well provided for in the south of France. YOUNG HENRY. The birth and rearing of him who was to be Henry IV. of France were as -remarkable as his later career. His two older brothers had died in infancy through the folly of those to whom they were entrusted. Old Henry, who wanted an heir — "no peevish boy, nor whimpering, whining girl" — insisted that his daughter, during her throes of labor, should sing an old song of the country • and so she did, not omitting one of the many stanzas. Then he gave her a gold box containing his will, and took away the child. Its lips were rubbed with gar- lic, a few drops of Gascon wine put in its mouth ; at this it raised its head and swallowed them eagerly. "Ha !" the king cried, " thou shalt be a true Beamois !" The boy was brought up in the mountains after the customs of the country, with the peasants and like a peasant. Thus trained for future tasks, he grew : strong and active. Gay and handsome, precocious and attractive, much of his childhood was spent at the French court. In 1565, when he was eleven, he over- heard a conference between the regent and the infamous Duke of Alva, who ^advised the taking off of the chief Huguenots; "for one salmon," said he, "is ASSASSINATION OF GUISB, BY JEAN PEI.TROT. 377 378 worth a hundred frogs." The boy took care that his mother should hear of this, and she never forgot the warning. At thirteen he returned to her, popular, accomplished, almost full grown, A magistrate wrote: "I shall hate the new religion all my life for having carried him off from us. Two astrologers here declare that he will some day be one of the greatest kings of Europe," His gifts were soon to be needed. Dreading the continual intrigues of Philip II., Coligny hatched a plot to seize the young king at Meaux ; it miscarried, and a second civil war began, Cond6 marched on Paris, and on November loth, 1567, met a force much larger than his own in the indecisive battle of St. Denis, in which the old Constable Montmorency was mortally wounded. The sultan's ambassador, seeing how well the Huguenots fought, exclaimed: "If my master had six thousand men like these, he could conquer all Asia." To gain time, the regent made peace four months later ; but toward the end of summer she sent out troops to seize Conde, with Coligny, who was visiting him at Noyers in Bur- gundy. A royalist officer, who disliked the treacherous business on which he was employed, gave them opportunity to escape with their families. Traversing rough mountain paths, and crossing the Loire by a dangerous ford, they in Sep- tember, 1568, reached Rochelle on the west coast, which from this time was the stronghold of their party. There they were soon joined by the queen of Navarre and her son, then nearly fifteen, Cond6 offered to give up the command to his nephew, but Jeanne refused, saying to her son: "You have ceased to be a child, you are now to be a man. Europe is watching you. Go, and under your uncle learn to obey, that it may be yours some day in your turn to command." BATTLE OF JARNAC DEATH OF COND^E. The third war now began. The edicts of toleration were repealed, the exercise of any form of worship except that of Rome was forbidden on pain of death, and the Calvinist ministers were given fifteen days to leave France. The king's army was nominally commanded by his brother, the Duke of Anjou, a boy of seventeen, who was guided by Marshal Tavannes. This skilful com- mander outgeneralled Cond^ separated him from his reinforcements, and forced an action near Jamac on the Charante river, March 13th, 1569. Conde's leg was broken by a kick from the horse of the Duke de la Rochefoucauld, who rode beside him. With the bone protruding through his boot, he called on his friends to strike for Christ and their country, and gallantly led his last charge. He was soon unhorsed, and fighting on his knee. Says an old chronicler, "Around him was the bitterest and most obstinate contest that ever was seen, it was thought, during the civil wars. One old man. La Vergne, fell with fifteen of his descendants in a heap around him. But what could two hundred and fifty gentlemen do, opposed to two thousand in front, with twenty-five hundred German reiter on their right and eight hundred lances on their left, but die ? — as they OSATH OP CONSi. 379. 38o •did, two-thirds of them, on the spot " Condfe gave up his sword to a gentleman named D' Argence, who had him carried to the woods near by and laid carefully ■on the grass with his back against a tree. He was talking to a number of royalist officers who had gathered about him, when a captain of Anjou's Swiss guard rode up and shot him through the head. Thus perished as gallant a prince as ever drew sword for the right. Had his ability equalled his spirit, France might have had a different history. His murderer was never punished, nor did young Anjou even blame the dastardly deed. By his orders the prince's body, slung across a pack-horse, was borne into Jarnac and jeered at by the .soldiers. It was afterwards given to his nephew, and buried in a tomb of his family at Vendome. Though the Huguenots had lost only their leader and the advance-guard, ■their spirits were low as Coligny and his brother drew them off to Cognac. Here the Queen of Navarre, who was no mean orator, hastened to join them, with Henry and his cousin, young Conde. In a glowing speech she pronounced the •eulogy of the heroic dead, raised the drooping courage of the troops, and offered her son and her nephew to carry on the work to which she pledged her life. With one accord the admiral, the nobles, and the whole army saluted the Prince ■of Beam as their chief, and swore fidelity to him. Thus, when little over fifteen, he was placed in the high position which he was to fill so well, and entrusted with the defense of those liberties to which he was never false at heart. A man ■of meaner birth, whatever his capacity, could not have ruled the barons. Coligny had experience, character, prudence, and fidelity, but those who were his equals in rank would never submit to his ascendancy. Henry of Navarre they cheer- fully owned as their superior, for he was of royal blood, the equal of the king's Ibrothers, and but three steps from the throne. After the battle of Jarnac Pius V. wrote to Charles IX. in theSe words : " If your majesty continues to pursue openly and hotly the enemies of the Catholic religion, even to their extermination, be assured the divine aid will not be want- ing. It is only by the entire destruction of the heretics that you can restore the ancient worship to your noble realm." The sentiments of the age were warlike and intolerant, but the Church should have been a little ahead of the age in wisdom and humanity. On the contrary, the alleged Vicar of Christ was constantly approving massacres and crying for more bloodshed. The chief hindrance to any permanent peace in France was this continual outside interference from the pope, and much more from a monarch even more Catholic than the pope, Philip II. of Spain. The difficulties of the Huguenots arose from their divided counsels, their need of foreign allies, their lack of funds, and the consequent impossibility of keeping together, for any length of time, a force sufficient to meet that of the king. On the other hand, the royalists were weakened by their own mutual jealousies and intrigues. The queen-mother hated THE QUEEN OF NAVARRE ENCOURAGING HER TROOfS. 381 382 tlie Guises (with reason), and wished to keep them down. In retaliation, the Car- dinal of Lorraine poisoned the king's mind against his brother, who was general- in-chief. The Duke of Anjou, nettled at this, and anxious to show that nothing could de done without him, was slack in his operations ; or when he was zealous, his measures were made of no effect by secret orders from the king. Again and again, in their times of weakness and discomfiture, the small Protestant armies might have been crushed or greatly damaged, if their enemies had been united in heart and will. It was largely through these dissensions that a force of German auxiliaries was enabled to march across France, and effect a junction with the Huguenots on June 23d. Their general died on the way, leaving his command to Mansfeldt, and his loss was followed by a greater, that of the brave and faithful D'Andelot. The Queen of Navarre decorated the visiting chiefs, among whom was the greatest and noblest man of that troubled time, William of Orange. But the chief effect of all this was to show that the Protestants of France were not with- out friends abroad. BATTLE OF MONCONTOUR. Young Navarre fleshed his sword in a severe skirmish at La Roche Abeille, leading a gallant and successful charge. The royalists now adopted the method of tiring out their foes, drawing off when they were strong, and gathering again later. Poitiers was besieged, and successfully defended by the young Duke of Guise and his brother — two boys oppressed by hereditary honors, and coming to the front like Anjou, Navarre, and Conde's son, at an age when they should have Ijeen at school. The battle of Moncontour was fought October 3d, 1569, and lost within an hour. The Calvinists resisted a first charge but feebly; under a second their ranks gave way. Coligny's jaw was broken by a pistol-ball, so that he could not shout the words of command ; it was the same sort of wound that "had disabled Montmorency at Dreux, near seven years before. The admiral was forced to retreat with heavy loss, leaving his wounded, his artillery, and his bag- gage to the enemy. But his prudence had saved the precious life of Henry, the nominal general-in-chief The boy cried with rage when sent to the rear and forbidden to take part in the battle. He watched it from a hill, and wished to engage at a moment when he might have changed the fortune of the day. Rightly or wrongly, Coligny bore the blame of this defeat. An old historian says that " he was abandoned by his officers, his nobles, and all save one woman, ■who bravely advanced to hold out her hand to the afflicted and assist in retrieving the affairs of the army." The heroic Queen of Navarre assured him of her con- fidence, and pawned her crown jewels to raise funds for the cause, while the quarrels of the royalists enabled the admiral to gather the remains of his army and prepare for another campaign. BATTLE OF MONCONTOUa. 3»J 384 The seat of war was now transferred to the south. An army overran Na- varre, practicing the usual cruelties, and taking every strong place but one : the Calvinist lords of the country in vain opposed its progress. Jeanne sent Mont- gomery from Rochelle with a few horsemen ; he eluded the troops sent against him, collected a force, joined the barons, raised the siege of Navarreius,, defeated the royalists, and took their general prisoner. Nearly at the same time Coliguy descended from the mountains of Languedoc, made his way by forced marches into Burgundy, and with six thousand men confronted twice that number under Marshal de Coss6. Being ill, he was obliged to leave the command to Prince Henry, who was in his element when heading a charge. On June 25th,. 1570, he defeated the royalists at Amay-le-Duc. This he afterwards called " my first exploit of arms," disregarding the skirmish a year before. A HOLLOW PEACE. Alarmed by these losses, the king and his advisers inclined to peace. It was concluded at St. Germain-en-Laye early in August, on terms very favorable to the Huguenots. The free exercise of their religion was granted, except at court, with a general amnesty ; their confiscated estates were restored ; they were declared eligible to all offices, and received the government of Rochelle and three other towns, Montauban, Cognac, and La Charite, for the next two years. In October Charles IX., who was now twenty, married Elizabeth of Austria, amid general rejoicings. But no new queen could hope to gain an influence rivalling that of Catherine de Medicis. Among the confusions and rivalries of these unhappy years her dark and subtle policy mainly guided the destines of France, and she would have been glad to allow no power but her own. The history of political intrigues is less edifying even than that of doubtful wars. One feels that men whose ideas cannot be reconciled and who hate each other might better be honestly fighting in the field than exchanging visits and courtesies, dancing at the same balls, pretending to be friends, and all the time trying to ruin one another. But the latter has usually been the way of courts. During the two years of peace two parties sprang up in France. The Extrem- ists, headed by the young Duke of Guise, who inherited his father's ideas and qualities, were in the confidence and pay of Philip II. Other Catholics, who hated this foreign meddling, wished to join hands with the Protestants at home and in the Netherlands against Spain, or at the least to resist its influence and have no more civil wars. Montmorency, the late constable's son, was the chief of these ; their adviser was the Chancellor De I'Hopital, who had long since shown himself a wide-minded statesman and a friend of toleration. Between these factions France was to be divided for nearly twenty years. In the supposed interest of peace, a marriage was arranged between Henry of Navarre and Margaret, the king's sister. Much against her will, Jeanne went 3«S to Blois to settle details with Catherine. She had a wretched experience there^ The loose manners of the place shocked her modesty ; she complained that it was "the most vicious and corrupt court that could be imagined," and that her sister and cousin had lost all sense of religion. As for the king, his amusements, would not bear putting on paper. "I would not for the world," she wrote her son, " that you should stay here." She was happily unaware that Henry's morals, were to conform rather to the practices of other monarchs than to the require- ments of the catechism. The two dowager-queens had not a sentiment in common, and agreed like oil and water. Each insisted that the young couple should reside with her and follow her way of worship. The pope objected to the union, and so did many others. But the young king overbore all opposition. Jeanne went to Paris to pre- pare for the wedding ; there she was seized with illness, and made a most Christian end on June 8th, 1572. Several Calvinist writers ascribed her death to poison; but this charge had no better warrant than the bad repute of her enemies. The families of Valois and Guise were capable of any wickedness : Coligny's elder brother, the cardinal of Chatillon, while an envoy in England, was poisoned by his servant, and this was but one case among many. But it is probable that the best woman of her time came to the death she welcomed by the visitation o£ God and not of man. CHAMBER OF HORRORS, TIMS OF THS INQUISITION. t- CHAPTER XXVI. ST. BARTHOLOMEW. ENRY, now king of Navarre, and Margaret of Valois, were married in Paris on August i8tli, 1572. Four days later, in the same city, the most famous massacre in history began. Historians have toiled to unravel the hideous web of hypocrisy and treachery which connected the two events. In those days the children of great families were more apt to be trained in crime than in virtue. Nothing was too bad for Guise and his associates, for Anjou and his mother ; but tbe king's consent had first to be obtained. The way in which this was done is partly made clear by memoirs of the time, including the confession — not intended as such — of one of the chief criminals. Cut it as short as we may, the necessary explanation will take us some distance back. Charles IX. was not without generous impulses, and made some efforts to behave like a king ; but if he had any native strength of character, it must have perished under the tutelage of a mother without heart or principle. As he often complained, he was worse taught than many of his valets. Nervous, excitable, and wholly ignorant of restraint, he was often the sport of his passions, and usually the tool of vile advisers. It was to his credit that he seemed to form a real respect and affection for Coligny, the best man in France. At their meeting iu the summer of 1571, he would not let the admiral kneel, but seized him by the arm, saying, "I hold you now, and you shall not leave me ; I cannot spare you. This is the happiest day of my life." Thenceforth he often sought his new friend's advice, and it was given frankly, with wisdom and to the point. Coligny was of course a warm admirer of William of Orange, who had done more for civil and religious liberty than any other man alive or dead. He hated Spain and Rome ; he knew that the interests of Protestantism throughout Europe yere one ; he was heart and soul with his cousin Montmorency and the other Catholic liberals, in their plan of union against the common enemy. Apart from the religious question, this was the obvious interest of France, and so the 386 387 admiral told the king. A treaty with England was signed ; negotiations were on foot with the Dutch and German states ; reinforcements were actually sent to William ; all seemed ripe, or nearly so, for a breach with Spain. The Spanish party saw all this, and raged inwardly. The queen-mother saw it, and trembled for her power. She had tried the Huguenot leaders, and they were too strict for her taste. More pagan than Roman, she preferred Rome to Geneva. But personal interests were always weightiest with her. Jealous of the new intimacy, she one day asked the king, in a sneering tone, what he learned in these endless conferences. His reply might well be fatal to his instructor : " I have learned that my mother is my enemy." After meditating on this rebuff, she followed Charles to one of his rural retreats, beset him with tears and reproaches, warned him of the consequences of his course, and asked him, if he persisted in it, to send her back to Italy. The weak youth yielded for the moment, but soon fell again under the sway of the larger mind. At a cabinet council there was fierce debate over a force that had been sent to Holland and waylaid by Alva. Coligny urged his colleagues to break with Philip at once, and cried, ■" He is no true Frenchman who opposes it." The king supported him; COLIGNY ATTACKED. The Duke of Anjou, who had ordered or approved Condfe's murder, was Catherine's favorite — if she cared for any of her children. One day, just after talking with the admiral, the king showed violent anger to- ward his brother, and seemed to threaten his life — or so Anjou reported to his mother. The precious pair agreed that Coligny must die. Young Guise was their fitting instrument. A bitter partisan from his cradle, the heir of his father's feuds and hatreds, despising his father's dying counsels, it was congenial work for him. The Protestants always felt that the court was not to be trusted, and many friends had warned Coligny not to return to Paris after the death of the Queen of Navarre ; but he was not a man to weigh his safety in the balance with what seemed his duty. One of his attendants soon begged to be relieved from duty and THE CARDINAL OF LORRAINE. o o H' IS o & o u fc. o 14- n. 388 389 allowed to leave tlie city. Being asked for his reason, he replied, " Because they caress you too much, and I would rather escape with the fools than perish with the wise." These fears were prophetic, and those who yielded to them proved to be the wise ones rather than the fools. But it appeared unreasonable to ■expect, in the midst of wedding festivities, that the vengeance of the godless would fall so soon and with such wholesale fury. On Friday morning, August 2 2d,. four days after Henry's marriage, the ad- miral was returning on foot from the palace, when a shot was fired from a window. Either the aim was not quite true, or he swerved aside ; but one ball entered his left arm, while another tore off His right forefinger. He pointed to the opposite iouse ; it was the property of a servant of the Duke of Guise. It was searched at once : the gun, which was found on the floor, belonged to one of the duke's bodyguard. It was soon learned that one of the duke's horses had been waiting behind the house, and that the would-be assassin had escaped upon it. When the news reached the king, he was playing tennis with Guise and Coligny's son-in-law. He threw down his racket in a rage, and cried, " Am I to be forever troubled with these broils ? Shall I never have any quiet ? " He went to his chamber and paced it with black looks. His mother and brother came to him ; he eyed, them with suspicion, turned away, and would not speak to them. Navarre and Cond6, after a hasty visit to the wounded man, asked the king for permission to leave Paris, as they and their friends were not safe there. The king, still in a fury, swore that he would have vengeance on all concerned in the outrage. He had the gates closed and the city searched, but he who fired the shot had gone. Coligny, suffering from his wounds, sent for the king, who went at once to his bedside and called him "father." Catherine and Anjou, fearing to trust the two together, thrust themselves into the room, but Charles sent them away when the admiral expressed a wish to speak with him alone. The queen soon interrupted them, pretending consideration for the injured man, and dragged her son away. As they went back, she asked again and again, "What did he say ? " He would not answer. At last, wearied by her importunity, he burst out, "Well, if you will have it, he said you have too much to do with affairs. He wanted to caution me, before he died, against letting you drive us all to the devil ; and, by Jove, I believe he is right ! '^ After that, what was left of the admiral was not worth insuring. A king who cannot keep secrets, nor protect his most faithful servants against their deadliest foes, is not one to handle affairs of state. Yet these details do not fit with the opin- ion long held by Protestant historians, that Charles was acting a part throughout He had hardly the ability for that, and certainly not the self-command. Guise, believing that his share in the attempted murder could not be more than suspected, asked for an audience the next day, took the high tone of 390 injured innocence, and asked permission to leave tlie court. The king frowned: *' You can go when and where you please ; but if you are proved guilty, I will know well enough where to find you.'' In all this the evidence goes to show that the poor weak king was sincere. But he was like the mob, "always of opinion with the last speaker." He could not resist pressure ; and now he was abandoned to the enemies of his soul and of France. THE PLOT. Ifanythingwere attempted against Guise, he could turn on his accomplices ; it seemed best for them to make a bold stroke and take matters into their own hands. Accord- ingly Catherine and Anjou, after consult- ing with Marshal Tavannes, the Duke de Nevers, and two others, went to the king's cabinet with these advisers late on Saturday evening. The queen-mother did most of the talk- ing. "The Hugue- nots are arming," she began. It was a lie, but what did that matter? "They mean to crush you. The Catholics have had enough of this ; the citizens are in arms." " But I have forbidden it," said Charles. "Still it is done. And what will you do?" He did not know. She went on: "One man has made this trouble. Remember Amboise, where they rose against your brother : remember Meaux, where they had planned to take you, and you had to fly. Away with them !" ASSASSINATION OF COLIGNY. 39r After more of tliis talk, the councillors urged the killing of all the Hugue- nots. De Retz alone objected, and he was soon brought to agree with the rest. Catherine resumed her discourse. "They are coming to-morrow to demand ven- geance on Guise. They will throw the blame on us. You may as well know it: your mother and your brother did the deed. We struck at the admiral to save the king; and you must finish the work, or you and all of us are lost." The poor weak monarch still hesitated. These men were his friends, he said; some of them he loved, to all he was pledged. What was to become of his honor? His mother brushed this trivial question aside. "If you will not do it^ we will leave you, and do what we can without you. So you are afraid of the; Huguenots?" She knew how to play on her son's passions. Rising in a rage, he: cried: "By God's death, since you think it right to kill the admiral, let every Huguenot in France die with him, that not one be left to reproach me with, the deed!" This much gained, the rest was easy. The city gates were closed, the citi- zens called to arms. Details were left to Guise, who was here in his element. By midnight his charges were given to the captains of the guards and to the town authorities. Every Catholic was to fasten a white cross on his cap and a strip- of linen on his left arm ; all were invited to join in the good work. It was now Sunday and St. Bartholomew's Day, August 24th, 1572. The signal was to be given at daybreak, but the anxious queen ordered the bell — ^it was a church bell, of course — rung an hour and a half earlier. As she listened at the window with Anjou, a pistol went off beneath. Struck with sudden terror, the sent a message to Guise to stop. But it was too late : he had ridden to the admiral's. MURDER OF COLIGNY. The captain of the king's guard knocked at the door, and struck down the servant who opened it. The soldiers rushed up stairs. Coligny was at prayer ;, he told his attendants to save themselves if they could. Behme, a German, was. first in the room, asking, "Are you the Admiral?" He answered calmly: "Yes. Young man, respect my gray hairs." The ruffian stabbed him ; othef blows followed, more than enough. "Is it done?" came a voice from beneath. *'The duke will not believe it without seeing. Throw him out !" The body was flung from the window. Guise and his brother wiped the blood from the dis- figured face, and then (it is said) kicked or trampled on the corpse. It is to be remembered in excuse for the young murderer, that he always believed, though without reason, that his father's assassination had been ordered by CoHgny. Few in those days had much regard for human life; but there was one difference between the two parties, which the papists could never understand. The better sort of Protestants were men of their word; they had a sense of 393 lionor, which forbade treachery and underhand methods. Thus, throughout these long-continued struggles, they were at a heavy disadvantage. The murder of Coligny was but the beginning. The Huguenots, waked by the ringing of church-bells and the shouts of "Death! kill all," found the assas- sins at their doors or in their chambers. In the Louvre and its courtyard two hundred lords and gentlemen were cut down or shot, and at least three hundred more in the city. The Duke de la Rochefoucauld, an intimate friend of the king, who had left Charles but a few hours before, was stabbed by masked men at his bedside. Teligny, the admiral's son-in-law, tried to escape by running along the roofs, and was shot from the street. One nobleman was chased to the •chamber of Henry, who was not there. The young queen, wakened by his cries, -called the nurse to open the door ; wounded in both arms and mad with terror, the intruder laid hold of Margaret, covering her with his blood. Her screams "brought assistance, and she managed to save the man's life. As she passed to her sister's apartment, another fugitive was struck dead at her feet, and she fainted at the sight. Thus through the very courts of the palace the butchers pursued their prey. A FEAST OF BLOOD. It was the same throughout the city. Sixty thousand men of all ranks are said to have take a part in the massacre, and two thousand were killed that morn- ing. The highest nobles led the mob. Guise cried through the streets, " It is the king's will ; let none escape ! " Marshal Tavannes shouted, " Bleed them, Meed them ! The doctors say bleeding is as good in August as in May." It was a carnival of slaughter. Navarre and Cond6 were not among the slain. Both were of royal blood ; both, by the king's desire, had lately married ladies of the court. Charles sent for them on that hideous morning, swore at. them fiercely, and required them to change their religion at once. Henry submitted; his cousin, a mere boy, was bolder. Given three days of grace, his resolution yet held out. "It is the mass, death, or the Bastile," cried the frantic king. " Which you please," Condfe answered, " so it is not the mass." Charles would have slain him then and there, but others held back the royal hand. But both princes were in the toils, and found it necessary to conform to requirements for the time. On Sunday noon the king ordered the butchering to be stopped, and it ceased for that day. But Paris had had a taste of blood ; the human tiger was roused, and wanted more. Next morning the bells rang out again, and the horrid business was resumed. It lasted in full force for two days more, and incidental murdering went on till the week ended. The Huguenots who had hidden from the first attack were diligently sought for, and little mercy shown to sex or age. "Infants, packed in baskets, amid jeering laughter, were £ung over the bridge into the Seine, Little boys not ten years old were seen A NOBI,EMAN SBBKING REFUGE IN QUEEN MARGARET'S CHAMBER. 393 394 dragging with cords in triumph along the streets a Huguenot infant torn from its slaughtered mother's breast." The count of Coconnas, who was afterwards justly beheaded, seized thirty persons, imprisoned them, and on their refusal to recant put them to death by slow torture, and enjoyed their agonies. Ren6, Catherine's perfumer, who was accused of having poisoned the late queen of Navarre through a pair of gloves, amused himself by visiting the Protestants in several prisons, and cutting them with his dagger. Pe^en, a butcher, and Cruce, a worker in gold, afterwards boasted of having killed in a single day, the first a hundred and twenty Huguenots, the other above four hundred ; but these claims were doubtless beyond the truth. These villains believed what their priests told them, that their crimes were acts of piety ^ to be liberally rewarded in heaven. INCIDENTS OP THE MASSACRE. The story of those horrid days would fill a volume. Rank, repute, charac- ter, eminence of whatever sort, was no protection. Ramus, a famous scholar, was ;found at his devotions in an upper story of his house ; his last words were a prayer for his murderers. He was shot, stabbed, thrown from the window, and dragged, still breathing, through the streets : his head was cut off and his body flung into the Seine. La Place, a jurist and historian, was twice summoned to- the Louvre, and then stabbed on the way. The head of the great house of La Force, after paying two thousand crowns as ransom for himself and his sons, was murdered with the elder of them. The younger, aged thirteen, lay still for hours between the bodies of his father and his brother, covered with their blood. Passers-by stopped to look at the group, and said "Ay, best kill the cubs as well as the old wolf" Plunderers took their outer garments : at last came a poor man, marker in a tennis-court, who tried to pull off the child's laced stockings, and let fall some expressions of pity. At this the boy raised his head a little, and whis- pered, "I am not dead." '' Lie still," said the rescuer, "till I come again." He returned when it was dark, covered the lad with a tattered mantle, and led him to a place of safety. On the way he was still in danger, and after reaching his relative. Marshal Biron, he had to be smuggled out of Paris in disguise, for the blood-hunters were still on his track. He lived seventy years longer, and became a Marshal of France. The occasion was favorable for the settlement of private grudges, and the enriching of such as did not object to blood-stained gains. " Defendants in actions at law assassinated the plaintiffs, debtors slaughtered their creditors, jeal- ous lovers butchered their rivals." Two nobles of the house of Clermont were at law ; one look the shortest road to the title and estate by killing the other. The Baroness du Pont was seeking a divorce ; the process was abridged, and the ladies of the court much interested, by finding the baron with his throat cut. Brantome, in his Memoirs, saj's that he knew maiiv gentlemen who made THE DUKE OF GUISE VIEWING THE BODY OF COLIGNY. 395 396 as mucli as ten thousand crowns apiece by pillage, and that the royal jewel-cases were largely replenished in the same unroyal way. Renfe, the perfumer, may have been a go-between in this irregular second-hand trade, for he got possession of the whole stock of a wealthy jeweler, on pretence of helping him to escape, and then killed him. Charles IX. is said to have stood at his window and fired muskets at the fugitives till he was tired. On Sunday evening he wrote letters to send abroad, pretending- that Guise was the sole author of the massacre, and that he and his court had been in danger. Two days later he acknowledged his responsibility for this punishment of treason, as he called it, before the Parliament of Paris, ■which paid him man}'- compliments and ordered an annual commemoration of the deed. On the same Tuesday he, with his mother and her ladies, went to the slaughter-house at Montfaucon to exult over the headless body of Coligny, which, after being subjected to shameful indignities, had been partially burned and hungup by the heels like a pig. "Pah, it smells!" said one of the visitors- The king answered with a quotation worthy of its pagan source : " The carcass of an enemy always emits a pleasant odor." To finish here the history of the greatest Frenchman of his day ; his memory was branded, his children were degraded to the rank of plebeians and made incapable of oifice, his castle of Cha- tillon destroyed, and the very trees on his estate, with the foolish rage for destruction that marked all French persecutions, were cut down. Yet his daugh- ter, Teligny's widow, became the wife of the great Prince of Orange. Among the Huguenots who escaped was one who owed his life to a singular act of magnanimity. Regnier, a gentleman of Quercy, had a bitter personal •enemy, Vezin, who had sworn to take his life. During the massacre this man, with two soldiers, entered Regnier's room and arrested him. Expecting instant death, he was led forth, told to mount a horse, and escorted in silence to his dis- tant home. " Now you are safe," said his captor. " Between brave men, danger should be equal. We can settle our affair when you will." Of course Regnier protested his gratitude. Vezin answered, " Love me or hate me, as you please," and rode back to Paris. This story, with other events of that fearful time, is brilliantly told in a recent English book, " The House of the Wolf." IN THE PROVINCES. The massacre was not confined to Paris. Old fires of hatred were banked, not extinguished, throughout France. Either by hasty orders from Paris, or from the spontaneous rage of papists, similar atrocities were committed in many cities. The news of St. Bartholomew's Day traveled fast, and was like a spark to powder. "They heard of it at Meaux oa the Sunday evening ; that night the streets of Meaux were drenched in blood. They heard of it at Orleans on Tuesday the 26th ; for a week onward from that date, Catholic Orleans gave w s o iJ o K <} pa O « -< (0 CO Why, they are afraid!" "Not so," one of his officers replied; "they are most NAVARRR AT THB BATTLE OF COUTRAS. 417 4i8 dangerous after prayer." They rose, and rolled out a verse of Marot's psalms. Henry, wearing his famous white plume, rode along the ranks, with words of encouragement. The royalists charged, driving before them a force of light cavalry that had been placed well in advance. But the main, body stood firm, while the foe came up in confusion. Navarre was in his element that day. To friends who thrust themselves in front to protect him, he cried, "Give me room: you stifle me ; I must be seen !" He seized an officer of Joyeuse by the collar, shot another who came to the rescue, and shouted to the first, " Yield thee, Phili- stine !" The word, as we know, meant an enemy ©f the chosen people and of progress ; but its use was much less familiar then than it is now. In half an hour the battle was over. Joyeuse was slain, with near one-third of his men, four hundred of them nobles. Three thousand prisoners and eighty- four ensigns graced the triumph of the Huguenots, who had lost but about two hundred. Henry acted with moderation and clemency, sparing life as far as he could, and expressing regret for the fate of Joyeuse, whose body he sent back to Paris. When his councillors asked what terms he would now demand, he answered, "The same as before." He wrote, with his usual wit and point, to Heniy III.: "Sire, my Lord and brother; thank God, I have beaten your ene- mies and your army." A sermon and a political treatise were in that short note. He meant that the French king had no business to be making war on his friends, and that armies so employed were his enemies. The other Henry knew this well enough, and perhaps was not sorry for the fate of Joyeuse, who alone among the favorites had urged submission to the League. Meantime the third Henry — Guise — was having his own way in the north and east. A large force of Germans and Swiss, badly led, were on their way to join Navarre. The duke, with some help from Epernon, hung on their flanks, prevented a junction, surprised them twice by night, slaughtered many, and finally drove them out of the country. As foreigners and plunderers, they were generally hated ; a story is told of a woman in Burgundy who cut the throats of eighteen sick or wounded Germans who had been left in her cottage. GUISE IN PARIS. Henry III., who had borne a part in this campaign, returned to Paris in triumph with his favorite Epernon. But the people gave all the credit to Guise. "Saul," they sang, "has slain his thousands, but David his tens of thousands." A book was sold with the title, "Military Exploits of the Duke of Epernon;" on each of its pages, in large type, was the word "Nothing." The throne was held in contempt, while Guise received an almost idolatrous devotion. Meaning to profit by this, he called a secret meeting of his family at Nancy. Their objects were the same as ever, but they had grown bolder with success. " They resolved to extirpate the Calvinists, to depose the king, immure him in a cloister, i '^ .^r!*??^ *» •:4»'. *'} a: ^ «K'. \ *^^lfc.^ ^affi*-'' *i'H.if» * ,11 ~> • , GUIS3 ATTACKING THS GERMANS ANU SWISS ON THgiR WAY TO JOIN NAVARRE. 419 420 expel tlie minions, confer on themselves all the high offices and dignities of the state, and rule the whole goyemment of France at their pleasure;" at least this ■was reported and believed. The Cardinal of Guise used to say that he would Hever be happy till he held the king's head between his knees, to fit a monk's cowl on it. His sister, the Duchess of Montpensier, carried a pair of gold scissors, and boasted that she meant to make the cowl with them. Without announcing all their private aims, the Leaguers wrote to the king requiring him to drive from his court and council all persons offensive to them ; to give up such forts and towns as they might name, himself paying the garri- sons and all other expenses ; to confiscate the estates of the Huguenots ; and in short, to make himself entirely and absolutely a puppet in their hands. A more lawless and indecent demand was never made of any nominal sovereign. It was in the interest not of liberty, but of persecution ; not of the state, but of a few persons, and chiefly of a single family, which had come into France within the century. Tenacity was the one virtue of the Guises ; they never changed a purpose nor let go a possession. Their ruling vice was not so much bigotry as shameless greed. Their pockets were considered first, the Church next, and justice and humanity came in nowhere. WHICH IS KING ? The feeble monarch, sorely embarrassed by these insolent demands, saw nothing better to do than delay his answer. Thereupon the Council of Six- teen, who held Paris for the League, concocted a plan to attack the Louvre, kill the courtiers and ministers, and hold Henry a prisoner. All was well arranged,, when the plot was betrayed. The king increased his guards and prepared the palace for defense. The Sixteen, fearing for their lives, urged Guise to come to Paris at once. Henry, both by messenger and by letter, forbade his coming; he disregarded the order, and entered the city on May 9th, 1588, with but seven attendants. Huge crowds gathered to meet him : according to a witness of the scene, "the shouts of the people sounded to the skies ; nor had they ever cried, 'Live the king,' as earnestly as they now shouted, 'Live Guise.' Some saluted, some thanked him, some bowed, some kissed the hem of his cloak. Those who could not get near expressed their joy by gestures. Some adored him as a saint, touched him with their beads, and then pressed these against their lips, eyes, and foreheads." It helps one to understand the fierce Parisian mob of those days, that their idea of a saint was one who had most to say and do against the Reformed. Certainly there was nothing saintly about Guise, unless his hatred of the Protestants were so considered. He called on Catherine, and she went with him to her son. The king had been advised to strike down the rebel then and there, and it was as good an opportunity as came later ; but if he meant to do it, his mother restrained him. WOODMAN'S CABIN IN THS ARDBNNB PORBST. 4«« 422 Tumults ensued : Paris was full of visitors from the provinces : the wildest rumors passed from mouth to mouth : barricades arose for the first time in the streets : the royal guards were not able to make head against the mob, and many tof them were slain. The all-powerful duke stopped the fighting : the queen- mother went to him to negotiate, but his demands were too monstrous. She cried out angrily, "What would people say, what would the sovereigns of Europe think, if the king allowed a subject to propose what amounted to his abdication ? " Guise replied coolly, "Those are my terms." There was nothing left for Henry but flight ; and he escaped next day by the back door (so to speak), while Catherine occupied the duke's attention with a prolonged argument. In the midst of it an attendant came in and whispered in his ear. He sprang to his feet and exclaimed, " Madam, you have betrayed me. He has gone, and I am undone." The aged dissembler pretended to be surprised and not to believe the news. Her son had left for Chartres, where he was safer for the moment. Meantime Philip of Spain was sending his famous armada to England, and urging Guise to delay no longer. The latter ordered Paris to his mind, and tried to convene the Parliament. Its president, Harlai, refused, saying boldly, "It is to be lamented, when the servant drives away the master. My soul I confide to God ; my heart is the king's ; my body is at the service of the lawless." Said Guise, "I must have certain measures passed." Again the lawyer answered with an epigram : "When the majesty of the throne is violated, judges have no longer any lawful authority." But others were less scrupulous, and the usurper got what he wanted in that part of France. Basely yielding to pressure, Henry signed in July a paper which made him nominal head of the League, excluded Protestants from the succession, and bound him not to rest till Calvinism was crushed, besides making Guise general- in-chief These promises he made, meaning to break them ; it was his habit to provide only for the moment, and take no thought of difl&culties ahead. SECOND STATES OF BLOIS. The States-General met again at Blois in October, and again the king dis- played his talents as an orator. He spoke of his poverty, which was now press- ing, and promised economy : he would wear his clothes out before getting new ones, and be content with a single fowl for his dinner, if a pair were thought too many. The Assembly, again controlled by the League, replied by reducing his supplies. He would agree to pronounce Navarre incapable of reigning while he remained a Protestant : they replied that Navarre as an individual must be excluded, and that a king might not even tolerate heresy. He flung out in wrath a sentiment which deserves far more approval than any of his actions: "He who sacrifices the national welfare to personal ambition, and seeks to pro- mote his private fortunes by duplicity and treachery, must pay for it in infamy 425 on earth, and endure God's judgments elsewhere." This only made Guise and his friends angry, for the cap fitted their heads perfectly. He insisted on print- ing his speeches : this filled the Leaguers with alarm, for rational people could not help seeing that, so far as the king's arguments went, he was in the right With scarcely concealed sympathy, he presented a letter from Navarre, denounc- ing the meeting as packed by his enemies, denying its right to condemn him, and protesting that he was not a heretic. It is curious that people have always been so sensitive about the application of this elastic word. From the Roman point of view the Calvinists were heretics of course, and the pope and his adher- ents from that of Calvin ; yet either side was much offended when the obnoxious term was applied to them. St. Paul had been much more candid in admitting that he worshipped the God of his fathers in a way which his opponents called heresy. ASSASSINATION OF GUISE. It had become plain that there were too many Henries in the field. Navarre was at a distance, out of reach for the moment, and not really the main point at issue, after all, just then. The two chief antagonists were at hand and in close collision ; one or other of them had to retire from the scene. Guise was still at his plots against the throne and possibly the life of his master, who received sev- eral warnings of the fact. Enervated by long self-indulgence, Henry had nearly lost the will and power to act; but he would screw his courage to the striking- point, rather than be stabbed or thrust into a monastery. The court was still at Blois. A council of state was summoned for the morning of December 23d, 1588. Between the hall where it would meet and the king's cabinet were a small antechamber and a bedroom : these were to serve as the place of sacrifice. The king first asked Grillon, the captain of his guard, to undertake the business. Though he hated the duke, this man replied that he would gladly challenge Guise, or die for his master, but that he was a soldier and not an executioner. Asked next if he would be silent, he said that was his busi- ness. Another readily took his place. The guards were doubled that night, and next morning, long before light, forty-five of them were admitted, by a secret stair, to the king's presence. He told them what was to be done, and they all professed readiness to do it. Eight of them, armed with sword and dagger, were stationed in the antechamber. It is strange that the fine Italian hand of Cath- erine de Medicis does not appear in these arrangements, except in objection to them. It was an age of treachery and suspicion, and one who had planned so many murders might well have distrusted his old accomplice, whom he had since wronged beyond forgiveness. But an infatuation of blind self-confidence came over Guise. On five or six notes of warning he wrote, "He dare not." To a friend he said, "I know no man on earth who, hand to hand with me, would not MUKDER OF THE DCKE OV GUISE. 4*4 425 Tiave more reason to fear tlian I." To some who urged him to leave Blois at once, lie replied, "Affairs are in such a state that I would not go out by the door if I saw death coming in at the window." This last was mere bravado, for he agreed to leave the next day. He supped that evening with one of his titled mistresses. When he reached his own room at three A. M., his uncle was there to give him another warning, but he brushed it aside as before, with "He dare not." At eight he was in the council hall. Here the Archbishop of Lyons gave him a hint, before a royal officer: "That dress is too light for the season: you should wear one stiff with fur." But it was not fur that could save him : in a simple, athlete's cos- tume, with a naked sword in his hand, he might possibly have escaped, for he ■was extremely strong. His eldest son, Joinville, was in the tennis-court with Henry's nephew, the Grand Prior; this had been arranged to keep the youth out of the way. His secretary sent a hurried note at the last moment, " Save yourself, or you are dead ; " but Guise had already left the hall for the king's cabinet, to which a valet summoned him. It is said that on the way he was seized with sudden faintness : if so, the murderers held their hands till he recovered. Noticing something sinister in their demeanor, he turned to glance at them as he raised his arm to lift the hang- ings at the door of the bedroom : at this moment the eight fell upon him. Encumbered with his cloak, he tried in vain to draw his sword ; but he dragged the assassins across the room before he fell. He was covered with wounds, and died without a word. Encouraged by this success, Henry, had the doors and gates thrown open, and announced to those who crowded in that he meant to rule in deed as well as in name. He went to his mother, who lay sick, and said, "The King of Paris is no more; I am now King of France." She answered, " I fear you will soon, be king of nothing." He had the remaining chiefs of the League arrested and confined, except the Dukes of Mayenne and Nemours, who escaped. The Cardi- nal of Guise was executed: his body and that of his brother were buried in quick- lime, in a place known to but a few, lest they should be turned into relics. Abundant proofs of conspiracy, treason, and complicity with Spain, were found : the papers of Guise showed that he had received two million ducats from Philip 11. But all this went for nothing, so fiercely were the passions of the Parisian mob aroused- Every demonstration of hatred assailed the absent king: his statues were broken, his arms torn down, his name left out of the public prayers: the priests called him Herod, and demanded revenge for the blood of Guise. The theologians of the Sorbonne declared that he had forfeited the throne, and that his subjects ought to cast off their allegiance: the Parlia- ment ratified the sentence, after Harlai and others had been thrown into the Bas- tile. The Council of Sixteen called on Mayenne to take the government ; he 426 came to Paris, and was made lieutenant-general. Half of France was presently in revolt. DEATH OF CATHERINE. Amid these commotions Catherine de Medicis died, January 5tli, 1589, within. a fortnight of her old accomplice. She had outlived three sons, two of them on the French throne, and left a fourth, king in little more than name : all of them put together had hardly the making of an average man. She had borne her large share in demoralizing France, in destroying its wealth and prosperity, in drenching it with blood. Two of the chief authors of the Massacre of St. Bar- tholomew had now gone to their account, and the third was soon to follow. By rights, they should all have been hanged sixteen years before. And now one of another mould than these comes to the front. The king of Navarre was no saint ; but in every attribute of manhood he was far above his foes. He had largeness of mind and heart ; his ambition was legitimate, not basely selfish ; he was true to his friends ; and he loved France. Much love he cannot have had for the enemy of his j'^outh, the murderer of his comrades ; but policy was the law of princes, and the policy of Navarre was loyal and gen- erous. It was not by treachery and assassination that he meant to reach the throne of France. Henry III. was loath to call on this ally, for he too felt that a great gulf lay between them. He made overtures to Mayenne ; they were rejected with scorn. He sent to Rome for absolution : it was refused. His agent urged that the Cardinal of Guise, like his brother, was a traitor: the pope replied that he was the judge of that. In sore straits, with neither men nor money, and threatened by the all-powerful League, he made a treaty with Navarre. The two met at Plessis, near Tours, on April 30th. Bourbon knelt ; the other raised and embraced him. In a long interview they arranged their plans. After it was over, Navarre wrote to his friend Momay, " The ice is broken, not without many warnings that I came here to die. As I crossed the river, I commended myself to God." The councillor answered, "Sire, 3'ou have done what you ought, but what none of us could have advised." So greatly and justly was the good faith of the last Valois distrusted, that the prince had halted a few miles from Tours, and consulted his attendants whether to go on or turn back. Sully claimed to have urged his- master to take the risk ; and the event more than justified his wisdom. The country was already torn by another civil war. Mayenne attacked Tours in the night, but was driven off. Reinforcements came ; the two kings marched on Paris with forty thousand men, forced the gates of St. Cloud, and prepared to besiege the capital, where Mayenne had a force of less than ten thousand. The news that he was excommunicated alarmed Henry ; for two days he would not eat. " My brother," said Navarre, " the bolts of Rome do not touch conquerors. You will be safe from them in Paris." It was to be assaulted on 427 August 2d. But the weapons he had so freely employed were now to be turned against the king: he had done forever with the Louvre and its tinsel joys. MURDER OF HENRY III. At least one priest freely preached assassination. Lincestre, the chief orator of the League, held up in the pulpit a chandelier that he said had come DEATH OF HENRY III. from the palace, ornamented with figures of satyrs. "See," he cried, "these are the king's devils, the gods he worships, the instruments of his enchantments. 428 Would it be lawful to kill sucli a tyrant ? I myself would be ready to do it at any moment — except wben I am consecrating the Lord's body in the mass." Jacques Clement, a young Dominican monk with a bad record, was excited by tbese tirades. He boasted mucb of wbat he meant to do, and was laughed at by his comrades. The prior of his convent told him it would be only a misr demeanor, not a crime, to slay a tyrant, and spoke to the Dukes of Mayenne and Aumale, who did not discourage the design. The Sixteen urged him on and said (having no authority to make such promises) that he should be a cardinal if he escaped, or canonized if he fell. Guise's sister, the Duchess of Montpensier, whose husband was in the king's army, was liberal in her favors to this low-bom and igptiorant fanatic. He bought a dagger, steeped it in what he believed to be poison, and by false pretences procured from imprisoned royalists a letter of introduction and a passport to the king's army. Presenting these at St. Cloud on July 31st, he was taken in by La Giiesle, the attorney-general, who had him watched that night ; but he slept like a child. Admitted next morning to the loyal presence, he offered a letter, and while Henry was looking at it, stabbed him in the abdomen. The king drew out the knife and struck the assassin's face with it, crying, "My God, the wicked monk has killed me !'' La Guesle dispatched Clement, whose body was thrown from the window to the soldiers beneath, and burned. The wounded man lingered for thirty-six hours. To Navarre, who came hastily in tears, he spoke with affection, urging his officers to recognize and be true to his successor. "To be king of France," he said, "you will have to tura Catholic. You must — and you will." His last hours displayed more dignity than his life. With him ended the house of Valois, which in the persons of thirteen successive kings had held the throne for two hundred and sixty years. CHAPTER XXVIII. THE FOURTH HENRY. ENRY of Navarre was now tlie lawful sovereign of France; but his crown and sceptre were yet to win. The officers of the late king kept aloof; they acknowledged his rights of birth, but thought these vitiated by his heresy. "Conform," they said; "submit to Rome, and we follow you," He answered, as he had done before, that he could not do it with the dagger at his throat. Even if he had no regard to his conscience, his honor forbade ; better lose thirty crowns than that. To ask him to change his faith so suddenly was to imply that he had no faith to change. No ; he would consider the matter ; he was always open to conviction ; if a general council could be had, he would abide by its decision. Meantime he guaranteed the free exercise of the Catholic religion, with all the possessions and privileges of the Church. A contract to this effect, with other provisions little favoring the Huguenots, was signed on August 4th, and registered in the Parliament of Tours. Not satisfied with these concessions, Epemon and many others left him. By prompt action and with Marshal Biron's aid, he retained the Swiss mercenaries ; but within five days the royal army was diminished by one-half, and it had become plain that the siege of Paris must be abandoned. He now issued an address to the French people. With the usual high- minded professions, it contained an argument the power of which is better appreciated in our day than it could be in his : "Consider how hard and unjust is this attempt to coerce me in matters of faith, when I, your lord and master, permit you to enjoy perfect freedom of conscience." It was the language of weakness appealing to strength, of a minority against superior numbers. He concluded with asking the prayers of his subjects that God would "enlighten his conscience," as well as direct his councils and bless his endeavors. He was obliged not only to make friends at once, but to look forward, however reluctantly, to the distant but inevitable event of his so-called conversion. His support was feeble: the (4'9) 430 Protestants were divided, and not all of them trusted or followed him. Some dreamed of a Reformed confederacy under foreign protection. Montmorency and other governors, thinking the king's cause hopeless, expected to see France break into fragments, and to become themselves independent princtes. If the League had been really united and ably led, Henry would indeed have been in straits ; but its soul was gone with Guise, and here too each was for himself Mayenne was heavy and slow; and the Cardinal Bourbon, whom this faction presently proclaimed king as Charles X., was a tool and figurehead at best, and now a prisoner. In such times of confusion success falls not necessarily to the' worthiest cause, but usually to the keenest brain and quickest hand. Through all these wars France produced no commanding genius, no general or statesman of the highest order ; but Henry IV. was the first man of his time, b}"- qualities as well as birth the fit and natural ruler and leader of the afflicted land. Great was the joy in Paris over the news of the late king's end. The Duchess of Montpensier, a lady ready to lay aside her aristocratic pride on every due occasion, embraced the messenger, and regretted only that the victim did not know that she had sharpened the knife. She wished to substitute bright green for the usual court mourning. The town was with her ; fireworks and huge bonfires celebrated the happy event. The Jesuits proposed to raise the regicide's statue in the church of Notre Dame. The pope was equally pleased, of course, and praised the deed before his cardinals, comparing it to the most heroic sacrifices of ancient times, and even, for its supposed value, to the birth and resurrection of the Son of God. But however frantic his oratory, Sixtus V. was a politician, and had no wish to see the Most Catholic King become lord of all western Europe. He knew that Philip II. had designs on the French throne ; it suited him better to have the place occupied by a harmless elderly priest, who represented nothing but orthodox)^ and an ancient family. Charles X. was a younger brother of the late Antony of Navarre, and an uncle of the rival claimant. BATTLE OF ARQUES. Having much ground to cover with a small force, Henry divided his army into three, and went north with barely eight thousand men, to await reinforce- ments promised from England. Thither Mayenne followed with thirty thou- sand, meaning to bring back the Bearnois, as this faction called the king whom they would not acknowledge, a pitiable prisoner. Couriers were appointed before- hand to hasten with the news to Paris, and windows on the street along which the triumphal procession was to pass were engaged at high prices. But the show did not come off as expected. The succors were delayed, and Henry, his position being insecure, was urged to retire into Germany or England. From this step, which might have been his ruin, he was saved by his own resolution or the wise advise of Biron. 431 Jocosely lamenting his misfortunes, lie called himself " a king without a king- dom, a husband without a wife, a general without an army-chest." But he went to work to fortify his position at Arques, a few miles from Dieppe and the coast. A trench eight feet wide was dug around his camp, including a castle and a hospi- tal called the Maladrerie ; within, earthworks were thrown up and cannon planted. BATTLE OF ARQUES. The enemy attacked on September 2ist, 1580, under cover of a heavy fog, which ■concealed their movements. They gained a temporary success by a ruse ; their German mercenaries, pretending to desert, were allowed to cross the trench and 432 helped by Henry's Swiss to climb the earthwork. Having thus effected a lodge- ment, tbey turned on the Swiss, and, aided by two French regiments who rushed in, drove the defenders from the Maladrerie. A general assault was ordered, under which Montpensier's division gave way. Had Mayenne been as quick as his adversary, he might have kept his advantage ; as it was, Henry was in dan- ger. He cried, "Are there not fifty gentlemen brave enough to die with their king?" In the nick of time Chatillon, Coligny's son, came up with two small regiments of Huguenots. "Here we are, sire," he said; "we will die with you." The arrival of this reinforcement, and the lifting of the fog at the same critical moment, saved the day. The guns of the castle opened on the foe as the Calvin- ists raised their battle-psalm: "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered." Chatillon, with Biron, who had been wounded an hour before, drove the Germans from the Maladrerie. The discouraged royalists reformed their ranks, and turned on the foe with new ardor. After a fierce fight, in which Henry showed his usual valor, the Leaguers were forced to retreat. ATTACK ON PARIS. The moral effect of this victory was great : it raised the king's reputation and brightened his prospects. The pope said, "That Beamois will win: he is no longer in bed than Mayenne is at his dinner." Five thousand English and ' Scotch arrived, with twenty-two thousand pounds from Elizabeth — ^the largest sum Henry ever yet had handled. Joined by his other armies, he entered Amiens, the chief city of Picardy, a province always bitterly hostile to the Prot- estants. Thence he marched on Paris, and took the wealthy faubourg of St. Germain, with much booty. Pillage was the custom of the times, and Sully gained three thousand crowns here. Chatillon, who had his father's murder to avenge, was extremely active. Nine hundred Parisians fell, and four hundred prisoners were taken. Among them was the prior of the Jacobins, who was soon after tried and convicted as an accomplice in the murder of Henry III. and for having praised it from the pulpit. This wretched priest was sentenced by the Parliament of Tours to the frightful punishment of regicides : his body was harnessed to four horses which were driven in opposite directions, and so torn apart. As Mayenne advanced from Flanders to relieve Paris, Henry retired to Tours, where he was acknowleged as king by two French cardinals and by the Venetian Republic. After securing Normandy, he attacked Honfleur, but left it to relieve Meulan, and forced the Leaguers and their Spanish auxiliaries to raise the siege. Meantime the pope had sent to Paris Cardinal Cajetan as legate, with three hundred thousand crowns, intended as a ransom for Cardinal Bourbon, otherwise Charles X. ; but Mayenne got possession of the money. These gen- tlemen always wanted all they could get from whatever source, and generally 435 kept most of it. Unlike honest John Tompkins of the ballad, "Although they were rich, they desired to be richer." They also loved ofi&ce and position and power, not only for the profit to be had thereby, but for the honor and dignity. As Henry's star rose, Mayenne was more willing to listen to his propositions ; but he could not bring himself to accept them and make peace, for he hoped to- be able to snatch the crown himself. There were many other schemes and cross- purposes among the Leaguers ; but it is not necessary to dwell upon these, for they had no other effect than to protract the miseries of France, and they finally came to naught. BATTLE OF IVRY. The two armies met again at Ivry, fifty miles northwest of Paris, on Marck 14th, 1 590. Henry had about eight thousand infantry and three thousand horse ; Mayenne had twice as many, including seven thousand of Parma's men from Flanders, brought by the young Count Kgmont. This nobleman, a devotee of the cause which had slain his father, insisted on fighting when Mayenne would have avoided it, and paid for his rashness with his life. Each army was arranged in a cresent. The horsemen of the League bore the heavy lance of chivalry : those of the- king had only sword and pistol. He said to them, "Comrades, if this day you. share my fortune, I too take all your risks. I am resolved to die or conquer with you. Keep your ranks, I beg yoii ; but if you should break them in the- heat of the fight, rally at once. Should you lose sight of your colors, keep my white plume in view : it will lead you to victory and honor." They knew that these were no idle words. The Huguenots knelt while their chaplain prayed, and then both armies charged together. Macaulay's ballad, which has added to- the deserved fame of this battle, may serve as a description of its beginning and end; it is put in the mouth of one of the Protestant soldiers: Oh, how our hearts were beating, when at the dawn of day We saw the army of the League drawn out in long array, With all its priest-led citizens, and all its rebel peers, And Appenzel's stout infantry, and Egmont's Flemish spears. There rode the brood of false Lorraine, the curses of our land ; And dark Mayenne was in the midst, a truncheon in his hand. And as we looked on them, we thought of Seine's empurpled flood. And good Coligny's hoary hair all dabbled with his blood ; And we cried unto the living God, who rules the fate of war. To fight for His own holy name and Henry of Navarre. The king is come to marshal us, in all his armor drest. And he has bound a snow-white plume upon his gallant crest. He looked upon his people, and a tear was in his eye : He looked upon the traitors, and his glance was stern and high. Right graciously he smiled on us, as rolled from wing to wing, Down all our line, in deafening shout, "God save our lord the King." BATTJCB OF IVRY. 434 435 " Aud if my standard-bearer fall, as fall full well be may — For never saw I promise yet of such a bloody fray — Press where ye see my white plume shine amidst the ranks of war, And be your oriflamme today the helmet of Navarre." Hurrah ! the foes are moving ! hark to the mingled din Of fife and steed and trump and drum and roaring culverin ! The fiery duke is pricking fast across Saint Andre's plain, With all the hireling chivalry of Gueldres and Almayne. Now by the lips of those ye love, fair gentlemen of France, Charge for the golden lilies now — upon them with the lance ! A thousand spurs are striking deep, a thousand spears in rest, A thousand knights are pressing close behind the snow-white crest. And in they burst, and on they rushed, while, like a guiding star, Amidst the thickest carnage blazed the helmet of Navarre. It was not a royalist victory from tlie start. On the contrary, tlie weight and numbers of the Leaguers drove Henry and his cavaliers back. He shouted to them to turn and see him die, and led a few in a desperate charge. For some moments he was out of sight, hidden in the press of foemen ; his friends thought he was down. But his usual good fortune had not deserted him. The white plume ap- peared again ; his followers raised a mighty cheer, rallied, and dashed furiously on the enemy. The ranks of the League wavered, and then broke all along their line. Their generals fled like cowards ; Mayenne, to secure his own safety, pulled down a bridge behind him, leaving hundreds of his men to drown in the river or be slaughtered on its bank. The Swiss, who had taken no part in the fight, surren- dered ; the Germans, whose leader was killed, offered to do the same, but were cut down with many of the Spaniards. The rout was complete and disgraceful. Now God be praised, the day is ours ! Mayenne hath turned his rein ; D'Aumale hath cried for quarter : the Flemish Count is slain. Their ranks are breaking like thin clouds before a Biscay gale : The field is heaped with bleeding steeds, and flags, and cloven mail. And then we thought on vengeance, and all along our van, " Remember St. Bartholomew ! " was passed from man to man. But out spake gentle Henry then, " No Frenchman is my foe : Down, down with every foreigner, but let your brethren go." Oh, was there ever such a knight, in friendship or in war. As our sovereign lord King Henry, the soldier of Navarre ! Ho, maidens of Vienna ! Ho, matrons of Lucerne ! Weep, weep, and rend your hair for those who never shall return. Ho, Philip ! Send for charity thy Mexican pistoles. That Antwerp monks may sing a mass for thy poor spearmen's souls. Ho, gallant nobles of the League ! Look that your arms be bright. Ho, burghers of St. Genevieve ! Keep watch and ward to-night. For our God hath crushed the tyrant, our God hath raised the slave, And mocked the counsel of the wise and the valor of the brave. Then glory to His holy name, from whom all glories are ; And glory to our sovereign lord. King Henry of Navarre. 436 Most of this description is accurate. As the pursuit began, Henry gave orders to " spare the French." The Spaniards were justly hated for their cruelties in the Netherlands, and the Germans, by their recent treachery at Arques, were supposed to have deserved their fate. Few regretted Egmont, who had been base enough to disown his father's memory. On his reception in Paris, the president, wishing to compliment him, had praised the late admiral, who had been stadtholder of Flanders and a famous soldier: but the son replied, "Do not speak of him: he was a rebel, and merited his death." Apart from its filial impiety, this was a stupid speech, for those to whom it was made were in arms against their lawful king. Moreover, it was not true, as we shall see in another place. The only other eminent victims of this battle were two Germans — Schoni- berg on the king's side, the Duke of Brunswick on the other. The nobles of the League, as has been said, took excellent care of their precious selves ; but with their men it was another matter. The cavalry, who had sustained the whole fight, had a chance to escape when it was over : not so with the footmen, who had stood still, scarcely firing a shot, and were now cut down or taken. • Some six thousand lost their lives, and as many were made prisoners : the remaining half of the rebel army was scattered in promiscuous flight. The victors lost but five hundred killed, and two hundred wounded. Sully, who captured Mayenne's standard, received no less than seven wounds ; but he recov- ered, to live over fifty years longer, and be for twenty of them an important figure in French history. Sixteen French and twenty Swiss colors, eight cannons, with all the ammunition and baggage of the camp, fell into Henry's hands. At ten that night he wrote to La None : " God has blessed us. To-day the battle came off. It has been fought well. God has shown that He loves right better than might. Our victory is entire. The enemy utterly broken. The Reiter fairly destroyed. The infantry surrounded. The foreigners badly handled. All the cornets and cannon taken. The pursuit carried to the gates of Mantes." Next morning he was playing tennis. As at least once before, he neglected to follow up his victory with the requi- site speed. Had he moved as quickly now as he did during the fight, he might have taken his capital and practically ended the war ; but it was his weakness to seek repose and pleasure after a victory. At this time Charles X., the nominal king of the League, died at Fontenay, having acknowledged his nephew's title. Coins of this fraction of a monarch exist, but he has no place in the list of French kings, the only one of that name and number having come to the throne two hundred and thirty-four years later. Still he had been useful to the Leaguers, and they were perplexed whom to put in his place, for they would not submit to Henry, HKNRY IV. AT IVRY 437 438 SIEGE OP PARIS. Paris had. been well fortified when he reached it on May yth, and was pre- pared to repel an assault ; so nothing was to be done but starve it into submis- sion. It was defended by five thousand soldiers and thirty thousand armed citizens ; the whole number within the walls was two hundred thousand, and there was food enough for a month. When this was gone, the convents were forced to supply the people for a fortnight from their reserved stores. The priests and monks bore part in the defense : thirteen hundred of them marched in procession, crucifix in one hand and gun or pike in the other ; and one of them, being awk- ward with his unfamiliar weapon, managed to shoot the secretary of the pope's legate, who had come out in his carriage to review them. These recruits probably gave up their supply of victuals to the public need with more reluctance than they exposed their bodies to the besiegers' bullets. By the end of June the famine became frightful. " A bushel of com soV for a hundred and twenty crowns. The only bread, and that very scarce, was made of oats. Horses, dogs, asses, and mules were used as meat, and they were delicacies publicly sold for the families of the greatest lords. The poor fed on herbs and grass, which they picked up in yards and streets, and on the ramparts; these produced such cruel disease that many died. Excessive heat, following excessive rain, increased the general sickness." Wood for fire had given out, and meat — ^when there was any — was eaten raw. A dog and a man, both emaci- ated, fought in the street ; the dog won, and dined off the man's shrivelled car- cass. The horrors of Sancerre were repeated on a larger scale, and carried further. When the hides and parchments were all gone, slates were pounded into powder and mixed with water and a little bran. The Spanish ambassador^ or some one else, remembered reading that in an eastern city, similarly beleaguered, bread had been made from bones : on this hint the graveyards were disturbed, and human skeletons turned into a hideous food. Bodies of famished children were salted for their parents' use. August came, and the survivors were scarcely able to clear the streets of corpses. The two hundred daily deaths increased fivefold ; it is said that in this last month of the siege thirty thousand perished. Maddened by the sight of fields ready for the harvest, many went outside the walls and snatched a handful of the ripe grain, heedless of wounds and dangers. Fanaticism endured these extremities rather than submit to the humanest sovereign of his time. At an earlier period of the siege, Henry had allowed three thousand women, children, and old men, to pass through his lines. He now let his compassion override his interest. According to Sully, " He could not bear the thought of seeing the city, where he was destined to rule, become one vast churchyard. He secretly per- mitted whatever could contribute to its relief, and pretended not to notice that his officers and soldiers were sending in provisions, some to help tbeir friends 439 and relatives inside, others to make profit out of the need of the citizens." This, on the king's part, was good charity, but very poor warfare. At this rate, why besiege Paris at all ? If he thought to win over the citizens by his kindness, he was mistaken ; they still cursed him as the author of all their calamities. Yet he would not yield to the repeated entreaties of his soldiers, and especially of the Huguenots, to storm the city ; and this was chiefly, some thought, from fear of the awful massacre that would ensue, in revenge for St. Bartholomew. He said to the bishop of Paris, who came out to treat with him : " I would give one finger for a battle, and two for peace. I love my city; I am jealous of her ; I long to serve her ; I would grant her more favors than she asks of me ; but I would grant them of free will, and not be compelled to it by the King of Spain and the Duke of Mayenne." PARMA RELIEVES PARIS. At length the Duke of Nemours, who had charge of the defense, sent word to his allies outside that he would be forced to surrender if not relieved in ten days. On this Mayenne advanced to Meaux, where he was joined by Alexander Famese, the great Prince of Parma, then Philip's Governor of Flanders. In view of the approach of these forces, Henry raised the siege at the end of Au- gust, and marched to Chelles, more than half way to Meaux, that he might intercept the enemy on his way to Paris. Delighted at the prospect of an encounter with the foremost soldier of the age, he THE PRINCE OP PARMA. encamped on a hill, prepared for battle, and wrote to one of his lady friends, "If I lose it, you will never see me again, for I am not the man to retreat or fly." But there was to be no battle. Parma, on arriving in the neighborhood, got a view of Henry's army, saw that it was equal to his own, and said to Mayenne : " Those are not the ragamuffins you told me of ; they are well appointed, and they have cannon." So he determined not to fight, but to resort to strategy, in which he was more than a match for Henry. The king sent him a challenge ; he answered that he understood his own business, and had not come so far to take counsel of an enemy ; it was not his habit to engage when he could get what he wanted without it ; let Henry force him 440 to a battle if he could. On September 6tli be outwitted bis antagonist by drawing out bis army as if for attack, and tben suddenly turning towards X,agny, wbicb be took next day, crossing tbe Marne by a bridge of boats. IHenry, enraged but helpless, saw his garrison at Lagny destroyed, and the way made clear for the relief of Paris. A campaign of skirmishes followed, in which the king could do little more than hang on Parma's flanks and cut off" stragglers. The invader stormed Corbeil on October i6th, which freed the passage of the Seine ; having sacked it, he wished to garrison the place with Spaniards, but Mayenne objected. This town and Lagny were soon retaken by one of the Icing's lieutenants. In November Parma returned to the Netherlands. Henry, -while pxirsuing him, deviated from the road to follow one of those roman- tic adventures of which he was so fond. He had cast an admiring eye on •Gabrielle d'Estrees, afterwards intimately associated with his history, but at this time shy. He now went twenty-four miles out of his way, almost alone, through a hostile country, and visited the lady in the dress of a farm laborer. It was a delicate attention which she never forgot. "After this," he said, ""nothing will go wrong with me." Such were his recreations on the march. Before . the end of this year, 1 590, he took Corby, a town on the Somme, Tiear Amiens. In remoter regions he was less fortunate. Indeed, he still hai reason to fear the breaking up of his kingdom into bits, through the ambitiof -of the petty princes, favored by the confusions of the time. The Duke of Savoy had taken Aix in the southeast, and in the northwest Brittany was claimed by the Duke of Mercceur, one of the never-satisfied Lorraines, in right of his wife. The Prince of Dombes was acting there for the king, and had built a fort by the ;sea, but was driven off by a Spanish fleet. The religious question, which was inextricably intertwined with the politics ■of the time, added to the king's embarrassments. Bordeaux, through its coun- -cillors, begged him to make more speed in the way of enlightening his con- .science, and his Catholic adherents often reminded him that he had promised, a 3rear before, to call a council within six months for the attainment of that import- .ant end. He excused himself by referring to the toils of war, his battles, his siege of Paris ; and he was obliged to add that for the present the royal cause needed Protestant aid from abroad : why cut off loans and reinforcements from England and Germany by hastening a decision as to his faith ? Yet he knew that he was only gaining time, and that these delays could not go on forever. Meanwhile the councils of the League were distracted. Certain acts of violence in Paris provoked reprisals, and ended in the downfall of the Sixteen . and the discredit of the extremists. The Duke of Nevers abandoned faction for ; loyalty, and was made governor of Champagne. The Duke D' Aumale attacked ;St. Denis, was repulsed, and killed at the door of an inn whose sign was The 441 Royal Sword. : some importance was attached to this trivial coincidence. Henry, on his part, besieged Chartres from February i6th to April 19th, 1591 ; it fell at last, chiefly throvigh the valor and skill of Chatillon, of whom great things were expected. His death within the year, at the early age of thirty, was a heavy loss to the Protestants, who believed that he would have equalled or even excelled his illustrious father. The name of another leader has not appeared of late; Condfe, Henry's cousin, was poisoned in 1588. These wars, intrigues, and hatreds were fatal to many of the best. As the season advanced, the king took Noyon, and his ofl&cers won other successes in the north and south. A new pope sent a new legate, who published a decree command- ing the clergy to leave all places which recognized Bourbon, and otherwise in- vaded the liberties of the national Church: this aroused much wrath, and injured the cause it was meant to help. The Parlia- ment of Paris accepted the bull, but those of Tours and Chalons ordered it to be burned, and denounced obedi- ence to it as high treason. Young Guise escaped from confinement at Tours, not at all to the satisfaction of Ma- yenne, who feared in his nephew a rival claimant to the throne. MARIA DE MEDICIS. Second wife of Henry IV. HENRY'S RASHNESS AT AUMALE. In the early autumn the Prince of Anhalt brought six thousand Germans, and the Karl of Essex half as many English. With an army increased to •forty thousand, the king began on October ist the siege of Rouen, which his father's troops had taken from the Protestants twenty-eight years before. Here he performed many deeds of valor, and won the admiration of Marquis Villars, who commanded the defense. This oflScer, who was moved to equal activity 442 by so chivalrous an example, declared that Henry deserved a thousand crowns, and regretted that his religion prevented true Catholics from serving him. . But in January, 1592, Parma entered France again, and the king went to meet, him, leaving Biron to carry on the siege. At Aumale he suddenly encountered the whole Spanish army. Following impulse instead of reason, he charged with but a few hundred horsemen behind him. The nearest regiments dashed forward to cut him off ; the white plume was recognized, and the cry went through the whole host, "Navarre!" If Parma had acted promptly, he would have been taken or slain; but the. Italian, who did nothing without a plan, s:uspected a trap, and forbade a general advance. As it was, the foolhardy king was in immi- nent peril, and barely escaped with the loss of half his men. He was the last to reach a bridge which offered the only way of retreat : as he crossed it, a bullet inflicted the only wound he received in all his battles. The injury was luckily not severe, and he made his way to Dieppe with the survivors, no two of whom could give the same account of the skirmish. He laughed off his rashness, which perhaps brought him no less honor than discredit : bxxt Parma, who regarded war as a science, was deeply disgusted. When blamed for neglecting to improve so rare an opportunity, he replied with contempt, " I supposed I had to do with a general, not a mere captain of dragoons." Another slur he passed on his antag- onist, observing that "it was a fine retreat ; but for my part, I never engage in a place whence I am obliged to retire." That is, he would not fight unless he was sure to win ; and from this maxim the able tactician never departed. MORE OF PARMA'S STRATEGY. The approach of the Spaniards and Leaguers forced Henry to raise the seige of Rouen, in which he had lost three thousand men. He placed his troops across the enemy's path and offered battle ; but Mayenne, who had encountered him twice, had little of That stern joy which warriors feel In foemen worthy of their steel. Parma appeared to accept the challenge, but again eluded the king by drawing off his force under cover of the cavalry. To free the lower Seine he took Caude loc : while thus engaged, a bullet from the walls entered his arm at the elbow and passed down to the wrist. He uttered no sound, and went on with his observa- tions, till the blood dropping from his hand attracted the attention of those about him ; but the wound disabled him for a time, and contributed to his death within the year. Mayenne, who had the command in this emergency, led the army into the peninsula of Caux, a narrow and dangeroixs place. Henry promptly blocked the entrance, cut off supplies, and thought he had them shut up in a trap. But though Parma's body was weakened, his mental resources had not failed: he 443 procured boats and rafts from Rouen, built a temporary bridge in tbe night, and crossed the rivet in safety. Having now accdmplislied bis task, and being needed in the. Netherlands, be returned tbitber, much to tbe disappointment of Mayenne and tbe League, wbo wished to have everything done for them and to make no returns. Parma told them that they were unreasonable and ungrateful, since be bad saved their two chief cities, and Spain had borne nearly the whole expense of the war. Yet he meant to invade France again, bad not his death removed the most dangerous of Henry's foes. HENRY IV. CHAPTER XXIX. ABJURATION. - OTH parties, with reduced forces, now carried on the war in a desultory way. There were no more great battles like Ivry, no more terrific sieges like that of Paris ; only chance encounters, the taking and retaking of small places, the inter- ruption of normal business, and increasing misery. Marshal Biron was killed at the siege of Epernay, July 26th, 1592 : he was the most prominent of the king's generals, marked with the scars of seven battles, and a scholar of some repute : the great Cardinal Richelieu was his godson and namesake. He used to keep a sort of diary, and record in it every notable event or remark : it grew to be a proverb, when any one said something out of the com- mon, "You found that in Biron's pocket-book." Negotiation now largely took the place of arms. Every one wanted peace ; "but the question was, On what terms ? Matters seemed no nearer a settlement ; the king's cause was by no means won, and fresh perils sprang up around him. His Catholic supporters, offended at his long delay in settling the religious ques- tion, were growing cool or turning away : they disliked Protestant alliances, and were not easily reconciled to the idea of a Protestant sovereign. The Estates- General, called together by Mayenne, met in Paris in January, 1593, and sat fjr months. Its authority, disowned by Henry, was acknowledged by Spain and the Pope. Philip II. claimed the crown for his daughter, who was a grandchild of Henry II. The nobles scouted this suggestion, for the Salic Law of France forbade succession through a female line : even the Bishop of Senlis. who had praised the murder of Henry III., cried out that the proposal was " the greatest evil that could have befallen the League, and confirmed all the Politicals had said, that interest and ambition had had more to do with the war than zeal for religion, and that in thinking to serve the Church they had been the blind tools of a foreign king." These plain remarks made an impression, which was deep- ened when the Spanish ambassador admitted that Philip meant to give his daugh- ter in marriage to the Archduke of Austria. The assembly agreed that this (444) 445 •would never do. The envoy then said that a French prince might be sub- stituted, to be named and elected king within six months. Who should it be? The young Duke of Guise. The critical time had come. To embarrass his enemies, Henry, through his Catholic supporters, had proposed a conference with some of the deputies ; Mayenne and other Leaguers, dreading Spanish dominance, had favored the idea, and certain bishops were in session at Surenne. To enliven the dullness of these proceedings and remind people that he was not to be left out of the account, the king attacked Dreux early in June, and took it after a month's siege. THE KING OF FRANCE MUST BE A CATHOLIC. It would be tedious to recount all the steps which led to an inevitable end. Only a member of the national Church, a Romanist, could mount and hold the throne of France : this had been apparent from the start, and became clearer every day. The Huguenots numbered perhaps one-sixth of the population, and they were not increasing. The first force of the Reformation-wave had been spent long before ; and the crown had not, as in Bngland, such power or prestige that it might change the religion of the people. Personally, creeds and forms were of small consequence to Henry, whom nobody ever mistook for a pietist. His belief was a matter of inheritance, of tradition, of association : as he had several times intimated, what held him to it was rather a sentiment of honor than a conviction of conscience. And now it was a question — or rather it was hardly a question any longer — ^whether this private sentiment ought not to give way to considerations of the public welfare. What other hope was there for France, what other solution of the problems of the time ? Not one which would not make bad worse. He was a public man, and public life makes its own require- ments. Abjuration, from the standpoint of Calvin's theology, was a crime; from that of statesmanship, it was a virtue. We need not regard Henry as one who nobly sacrificed himself for the gen- eral good. He was a popular hero, not a moral hero. Ambition and self-love were not wanting in his nature : he always considered himself, though he con- sidered others too. It is only by contrast with the baser spirits round him that he shines so superior. There have been far better men and kings than he ; but to one better ruler there have been thousands worse. Above all others he was the man of his time in France : could he have met the requirements of the occa- sion if he had been a severe religionist ? His case was not the case of Jerome of Prague or Cranmer, who under terrible pressure renounced for a moment the cause to which they had given their hearts and lives. Some of his Protestant councillors backed up the advice of their Catholic friends. Sully's view was this: "I see but two ways out of your pres- ent straits. One is to put a force on nature and inclination. You must pass BEAUVA'S CATHEDRAL. 446 447 through a million diflBculties, fatigues, pains, perils, labors, be always in the saddle and in arms, helmet on head and sword in hand. Farewell to repose and pleasure, to love and mistresses, to games, dogs, hawking. You can come out only by a multitude of combats, taking of cities, great victories, and vast shedding of blood. That is one way. The other is to accommodate yourself in the matter of religion to the will of most of your subjects. So you would escape all these pains and diffi- culties — in this world. As for the other world," he added, with a backward glance to the catechism they had both been taught in childhood, "I cannot answer for it." And then they both laughed, as if they had been free-thinking philos- ophers of a much later period. There were no theoretical skeptics in their time ; but Henry and his minister were men of the world, not devotees. Coligny might have advised differently ; but Coligny had been long in his grave. The king expressed the feeling of many besides himself when he gazed from neighboring heights on his rebellious capital, and said, "Paris is worth a mass." Since he had so little faith to change, it is to his credit that he was so long in changing it. The delay was against his interests, for he might have had peace before on this condition. The main motives which had restrained him — so far as we may analyze any human motives — were two that always go together ; a manly pride and a regard for appearances and reputation. He was unwilling to be dictated to, and he did not wish to appear light. The change, once made, was to be made forever ; ' or at least — since the matter which was called spiritual was to him mainly worldly — for this present life. There was an unconscious sarcasm in his last words to his new instructor : " The way you now make me enter I leave only by death." Perhaps he thought that beyond the grave he should be a Huguenot again. HENRY RECONCILED TO THE CHURCH. His resolution, once taken, was carried out as speedily as might be. Care was taken to surround with trappings of solemnity what all thinking men knew to be a farce. The king expressed his wish for instruction in the points in dispute between the two systems ; he received it. He had his doubts ; they were removed one by one. During the process he did not always restrain his mocking humor. He offered to pass the point of Prayers for the Dead, remark- ing that he was not dead yet, nor in a hurry to be. As to Purgatory, he said, "I will receive it to please you, knowing it to be the bread of priests." But at the end he became serious. "You have not satisfied me as much as I desired, but I put my soul into your hands, and I pray you, have a care." The bishops, being royalists, were more anxious to have the business settled than to lay too heavy, burdens on their convert. On Sunday, July 25th, 1593, in the church of St. Denis, he was received into the bosom of the Church of Rome, confessed to the Archbishop of Bourges, 448 and heard mass. It was an occasion of local and almost national rejoicing; can- nons were fired, and tlie soldiers and people shouted in delight. But the con- science of which Henry made too little must have pricked him when he abjured the "errors" of his youth, the teachings of his mother, the faith of Conde and Coligny, and said that he repented of having held them. The peril of enforced conformity, if not of all union between Church and State, lies in this, that men to gain an end will use words which they do not mean, regarding the most solemn professions as an empty form ; so that reverence and the sense of truth are weakened, and sincerity becomes impossible except to the unthinking. An act that is to one's interest loses all flavor of piety, and should not be cumbered with its pretense. But these thoughts, obvious and familiar now as the rule of three, were scarcely dreamed of three hundred years ago. Only through its blunders does the world learn wisdom. The king's recantation aroused very various feelings in diiferent circles. The severer Calvinists regarded him as a lost soul. Their men of affairs, while regretting the perversion of their leader, knew that it was for their prosperity and peace. To the Catholic royalists generally, and to the mass of Frenchmen^ the removal of the obstacle which had kept Church and throne apart brought nothing but relief Only a few serious and high-minded men felt, as did one of the prelates, that " it would have been better had the king remained in his reli- gion than changed as he has done ; for there is a God above who judges us : respect to Him alone should sway conscience, and not a regard to crowns and kingdoms." But this idealist would hardly have been counted a practical man, and was wholly out of touch with the French public opinion of his time. THE POPE AND THE JESUITS NOT SATISFIED. Another class of persons, from widely different motives, offered vehement objections to the abjuration, even before it was made ; for of course it had been announced in advance. The partisans of Spain and of the pope wanted no half- hearted converts like Henry, at least not when these were likely to gain so much by coming into the fold. They were sharp enough to distrust his sincerity and his promises, and they wanted a king who would be their tool : to this end they were willing to see France kept in turmoil and misery for any length of time. The legate threatened the clergy throughout the land with excommunication if they accepted the "pretended conversion of the Bearnois," or honored the iniquitous ceremony of St. Denis with their presence. This had little effect, for the Galil- ean Church of those days, as has been remarked before, was jealous of its par- tial independence, and resented too much papal meddling in national affairs. The Archbishop of Lyons and some others refused to acknowledge the king till he should receive absolution from the pope, which, as we shall see, was not easy to obtain. The Jesu'ts, as devoted to the Spanish interest, were especially violent. 449: Barrifere, a layman of low degree, encouraged by the liead of this order at Paris,, went to St. Denis to murder Henry as he came out of the Church after his abjura- tion ; but his heart failed him. He followed the court from place to place, having; abundant opportunities, but still wavering, till he was arrested at Melun, where he confessed his purpose and was executed. His accomplices were still safe in Paris. Having made with the League a truce of three months from August ist,, the king sent the Duke of Nevers to Rome to procure his absolution. Clement VIII. refused to consider the matter or receive the ambassador in public; the clergy who had gone with him were threatened with the Inquisition for having; ROCHBLLE, ONCE THE STRONGHOLD OF FRENCH PROTESTANTISM. taken part in absolving the relapsed heretic at home, so that Nevers was obliged to keep them in his own quarters and to protect them from arrest in leaving the papal territories. This high-handed treatment encouraged the League, but dis- gusted all others, and arrayed the national spirit more firmly on Henry's side. As the king's submission to the Church ended the Protestant wars in France,, it might appear that we should now take leave of him and his dominions. But his recantation, as most men knew, was little more than nominal. His ideas,, aims, and sympathies had not really changed ; he was still the representative of toleration, of progress, of comparative liberty. The conflict between the twa 450 systems, the mediseval and the modern, that of Rome and that of rational states- manship, continued in France for five years more, and we may well trace its course to the end. CORONATION OF HENRY. The truce expired November ist, andHenrj'^ refused to extend it. Mayenne still held the capital, but others were growing tired of resistance to their lawful :so\'ereign. Meaux, Orleans, Bourges, Lyons, Aix, and other cities were given Tip to him. On February 27th, 1594, his coronation took place in the cathedral •of Chartres. We read with amusement that, as the flask of holy oil from which the ancient kings had been anointed was out of reach, being in the hands of the Xeague, another was procured from Tours, which an angel had brought from leaven to heal St. Martin in equally remote ages. In our view it matters little what oil or what formalities were employed on the ablest man who had ruled France for centuries ; but these ceremonial details were then, and in monarchical lands are still, accounted part of the divinity that doth hedge a king, and none of them were here omitted. A splendid array of princes, bishops and nobles graced the occasion; it was as gorgeous and joyous a spectacle as that of his abjuration seven months before. But one part of it must have jarred on the nerves of some who stood by, and wrenched (we may trust) the conscience of him who was the central figure there. The old coronation oath contained a promise to root out all heresy and heretics. These words on Henry's lips were a lie, and he used them simply as an idle but inevitable f jrm. He was no persecutor and no fool: no man ktiew better what had caused the miseries of France for fifty years. He meant to abate those miseries, to restore prosperity and peace ; and he had no mind to turn ■on his old associates. It was not to be another Francis II., Charles IX., or Henry -HI., the tool of Lorraines and legates, that he had labored so long and so hard. If ■a little perjury came into the account, he would not stick at that ; but he had his ■own plans all the same, and intended to carry them out. HENRY ENTERS PARIS. All this time there was much agitation in Paris. The city was tired of "being shut up, royalist writers and intriguers were active, and the cause of the ZLeague grew weaker with every day. Mayenne, feeling himself unsafe there, -withdrew, leaving a Spanish garrison. The new governor, Count de Brissac, liad been fierce for Guise and against Henry III., but Henry IV. won him over. He earned his pay, for the negotiations were carried on under great difi&culties, and the betrayal of his trust was attended with extreme danger. At four in the morning of March 23d, the gates were opened and the royal troops marched in. l^ever was a city taken more quietly.. Two citizens and a few foreign soldiers, who made a vain resistance were the only lives lost. The capital awoke to see \the king riding about the streets in high good humor. The fickle populace,. 451 quickly recovering from their amazement, welcomed him almost as heartily as they had saluted Guise six years before. As he tried to enter the great cathedral, they crowded upon him so closely that the guard would have driven them back. " No, no," he cried : "they are starving to see a king. Let them knock me about a little." As he wrote to a friend, " An old woman of eighty seized me by the head to kiss me. I was not the last to join in the laugh." His gaiety, his kind- liness, the unsurpassed charm that did so much to make him beloved and famous, won all hearts that could be won. The rebel city was now almost as loyal as Rochelle or Tours. The beautiful traits in Henry's char- acter shone out in his hour of success. Never was there a better illus- tration of the saying )j that good manners are /^ good morals. His pop- ular qualities — his familiarity with inferi- ors, his easy condescen- sion that never seemed to condescend, his con- stant cheerfulness, his abounding humor, — came from no studied policy, no superficial politeness : they were the natural growths of a good soil, springing luxuriantly from a rich and generous heart. Many have been purer, more truthful, more rigidly upright, than he : some have been more disinterested ; nowhere out of France, and rarely in it, has monarch or private man shown more that was winning and lovable. There was no malice in his nature, nothing of personal grudge or vindictiveness. In an age in which the strong arm and the hard heart ruled, when secret ENTRANCE OF HENRY IV. INTO PARIS. 452 murders and ferocious cruelty were matters of course, his gentleness anticipated our modem ideas and manners, and seemed to predict tlie advent of a better era which was yet far off. Much as he loved battle, he hated to punish in cold blood. He had a noble maxim which savored rather of the pulpit than the camp : " The satisfaction one gets from revenge lasts but a moment : that which clemency yields is eternal." If his Huguenot troops had stormed Paris four years earlier, he could hardly have prevented a frightful massacre : now all was to be forgiven and forgotten. He proclaimed a universal amnesty, and said that he would gladly give fifty thousand livres to buy back the two French lives MONT P^LVODX. It woB here, amid these mourUaina and canes, the French Protestanls would hide from their perseeutors. Not one drop of native blood, he felt, should have stained that had been lost, his triumph. TRIAL OF THE JESUITS. Yet there were some in Paris who could not be allowed to stay there. A few leaders of treason and disturbance were sent away : all others were received into the king's service, whatever their past record. The Spanish garrison of four thousand, with their commander the Duke of Feria, were given a safe-con- duct to the frontier. As they marched past the palace, on the day of the king's 453 entrance, he waved his hand from a window and called out, "My compliments to your master — but do not take the trouble to come back." One body of yet more dangerous enemies remained. The Jesuits would not take the oath of allegiance, moderate as were its terms. The university cited them for trial, and its rector petitioned the Parliament for their expulsion. The cause was pleaded on July lath, 13th, and i6th, by Arnauld, on behalf of the university, and D0II6, representing the parish priests or regular clergy of the city, who were joined in the prosecution. These speeches, setting forth the treasons and crimes of the order, its constant agency in stirring up sedition and inciting to murder, make interesting reading yet. The fiercest Protestants have never said harsher things of the Jesuits than did these Catholic advocates of a city that would not endure the Reformed worship within its walls. Arnauld called them "traitors and assassins:" D0II6 pointed out that they had disturbed the whole discipline of the Church, headed the villainous Sixteen in Paris, turned women against their husbands in Switzerland, and made themselves intolerable everywhere. Their orators had abundant recent evidence to draw upon, and used it freely. The Jesuit defense was prudently delayed, and the consequent sentence still further. At this they were foolish enough to rejoice, as at a victory ; but their triumph did not last long. Early in December, when the king had just returned from Picardy and was receiving visitors, a young man named Chatel, son of a draper, attacked him with a knife. The blow merely cut his lip : the would-be assassin was seized, and confessed that the Jesuits had told him it would be a good deed to kill the king. Henry's spirits were raised rather than dampened by the incident. "Ah," he said, as he wiped off the blood; "other mouths have told me about these gentlemen: now my own shall convict them." Chatel bore the punishment of a regicide : his father's house was pulled down and a monument erected on the spot. One Jesuit was hanged: the number should have been larger, for one or two were known to have been connected with the previous attempt of Barri^re. The whole society was banished from France, and stigmatized by the Parliament as "corrupters of youth, disturbers of the public peace, and enemies to the king and state." The clergy denounced the teaching of murder as a devilish heresy, and warned all religious orders that the king must be respected and obeyed. The theologians of the Sorbonne had already decided that the king's absolution was sufficient, and that resistance to his authority was mortal sin. Harlai had been restored to his place as first president of the Parliament, and all Paris was now submissive and loyal. Henry availed himself of this opportunity, the first fair one that had come to him, to grant partial toleration to the Huguenots, by re-enacting the edict of 1579. A few military events had occurred during the autumn. Spanish troops had taken La Cappelle, a town on the Dutch frontier ; on the other hand, Honfleur in Normandy was reduced, and other places, till now held by the 454 League, surrendered. The chiefs of that faction, tired of standing out against the inevitable, were coming in one by one : true to their principles, each of them had his price, and got it. For instance, the Duke of Elboeuf, one of the numerous and expensive Lorraines, demanded a pension of thirty thousand francs and the government of a province, which were cheerfully granted. In this way the king expended sums exceeding six million dollars, and in purchasing power worth ten times as much as that amount now. This new huge system of bribing kept France poor for a while, but Henry, who lacked neither courage nor brains, thought it the best way to restore domestic peace. He asked one of his earlier recruits of this kind, "What do you think of seeing me in Paris again?" "Sire," the lawyer answered, "it is giving to Caesar the things that are Caesar's." "Giving ? ' ' the king repeated. " Not exactly. You sold them to Caesar, and made a good bargain of it." Mayenne and Mercceur alone held out, and were too powerful to be overcome at once by force, though ready to join hands with any foreign foe. WAR WITH SPAIN: BATTLE OF FONTAINE. In January, 1595, the king, against the judgment of his more prudent advisers, declared war against his constant enemy, Philip II. Velasco, the Consta- ble of Castile, crossed the Alsatian border, took Vesoul, and was moving toward Dijon with eight thousand foot and two thousand horse, having joined Mayenne with fourteen hundred, when at Fontaine he came upon Henry, who was recon- noitering with a few cavaliers. The meeting was so unexpected, and the reports of his scouts so sudden, that the king had no time to put on his armor. The attendants brought his swiftest horse and urged him to fly ; but he said he wanted their assistance, not their advice. Hastily rallying his small force, he dashed so furiously upon the enemy's horse, dispersed in several squadrons, that he drove each back in turn, and retired with little loss before the generals could get their wits and their troops together. It was the affair of Aumale over again, with perhaps more motive and a happier result ; for Velasco was so much alarmed by this lightning-like stroke that he retreated into Germany, much to Mayenne's disgust. "Hang yourself," Henry wrote to one of his boon companions, "that you were not at my side in a combat when we fought like madmen ;" and to his minister Mornay, "Less than two hundred horse have put to fight two thousand, and driven ten thousand foot out of my kingdom." This escapade and its extraordinary success helped to reduce the number of his enemies by two— one at home, and one abroad. Mayenne abstained from all hostilities and meditated submission ; and in September the papal absolution ■was published. Its chief conditions were that the Roman worship should be established in Beam, all property of the Church restored, and the heir to the throne educated as a Catholic. Some of these things Henry had already done, others he was ready to do — as far as he could ; for it was not easy to recover CHARLEMAGNr. +55 456 confiscated estates from their new owners. Clement had wanted better terms, but "tbe king was now strong enough, to refuse them. He declined positively to annul the edict of toleration, to admit that his absolution by the French bishops was invalid, to recognize any other than spiritual value in that of the pope, or to receive foreign investiture, as if Rome had power to give or take away his crown. At this time Fuentes, Governor of the Spanish Netherlands, took Cambrai and other towns in Picardy. Henry rode northward from Lyons to oppose him. In Paris the authorities begged him not to expose his precious life. " Why," said he, "unless I lead, nobody follows. If I had money to pay a few more regiments, I would not be in danger so often. I came here at a trot, and I am going off at a gallop ; but I want cash." Having procured a supply, he went at full speed to Amiens. At the gate the town council met him with a set address. "O king!" the spokesman began, "so great, so merciful, so magnaminous — ^" " Yes," he interrupted, "and so tired. Let us have the rest another time." He was just sitting down to dinner when another deputation came in with another orator, who opened fire at once. "Sire, Hannibal, when leaving Carthage — " "The king broke the thread of this discourse also. " Hannibal had dined," was iis continuation of the tale, " and I have not." THE KING'S SUCCESSES. He was at Monceaux in January, 1596, when Mayenne came to make his submission. He too commenced in the approved pompous style. "Sire, I am the humble debtor of your royal bounty. You have delivered me from the arro- gance of the Spaniard — " when Henry jumped up, embraced him fervently, seized his arm, cried, "Come, see my garden," and hurried him through the grounds. The duke, who was very fat and very lazy, was .soon panting and exhausted. The king stopped, as if struck by a sudden thought, and asked, ^'Cousin, am I too fast for you ?" " Ah, sire," the other puffed, "at this rate I shall soon be dead." Henry laughed, offered his hand, and said, "That shall be your only punishment." It was far less than Mayenne deserved and would have been likely to get from any other monarch ; but in France the great nobles were hardly less powerful than the king — some of them, as we have seen, were at times greater than the king ; and their persons and estates were almost sacred. In the spring of 1596 Calais and some other places were taken by a Spanish army under the Archduke Albert, and Henry had gained nothing in exchange but La F^re. He sent to Elizabeth for aid; she offered it, on condition that Calais, when retaken, should be garrisoned by her troops, which was equivalent to its cession to England. There was no jesting in his reply. The proposal, he wrote, must "have been inspired by those who understand not the promptings of your spirit. Permit me still to believe that you disdain to measure, your friend- ship by the standard of self-interest, when the urgency of affairs is such that no 457 time can be lost in bargaining." The spirited dignity of this rebuke secured better terms. An alliance was made between France, England, and the United Provinces. Henry's treasury was now empty. He wrote that his shirts were torn, his coat out at elbows, and his pot often empty, so that he was forced to dine with friends who had more to eat than he. In this extremity he placed Sully in charge of the finances, which had been vilely managed ; and that able minister soon raised five hundred thousand crowns, not by taxation, but by recovering stolen money from the thieves who had collected the taxes. It was the beginning of vast reforms. At an assembly of notables which he convened at Rouen in October, 1596, he said that, as they all knew to their cost, when he was called to the crown he found France half ruined, and quite lost to Frenchmen ; that he aimed to be its liberator and restorer ; and the present need was to save the realm from financial ruin. His words were heeded, and by Sully's management good results followed. AMIENS LOST AND WON. In March, 1597, he received bad news. Amiens had been taken by a curious stratagem. Spanish soldiers, disguised as peasants, and carrying sacks of walnuts, followed a heavy wagon which was driven to one of the city gates and halted there. One of the men dropped his sack ; the nuts rolled out, and the guard fell to scrambling for them. The Spaniards drew their weapons ; others, concealed without, rushed to the attack. The portcullis was lowered, but the wagon pre- vented its fall ; the assailants forced their way in and cut down the defenders of the place. It was one of the famous surprises of history. Henry, who had been enjoying the pleasures of Paris during the winter, said to his favorite Sully, " I have played too long the King of France ; it is time to be the King of Navarre again." He hastened to Amiens, which was attacked and defended with great valor. The siege lasted near six months; Mayenne took part in it, and showed more ability than he had usually done on the other side. The Spanish commander, Porto Carraro, was killed, after com- plimenting his assailants. The Archduke came again from Flanders with a great army ; but Henry, without raising the siege, defeated Albert in what he called "the finest encounter that has ever been seen." "The warlike Cardinal," Henry wrote, "came on very furiously, but went off very sneakingly." On September 25th Amiens surrendered. The king at once marched to Brittany against the Duke of Mercoeur, who lost no time in making his submission. All France was now loyal and united, except the recent Spanish conquests in the north, and a small corner in the southeast, which the Duke of Savoy claimed ; this matter was not settled till two or three years later. 458 EDICT OF NANTES. It is to Henry's credit that lie did not wait for a formal declaration of peace to right the wrongs of his early friends the Huguenots. He had already, as we have seen, revoked the persecuting edicts of 1585 and 1588, and restored the partial toleration granted by that of 1579. But this was not sufficient, and in the regions lately held by the League they were still subjected, not only to an- noyance, but to grievous oppression. In many separate treaties with these rebel- lious towns and nobles, the king had not been able to set aside the prohibition of the Reformed faith ; for his embarrassments were great, and he could not do VIEW OP NANTES, Wlure the famous edict laas Umed by Henry IV., in 1598, Jar nearly a century the charter of Haguenot freedom. everything at once. But now that the whole land was at his feet, — or rather in his hands, for he was always quick to raise those who knelt before him — the situation was changed. It mattered not to his generous spirit that since his ab- juration his former allies put the worst construction on his motives, stood sul- lenly aloof, and looked on him as a foe or a tyrant : he would show them that they were mistaken. On April 15th, 1598, he signed the memorable Edict of Nantes, which guaranteed the sacred liberty of conscience. It removed the civil disabilities under which Protestants had labored, opened all public schools, 459 employments, and honors to them, and permitted their worship wherever it had been held before. If not perfect as a measure of toleration — for the least religious restriction is hateful to the modern mind — it was the best' France had ever known, and under it the Huguenots thrived and lived in tolerable peace for eighty-seven years, though Henry's successors were continually limit- ing their privileges. This great measure was not carried without a struggle ; in fact, it was driven through by the king's sheer will. The Parliaments of Paris, Bordeaux, Toulouse, and Rouen refused to register the edict. Rouen sent deputies to argue the matter with Henry. A charming story is told of their reception. He was on the floor, romping with his children, when they entered. Wholly unabashed, he said, "I am playing the fool with these babies ; but I am ready to play the wise man with you." He rose, and led them to another room. When they had stated the case, he said, "I am the head of this realm ; you have the honor to be members of the body politic. It is my business to command, yours to obey. This is my edict : it is to be executed." It was despotism enforcing toleration with a high hand. That is not the way we do now ; but in those days the repub- lican idea was practicable only in Switzerland and Holland. Elsewhere, consti- tutions either did not exist, or were little regarded. If an absolute monarch used his power with wisdom and benevolence, that was the best that could be looked for, and far more than was usually found. PEACE OF VERVINS. Meantime the Spanish tyrant, who was neither wise nor benevolent, was nearing the end of a reign that had lasted far too long. The pope and his legates were anxious that this useless war between two Catholic powers should cease ; for if Spain and France exhausted each other, what was to prevent the Turks from carrying their conquests beyond Hungary ? Philip II. found out at last, what he ought to have had the sense to see long before, that he had enough — and too much — to do in the Netherlands. The peace of Vervins, which was concluded May 2d, 1598, restored Calais and the other Spanish conquests, and enabled Henry to say that he had gained more towns by a stroke of the pen than he could have taken in a long campaign. Thus released from the toils of war, he gave his mind to the series of reforms and internal improvements which raised France from her low estate. The love his people bore toward him was matched by the frantic hate of bigots. In the next twelve years eighteen more attempts were made upon his life, and in 1610 the dagger of Ravaillac removed the foremost sovereign of Europe. Had he lived longer, he might probably have averted the wretched Thirty Years' War, which desolated Germany, retarded the world's progress, and ruined the Protest- ant cause in so many states. His memory was long and dearly cherished in the 460 land he served so well ; but his unworthy descendants did what they could to undo his work. By the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, in 1685, more than half the commerce and manufactures of the country were destroyed, and its most useful citizens driven out to enrich other lands, among them England and America. FRENCH S0I HE Netherlands occupy a mucli smaller space on tlie map than in the history of freedom. Within a region which might be enclosed in almost any one of our American states, a land without natural defenses and exposed, to the constant inroads of the ocean, was waged for three-quarters of a century a war- that will be remembered with wonder and admiration so long as men cherish liberty. Motley has told the story in seven large and eloquent volumes ; we shall have to trace its outline far more rapidly. At the beginning of the fifteenth cen- tury Holland, Brabant, and Flanders offered to the rest of Europe a model of industry,, prosperity, and the arts of peace. Their narrow confines were crowded with cities, whose commerce and manufactures- went through the known world. The eastern portions had been wrested from the sea, and were the home of the most expert sailors and fishermen. The merchant guilds were ancient and wealthy. The towns and provinces had charters of remote date, which secured them a larger measure of freedom than existed elsewhere, except in the Swiss cantons. Their rulers had till lately been content with liberal taxes, and meddled little with these privileges, of local self-government. There was much mental activity, much self-assertion of the bold democratic spirit, much occasional turbulence. The current of life ran warm and swift : Dutchmen were not a sleepy race. The southern provinces, (now Belgium) were largely of another blood, and had much less seacoast ; but the severance was not so marked as in later years. Jacqueline, Countess of Holland, Zealand, and Hainault, who died in 1437, was the last native and inoffensive sovereign of these parts. Her dominions passed to Philip of Burgundy, ironically called the Good, who by fair means or foul got possession of Flanders, Brabant, and sundry duchies, counties, and bar- onies. He began the bad business of violating the constitutions which he had (461) 462 sworn to guard, and thus set a vicious precedent to his successors, liis son, Charles the Bold, played a prominent though a foolish part in history ; a would-be conqueror abroad, he was a tyrant at home, and valued his provinces merely for what he could squeeze out of them. Dying in 1477, he left no son, but a daugh- ter Mary, from whose helplessness her subjects extracted a grant called the " Great Privilege : " it was destined to be disregarded like the older ones. She was married to Maximilian, son and successor of the German emperor ; and their son, Philip the Fair, married the daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella. From this union came Charles V., King of Spain, Emperor of Germany, and possessor of more other titles than we care to remember. In this way half Christendom came under a single head, and the pernicious connection of the Low Countries with Spain, which was to cost so much blood and treasure, was brought about. The arrangement was against all common sense and all sound economy, for one man should have no more lands to govern than he can manage properly, and each nation has laws, customs, and a temper of its own. The Spaniard and the Hollander had nothing in common except mutual dislike, which soon rose to violent hatred : they were different in race, habits, opinions, and character. One was a feudal aristocrat, who despised all labor except fighting : the other was a busy trader, proud of his gains and his independence, who used the sword only to defend his rights, and regarded his masters as lazy, greedy, and meddlesome fools. The two countries ought to have been kept wide apart : but in those days the welfare of states was little regarded, and monarchs were in oflSce for what they could get from it — for their own sake, not that of their subjects. CHARLES V. Charles V. had considerable ability and enormous power — far more than should ever have been entrusted to any but the cleanest hands, the wisest head, and the most generous heart. By comparison with his wretched son, his char- acter appears almost respectable. He studied the arts of popularity and knew how to preserve appearances in a way, so that he was never detested in the Netherlands as he deserved to be, though he introduced the hideous system which caused so much misery, and more lives were taken there in cold blood by his orders than by Philip's. He was outwardly the greatest monarch of his time : he had a multiplicity of affairs on hand, and stood for other interests besides persecution. But he was far from the modern idea: he hated reform and liberty : if he had been absolute in Germany, the new movement there might have met the fate that befell it in the south. Where he could, he supported the claims of Rome with fire and sword. It must be remembered that the Netherlands, though in area so small a fraction of the possessions of these monarchs, and really owing them less obe- dience than they could legally command elsewhere, were important by reason 463 of wealth and population. Here, as has been said, were a number of the chief cities of Europe, enriched by a steady stream of commerce. Therefore, as a bank to be frequently drawn upon, the provinces received many royal attentions. The republican idea was not yet born ; a sovereign's visit, still more his temporary residence, was esteemed an honor, whatever evils came in its train. The nobles enjoyed the pomp which girds royalty about : the people, perhaps beyond all other nations, delighted in shows, processions, festivals. Nobles and populace alike, though constantly abused, submitted cheerfully to a lord- ship by which they ^_„ gained nothing, and were loyal till loyalty became im- possible. Charles V. had wit enough to foster the trade of Antwerp, Am- sterdam, and the other towns, know- ing that the richer his subjects, the more he could gain from them. Philip II. ruined whole provinces for an idea that was false and pestilent. The patience with which these states long en- dured the vilest oppression is almost as marvellous as the courage and persist- ence they afterwards chart,es v displayed in defending the most sacred rights of humanity. THE DUTCH REFORMATION. The collision came about largely, though very gradually, from religious causes. As much as in any land except Bohemia, the Reformation had been 464 anticipated in these provinces. There was no early war like those of the Albi- genses in lyanguedoc, no sporadic resistance like that of the Vandois, off and on for centuries, in northern Italy ; but from about 1240 the country had been full of Cathari, Waldenses, and other alleged heretics. Under various names and with differing opinions, they protested against the corruptions of the Church, and insisted on following private conscience. The most frightful severities were employed against them: in Flanders "a criminal whose guilt had been established by the hot iron, hot ploughshare, boiling kettle, or other logical proof" — for the most idiotic methods were adopted to detect a heretic, as long after to expose a witch — " was stripped and bound to the stake : he was then flayed, from the neck to the navel, while swarms of bees were let loose to fasten upon his bleeding flesh, and torture him to a death of exquisite agony." These barbarities, had little effect, unless to stimulate the zeal of the survivors; Waldo's French Bible was translated into Dutch verse, and the numbers of the heretics grew apace with the luxury and immorality of the clergy. When the Reformation came, many in these provinces were glad to receive it, and some were ready to go much further than the Reformers. Erasmus, the leading scholar of his age, who "laid the egg that Luther batched," was bom at Rotterdam : his writings had their full effect upon Dutch students. The emperor, much offended by the success of the new doctrines, put forth in 1521 a ludicrous edict against Luther and his followers : "As it appears that the aforesaid Martin is not a man, but a devil under the form of a man, and clothed in a priest's dress, the better to bring the human race to hell and damnation, therefore all his disciples and converts are to be punished with death and for- feiture of all their goods." Two years later, as has been told in another chapter, the first martyrs of the Reformation were burned at Brussels. Some disorders and acts of violence among the opponents of Rome helped to bring the cause of reform into disrepute, and to give an excuse to the per- secutors. Some obscure sects, whose origin is remote aud doubtful, are said to have deserved part of the odium in which they were long held. Jeremy Taylor, writing as late as 1647, deliberately excluded them from the toleration which he claimed for all other Christian bodies. The so-called Peasants' War, which convulsed parts of Germany in 1525 and later, was a series of horrors. A crowd of wild fanatics, led by a baker of Harlem and a tailor of Leyden, crossed the border, seized Munster in Westphalia, and shocked the world by their murders and debaucheries. Their prophet called himself King of Sion, took to himself fourteen wives, and made several attempts on Duch cities. On a cold night in February, 1535, the good people of Amsterdam were alarmed by seven men and five women who ran through the streets in a state of nature, shouting, "The wrath of God!" On being arrested, they declared that they were "the naked truth." They and many other victims of this delusion, who 465 should have been confined in asylums, were put to death. The mania spread; throughout the Netherlands, and lasted for some time. Similar phenomena,, though usually on a smaller scale, have occurred at every period of great religious excitement : they were common in England during the Commonwealth,, and extended to America in later days. FIFTY THOUSAND MARTYRS. The emperor did not wait for these excesses before beginning his bloody work at large. The Inquisition was introduced, if not at once under its own, name, yet with the whole array and fury of its processes. By repeated edicts- all gatherings for worship, even of a few friends, and no less the private reading of Scripture and conversation on religious topics, were denounced as capital offenses. Even Spanish methods could hardly go further. The best that can be said for these laws is that they did not accomplish their purpose ; but that was not the fault of those who framed and executed them. They "were no dead letter. The fires were kept constantly supplied with human fuel by monks, who knew the art of burning reformers better than that of arguing with them. The scaffold was the most conclusive of syllogisms, and used upon all occasions. Still the people remained unconvinced. Thousands of burned heretics had not made a single convert." It would be easy but useless to fill our pages with details of these judicial murders. Some of the victims were lunatics ; a few may have been criminals; but the great mass were doubtless quiet persons in humble life, who wished to serve God peaceably, as their descendants have since done at home or in Eng- land and America. The victims of persecution in this reign and within these provinces numbered no less than fifty thousand. The list of the Anabaptists alone, or of those claimed as such, with what is preserved of their trials and testimonies, fills thirteen hundred large columns in a work compiled by Thielem Van Braght in 1660, and lately translated and reprinted in a huge quarto by the Mennonites in Indiana. Such wholesale slaughters did not then excite the horror the}"- move in us. In fact, it required more than fifteen centuries for professed Christians to learn what were the cardinal points of the morality taught by the Founder of their religion. In the view of emperors, popes, the clergy, and the masses generally, these were not truthfulness, justice, purity, and mercy, but simply orthodoxy, which meant a slavish submission to authority in Church and State. The regent, Queen Mary of Hungary, whom Erasmus praised as a " Christian widow," went but little beyond the general opinion in the advice given to her brother in 1533,: she thought that " all Protestants, even if repentant, should be dealt with so severely that the error might be at once extinguished — only taking care that the |)rovinces were not entirely depopulated." Her nephew, Philip II., went still further, and wa.s willing and even anxious .to d©-, stroy tht whole' population.! In his view a f uinouis solitude wai^ far better than tilled fields, busy canal$, and crowded streets, wherein three million peoplei worshipped God in a fashion not the king's. ' , In 1549 this promising prince visited Brussels, that his father's Dutch subjects might have th.e joy of gazing on their future lord. The occasion was celebrated by a new edict, confirming all tbose which had gone before. When he came to his power six years later, he was thus able to say, "You see, I make no new laws: I merely enforce I'l excellent ones under which you kave been 1 ug." These were such as to stifle intellect, to Qgle conscience, to sap tbe foundations of a and reduce the Netherlands to a smaller and But the Netherlands had a mind of its own, which, was yet '-■ -' - - ^-^ to be reckoned with. ABDICATION OF CHARLES V. In 1555 the world was astounded by the news that the great emperor meant to abdi- cate. But he had his reasons. Though not yet fifty-six, he was an old man. A king a.t fifteen and a Csesar at nineteen, he had led a hard and exhausting life. He had been in many campaigns and still more plots; he had shed a vast deal of blood; and he had eaten far too many early breakfasts and late suppers. It was TOWN HA1^'***i# - -^ » «r^' ? CASTLE OF ST. ANGELO, ROME. ards, liars, libertines, as well as murderers : no matter, if they were of Philip's; creed. WORSE DAYS COMING. The spirit of rebellion was now broken. Noircarmes wrote to Cardinal Granvelle : " The capture of Valenciennes has worked a miracle. All the other 494 cities come forth to meet me, putting tlie rope round their own necks." Kven the fifteen thousand zealots of Antwerp, lately so anxious to fight their fellow- citizens, made no attempt to resist when Mansfeld entered their gates with a gar- rison on April 26th. The provinces had suffered much ; they were to be tried still more heavily before they could find the will and the ability to make a real stand against oppression. Darker days than they had yet known were at hand ; for Alva had left Madrid, and was coming with a Spanish army. ! This news much offended the regent. With unusual boldness, she com-' plained to her brother that she had been ill treated. The country was doing very well under her, she said ; and from her point of view it was true. She sent an envoy to explain that there was no need of Alva and his troops. The demi- god's reply expressed his amazement and high displeasure at her impertinence. If she had done any good to religion, she owed him humble thanks for having put her in a position to do it. What more did she want ? He was soon coming in person, he added ; but he did not mean it. Orange could do no more, except to secure his own safety. Margaret, dis- regarding his repeated renouncement of her service, deluged him with sum-i mouses, commissions, entreaties ; with his high lineage and his noble heart, she wrote, how could he forget his duty ? He replied that he had not taken, the new oath, and would not take it. She sent the secretary of her council, a man of tape and formulas, to argue the matter with him. Here the Silent found his tongue, as always when it was needed. "Do you expect me," he asked in suhi stance, "to break pledges taken long ago to our laws and to the late emperor? To enforce edicts which I loathe ? To persecute my neighbors for their opinions, and perhaps bring my wife to the block as a Lutheran ? Am I to be the blind slave of whomsoever the king sends here, though he be my inferior in birth and station? Is William of Orange to take orders from the Duke of Alva?" DEPARTURE OF ORANGE AND MANY OTHERS. At the baifled secretary's request, he agreed to meet two or three of the lead- ing royalists. It was his last interview with Egmont, whose recent conduct had not destroyed a friendship of long standing. He warned the deluded man of the perils he was confronting. "You are the bridge," he said, "which the invaders will cross and then destroy." The words put into Egmont's mouth, "Adieu, landless Prince ! " and William's more apt reply, "Farewell, headless Count!" belong to the class of prophesies after the fact. The large estates of Orange were soon to dwindle, and Egmont's head, which was serving him very poorly, did within fourteen months part company with his body : but the two friends would scarcely twit each other with these losses in advance. One remained ; the other was in Germany by the end of April. His head had served him well, as was soon proved by a letter from Philip's secretary, who was in William's pay — 495 sucti were tlie intricacies of high employment. Among the king's secret instruc- tions to Alva was this pregnant passage : "Arrest the prince as soon as possible, and let his trial last no more than twenty-four hours.!U Orange was not the only fugitive. His brother Louis was already in Ger- many, where neither of them was likely to waste his time. Brederode, whose activity was chiefly displayed in loud talking and hard drinking, had made a disgraceful submission and then fled : he died the next year, little regretted. Some minor lords of the late confederacy slept while their treacherous pilot ran into a Frisian port: their men were hanged, and themselves kept for Alva and his headsman. The humbler classes, when they could, followed the example of their leaders. A few years earlier, thirty thousand workers in cloth, silks, and dyes had carried their useful arts to England, and Elizabeth, in giv- ing them homes and protection, had prudently required each house to take a native appren- tice. The number of such refugees was now multiplied, and many were killed in trying to escape. The Protestant ser- vices were utterly suppressed, the chapels torn down, the preachers and hearers hanged on timbers taken from their places of worship. Every village, says Meteren, the historian of Antwerp, had its executions, sometimes two or three' hundred. The dissenting societies were not only scattered, but weeded well : weak or false members, and some who had displayed great zeal, were now equally devout at mass. The Duchess sent forth on May 24th a new edict, the object of which seemed to be to hang nearly everybody. But the king was much incensed, and ordered her to recall it as illegal, indecent, and unchristian. Why ? Because it provided only for hangings : nothing less than fire on earth and in hell would do for heretics. Alva would have no such wicked lenity. ENTRANCE TO THE HAI,I, OF THE KNIGHTS. CHAPTER XXXII. ALVA AND THE BLOOD-COUNCIL. ^HERE are names that, when they stood for living- power, were greeted with a shudder or a smothered curse, and that live in history as the synonym of all that is most hateful. The man who, more than any other, shares his master's infamy was of high birth and marked ability. His ancestor was the brother of a Byzantine emperor and the conqueror of Toledo. Alva himself, though despicable as a- '^^ statesman, was the most famous general of his day. He was fifty-nine, tall and lean, haughty and unapproachable, cruel and avaricious. He cared little for pleasure, much for gain ; as to the rest of his character, " the world has agreed that such an amount of stealth and ferocity, of patient vindictivness and universal bloodthirstiness, was *v never found in a savage beast of the forest, and but rarely in a human bosom." Such was he who for six years was to hold the Netherlands in the hollow of his hand, and take delight in crushing them. As the regent had written to her brother, he was already well known and hated there: as he told his attendants, it mattered little whether he was welcome or not — the point was that he was on hand. With him came twelve hundred cavalry, and four huge regiments of foot from the Italian wars ; in all, about ten thousand veterans. Each man was armed and dressed like an ofi&cer, and had his private servant — for the profession of arms was then the most respected in Europe, and Philip's armies were the finest in the world. Two thousand women of the camp accompanied the march. All were under perfect discipline, splendidly equipped and provided, and masters of their business. These gentry were to play a great figilre in the provinces for many years to come. The French king, for fear of the Huguenots, would not let them pass through his territories : on either side a French and a Swiss force followed and watched them closely, to see that they did no harm on the road. They went by way of Savoy, Burgundy, and lyorraine, often in lonesome and dangerous places where they might have been ambushed and annihilated by less than their own numbers. It seems a pity that this could not be done ; but (496) 497 Horn N. rebellion as yet existed only in the tyrant's jealous fancy. The provinces were cowed, shivering under the lash, and waiting in helpless terror for their lordly executioners. EGMONT AND HORN ARRESTED. In August Count Egmont, still smitten with judicial blindness, rode forth to meet the old enemy who brought his death-warrant. "Here comes the chief heretic," said Alva. Presently he threw his arm over the victim's shoulders, and they went on to Brussels like loving friends. These lying pre- tenses of good will, with assurances of the royal favor, were kept up for some time, and extended who was thus lured from at Weert, where he had bi in retirement. Eg- mont at least received repeated warnings. On September 9th, when they were din- 1 ing with Alva's son, / the grand prior of the Knights of St. John, the host whis- pered in his ear, "Leave this place at once; take your fast- est horse and escape." He rose in agitation, left the room and would have followed this honest advice ; but Noircarmes, fit tool of all villainy, dissuaded him. He and Horn were ar- rested the same day, and a fortnight later placed in the castle at Ghent. Their secretaries and the burgomaster of Antwerp were also seized: Hoogstraten escaped through a lucky accident. Titelmann, the inquisitor, hearing of these captures, asked whether "Wise William" was among them, and exclaimed, "Then our joy will be brief; woe to us for the wrath to come from Germany ! " '^K * i DUKE OF ALVA. 498 Bergen and Montigny, who had undertaken a mission to Spain the year before, were detained there. Bergen died heartbroken and perhaps poisoned ; his estate was confiscated, and the other's fate was deferred. Alva's next step was to establish a Council of Troubles, better known as the Council of Blood. Nominally it was to have exclusive jurisdiction in all cases connected with the image-breaking, the risings, and other recent disturbances : in reality, it set aside at one blow the courts, the laws, the charters of the prov- inces, and put in their place an irresponsible system of Spanish or Italian despotism. The duke became a czar or sultan ; with the aid of a few henchmen lie governed the country as he chose, with the almost avowed object of diminish- ing its population and turning its revenues, public and private, into the treasury. He had promised Philip a yearly income of half a million ducats from confisca- tions, and he boasted that a river of gold, a yard deep, should soon flow toward Spain. This involved the removal of those who had the gold ; and apart from what was to be gained, there was much pleasure in mere bloodletting, for sur- :geons of his quality. Religion afforded a fair pretense to all this slitting of -throats and purses ; but any rich man was likely to be found a heretic. In fact, the eighteen articles of the new court brought nearly every exercise of intel- ligence within the range of capital offenses. It was high treason to have signed •or transmitted any petition against the edicts, the Inquisition, or the bishops ; to claim that the old laws and charters were entitled to respect, or to question the king's right to trample them under foot ; to have had any connection with the preachings, or not to have resisted them and the ' Request ' too, as well as the spoliation of the churches. Under this savage decree, almost the whole population of the Netherlands could be held guilty of treason ; and this seemed to be the object aimed at. Never did tyranny use plainer language, or go to work with more wholesale and methodical ferocity. THE "COUNCIL OF TROUBLES." The new council was very loose in its texture and informal in its proceed- ings ; ease and efficiency were desired, and these could only be impeded by sel forms. Both the privy council and the state council were practically merged in it ; yet it had no charter, its chief members were mere creatures and appointees of Alva, and most of them had no votes. The duke kept it thus in his own lands for an obvious reason ; as he significantly expressed it to his master, " the men of law condemn only for crimes that are proved, whereas bur state affairs are managed by different rules from the laws they have here." His chief tools were old Viglius, Noircarmes, Berlaymont, and two Spaniards, Vargas and Del Rio. One of his favorites was Hessels, a native councillor of some note. Like the prelates at Abelard's trial, this worthy used to sleep through the discussions, .and wake up when a case was finished, to say, '■'■ Ad patibulum — to the gallows." l 'J. • ' %-y jLv lit- -^^ r ;,a4M'^ i';'. I > 499 500 Tlie usual method of procedure (if it deserved the name) was this : informa- tions came in by the bushel, and were sent by Alva to the inferior councillors. They gave them some sort of examination, and made reports to Vargas on each paper, which might accuse a single person or any number. When the report recommended death, it was approved by Vargas, and the victims executed within two days. In any other case it was sent back to be revised, and the duke scolded his subordinates for their lack of zeal. The cases of Orange, Egmont, Horn, Montigny, and other nobles of eminence, whether within reach or not, demanded and received more time and attention. By this atrocious travesty of justice eighteen hundred lives were taken in less than three months. We read of forty-six executed together at Malines, and eighty-four at Valenciennes. Some were hanged, some burned, some beheaded. It was intended to make a general clearance just before Lent of 1568; many had warning and escaped for the moment, but five hundred victims rewarded the zeal of the blood-hunters. No care was taken to discriminate between sup- posed guilt and the absence of it. One De Wit of Amsterdam was condemned for having prevented a rioter from firing at a magistrate ; if he could do that, it was sagely concluded, he must have been a leader of the revolt. When another's case came up, it was found that he had done nothing amiss, but had been put to death already. " No matter," said Vargas ; " if he was innocent, so much the better for him at his trial in the other world." ALVA VICEROY. Since Alva's arrival the regent's occupation had been gone, and she fumed at the loss of her pOwer and dignity. Again and again she had offered her res- ignation; at last it was accepted, and the duke named as governor in her stead. She left the provinces at the end of the year 1567, regretted only because she had given place to one much worse than she. In the light of later events her rule, which was bad enough, seemed lenient. Her last ofiicial act was a useless letter to her brother, urging mercy and forgiveness; but she said and did nothing to save her faithful friends and servants, Egmont and Horn, from the fate to which she had lured them on. She was not alone in finding it easier to preach than practice, easiest of all to condemn perfidy and cruelty which, though in greater degree, were like her own. Alva had at once taken the keys of the chief cities, and distributed his ter- rible soldiery among them. His next care, after the Blood-Council, which usually cost him seven hours a day, was to provide means whereby his garrisons might securely hold and overawe the towns. The citadel of Antwerp, which was des- tined to play such a terrible part in the history of the next few years, was begun in October 1567, and hurried to completion, two thousand workmen laboring under the direction of two skilled Italian engineers. The cost, four hundred 50I thousand florins, was placed upon the burghers, who were thus obliged to pay for the suppression of their liberty. Alva meant to have no more such civilian tumults as Orange had put down ; hereafter the soldiers would furnish the dis- orders. ORANGE INDICTED. In January, 1568, Orange, with his brother and other noble refugees, was summoned to appear before the Blood-Council within six weeks, on penalty of banishment and confiscation. He replied briefly, disowning the jurisdiction of that tribunal. He was sovereign of the principality ia France which gave him R^AR FACADE OP THS FLESHER'S HAI the Netherlands with the connivance of the master who now doomed them to destruction, and their fate was not long to be delayed. To make sure, Charles sent the same directions to his envoy in the 524 north, who on September 15th wrote back that Alva was cutting off heads every- day, but suggested that the French king should call his subjects back from Mons. He answered — this he wrote in so many words to Charles himself — "They will not trust his Most Christian Majesty, but will prefer to die in Mons" — as well they might. Meantime Alva had joined the besiegers, with Medina Coeli and others of high degree. He would not come out of his camp, knowing, as in 1568, that time worked for him and against Orange, whose army was enlisted for a short time only. The Archbishop of Cologne, whom he called " a fine figure of a man,, with his corslet and pistols," urged him to fight, but in vain. At one in the morning of September 12th Romero with six hundred Spaniards surprised the prince's camp, slaughtered the sentinels and many more, and almost captured William, who had but a moment to escape. His pet dog, by barking and scratching, awoke him just in time to avoid immediate death or a scaffold in Brussels. His personal attendants were slain, and only the imprudence of the assailants in firing the tents enabled the army to see their foes and turn upon them. Romero drew his men off with a loss of but §ixty, after killing full ten times that number. SURRENDER OF MONS. The prince's brief hour of success was over. His troops refused to serve longer, mutinied, even threatened his person. A hired assassin, one of many that were to come, attempted his life. The southern cities renounced his cause and returned to their tyrants. He wrote, "It has pleased God to take away every hope we founded upon man. The King of France has owned that he- ordered the massacre, has sent aid to Alva, and forbidden his subjects, on pain of death, to assist me. But for this, we had been masters of the duke." He could do nothing for his brother, sick and in danger at Mons, but advise him to- make the best terms he might with the besiegers. With a few devoted friends he repaired to Holland, "having determined there to make his sepulchre." The defenders of Mons were almost as demoralized as the mercenaries of Orange. Alva, who was in a hurry, offered good terms, and they were accepted. The soldiers were to march out with the honors of war, having promised not to- serve against Spain or France. Count Louis, for himself and his Englishmen and Germans, scornfully refused to take this pledge, and was. excused from it. He received many compliments from the victors, who would have been glad to- take his life. The city was evacuated on September 21st. Such of the citizens as were Protestants or had borne arms were to leave, taking their property along. Some of these, imprudently trusting to Spanish honor, remained a few days to settle their affairs, and were arrested. Noircarmes set up an imitation Blood-Council, and proceeded to disregard. the promise of free exit to rebels and heretics, and safety to the rest. Every one- 535- -who had anything to do with the late resistance, or with the Calvinist services^ was put to death: those who rejected the ofi&ces of priests were burned. The old horrors were re-enacted, and all pleas for mercy spumed. A cobbler was hanged for eating soup on a Friday, and many paupers for taking Protestant alms. Mere suspicion of unsound opinions was enough; when this failed,, wealth was a ground for condemnation, A Catholic gentleman who lived in- France was kidnapped and beheaded, that his estate near Mons might be con- ■**''V?^'' THE TOWN HAI,I<, HARLEM. fiscated, for not having communed at Easter and having twice heard the preach- ers out of curiosity. The Blood-Councillors complained that Noircarmes took nearly all the plunder, though they had helped him get it by sentencing so- many of their relatives and friends. The executions went on for nearly a year^. 336 ^sometimes twenty in a da}-. Mons liad been one of the richest cities in the iprovinces, and famous for its manufactures ; all that was at an end. Its fate was that which many other towns had already endured, or were yet to endure. SACK OF MECHLIN. The tyrant's wrath fell next upon Mechlin, whose wealth afforded the easiest way of paying the arrears due his troops. When it submitted to Orange, Alva wrote to Philip, " This is a direct permission of God for us to punish her as she deserves for the image-breaking and other misdeeds done there in the time of Madame de Parma, which our Lord was not willing to leave unchastised." The city was the seat of an archbishop and contained few dissenters, but that did not matter at a pinch. The garrison fired two or three shots and fled. A procession of priests and citizens came out to implore mercy, but in vain. Mechlin was given up for three days to the soldiers — one each for Spaniards, Germans, and Walloons. A Catholic councillor wrote that his hair stood on end at remember- ing the scene. When it was over, those who survived might better have been dead. Beds were pulled from beneath the dying to see if they concealed money or plate : " Hardly a nail was left sticking in the walls." The murders and rav- ishings were past counting. As for the churches, no image-breakers or Beggars of the Sea could have spoiled them more thoroughly. The worst Outrages of the Valenciennes mob, of Antwerp bigots and reckless Zealanders, were tame and puny compared with what was done by soldiers of the most Catholic King, with the full allowance if not at the express command of his zealous viceroy. Alva's son Don Frederic was there with Noircarmes, and men less savage than they appealed to them in vain to stop the promiscuous destruction. Turks who had stormed a Christian city, or Attila's heathen hordes descending upon Rome, could hardly have wrought more mischief. When all was over, Alva wrote to Philip to congratulate him on so fine a deed. Since this was the Spanish idea of governing, no wonder Spain sank so rapidly from her proud pre-eminence among the nations of the earth. FATE OF ZUTPHEN. It was ordained, in the mysteries of Providence, that as the spring and early summer of this year 1572 were to be marked by most unexpected and amazing suc- cesses for the cause of liberty, so its latter half should be filled with cruel dis- appointments and reverses. From Hainault and Brabant the blood-stained conquerors turned to the north and east. Zutphen, the capital of Gelderland, was one of the many cities which had declared for Orange. Alva sent his son against it, with orders to bum the town and leave not a man alive. It was easily and punctually done. When the troops were tired of slashing and hang- ing, five hundred citizens were tied in couples and thrown into the river. Some 537 wlio were caught last were hung up by the feet and left to perish. The women had occasion to envy their murdered husbands, brothers, and fathers. A relative wrote to Louis of Nassau, " A wail of agony was heard above Zutphen last Sunday — a sound as of a mighty massacre ; but we know not what has taken place." Zeraerts, who held Walcheren for the prince, after failing in several enter- prises, had laid siege to Tergoes in South Beveland at the end of August. The Spaniards in vain attempted to reach and relieve the place, till a Flemish ofl&cer led them in a feat worthy of the boldest Zealander. A channel, ten English miles in length, had been formed by an irruption of the sea fifty years before, between the island and the main' land. A narrow causeway, four or five feet under water at low tide, and cut in three places, afforded a doubtful and laborious passage. Across this three thousand picked men under Mondragon made their way by •night, two abreast or in Indian file, slipping, scrambling, at times swimming. The terrible journey was accomplished in five hours, between tide and tide, and ■with the loss of but nine men : it was a wonderful exploit, worthy of the bravest defenders of liberty instead of its destroyers. After a few hours' rest on the shore, they began a march of twelve miles further to Tergoes. Their arrival by this seemingly impossible means struck terror into the besiegers, who were more numerous than they. Zeraerts in vain tried to rally his men ; they fled to their ships, chased by the enemy, who cut oiF their rearguard. DESTRUCTION OF NAARDEN. The fate of Mons, Mechlin, and Zutphen struck terror through the country. Friesland, Overyssel, and Gelderland returned to their allegiance. Van den Bergh, a brother-in-law of Orange, fled like a coward from Campen, which he had promised to hold to the last, leaving his sick wife behind. Only Holland and part of Zealand remained faithful, and Don Frederic was sent to Amsterdam to stamp out the last embers of rebellion. It was not to prove so easy a task as he probably imagined. More horrors were to be enacted, more rivers of blood to flow, other cities to be ruined, before the tide should turn again toward liberty. Naarden was a small town on the south coast of the Zuyder Zee. Its sur- render was demanded on November 2 2d, by a company of horse. The citizens refused, and a single gun was fired, without authority, by a half-witted fellow. The burghers sent to Sonoy for aid, but none was to be had. Being in no condi- tion to defend the place, they sent deputies to treat with Don Frederic, but he would not receive them, and they were told to return with the army. The burg- omaster escaped by the way ; his companion went on, and entertained Romero and his officers at dinner, after receiving a promise that neither life nor prop- erty should be injured. The keys had been given up on that condition; but throughout these one-sided wars the Spaniards seemed anxious to make a repu- tation for treachery no less devilish than their cruelty. Five hundred citizens i' 538 539 •were assembled in a cliurcli : the soldiers were suddenly let loose upon them, and the building fired. The massacre extended throughout the town. The butchers tortured their unresisting victims with sword and lance, opened their veins, and literally drank their blood. A rich and prominent man had his feet roasted till he paid a large ransom for his life, and then was hanged by special order of Don Frederic. Some who escaped from the town were chased into the fields, stripped, and hung by the feet to freeze. Most of the houses were burned, and what remained, with the walls, were soon after pulled down. Alva, with his usual blasphemy, wrote to the king that it was by God's appointment that these people were foolish enough to attempt the defense of a place that was not defen- sible ; and Mendoza, the Spanish historian, who took part in these wars, thought that "the sack of Naarden was a chastisement which must be believed to have taken place by express permission of divine Providence," because it was an early seat of Protestantism. A moderate success, won on their own element, did something to revive the sinking hopes of the Hollanders at this juncture. Some of their vessels were frozen in near Amsterdam, and attacked by a picked force ; but the Beggars,, more skilful on the ice than their eneraies, drove them off with heavy loss, and a thaw the next day enabled the ships to escape. Alva, who was now at Amster- dam, was much surprised at this " skirmish on the frozen sea." He sent for seven thousand pairs of skates, and trained his men to use them. SIEGE OF HARLEM. Harlem, then as now an important town, was the next point of attack. Its capture would cut off the peninsula of North Holland, held by Sonoy, from the main province, where Orange was doing what he could to concert measures of defense. Three of the magistrates went privately to treat with Alva. Two of them returned, and were tried and executed. The burgomaster, who prudently remained at Amsterdam, wrote home advising the citizens to surrender; his messenger was hanged. Though the city had but weak walls and a small gar- rison, its commander, Riperda, roused the spirit of the burghers ; the cowardly or traitorous magistrates were displaced by others who could be trusted, and every possible measure was taken for defense. Water was to enter largely into these operations. To the west, five miles of sand lay between the walls and the ocean. A shallow lake, dangerous in storms, separated Harlem from Amsterdam, ten miles east, and was traversed by a nar- row causeway. One arm of this late carried the waters of the Zuyder Zee to the northwest ; another, called the Mere, extended far southward. On December nth, Don Frederic, having stormed the neighboring fort of Sparendam, began to invest the city : in a short time thirty thousand men, a force nearly equal to its entire population, were encamped around it. Continual fogs and mists from the 540 frozen lake concealed the doings of eacli party from the other, and enabled Orange to introduce provisions, munitions of war, and reinforcements, till the garrison numbered about four thousand. Besides these there were three hun- dred women, regularly enrolled and armed, who did as good service as the men ; they were reputable characters, and led by a widow of high family and standing. A relieving force under La Marck, in numbers nearly equal to the garrison, was not fortunate enough to reach the city. A thousand of them fell in a fierce battle, and many were taken and hanged on high gibbets in the Spanish camp. La Marck sent to offer a ransom and nineteen prisoners in exchange for one of his officers : it was in vain. The officer was suspended by one leg and left to die, and La Marck hanged his captives in return. The cannonading began on December i8th. In three days two thousand solid shots were hurled against the walls, to their great injury. But the people, women and children as well as men, labored by day and night, bringing sand, earth, and stone, to repair the breaches. They did not scruple to use the statues from the churches : this the besiegers thought shocking sacrilege. Human life, the rights of men, the chastity of women, had no value in their eyes; but images of the saints were too precious to be touched — except when these devotees were sacking a town. Alva's son, expecting to finish the business in a week, ordered an assault on December 21st. It was fiercely repelled, with a loss of but three or four to the defenders, and as many hundred to the enemy: Romero lost an eye. Against this defeat the Spaniards soon had a victory to record. Batenburg, who had taken La Marck's place as admiral, was sent with two thousand men, seven can- non, and a quantity of supplies. He lost his way in the fog, all that he brought fell to the enemy, and his troops were slain or scattered. His lieutenant's head was thrown into the town with a mocking message : the besieged retorted with eleven heads of prisoners, and a line saying that they were for Alva in payment of the ten per cent, tax, with one over for interest. These beheadings were in g'rim jest : prisoners on either side were usually hanged. HEROIC DEFENSE OF HARLEM. After the first assault, mining and countermining began. Sappers would cross each other s underground paths, and fight in the dark, with scarcely stand- ' ing-room. Explosions were frequent. " A shower of heads, limbs, mutilated trunks, the mangled remains of hundreds of human beings, often spouted from the earth as if from an invisible volcano." Thus the winter passed, with con- stant labor and frequent loss, with battering and mending of walls, with mines and sallies, with steady courage and unflagging zeal. Seeing that the ravelin at the Cross-gate could not long be held, the men of Harlem, unknown to their foes, built a half-moon inside it. On January 28th they were gladdened by the 541 arrival of what they needed most, bread and powder. A hundred and seventy sledge-loads had been brought safely across the lake by four hundred patriots. Three days later a midnight attack was made, and had almost succeeded ; but the sentinels were brave, the bells were rung, the burghers rushed from their beds to the walls, and the expected massacre was postponed. At daylight of February ist came a general assault. It was strongest at the weakest point. The wall by the Cross Gate gave way, the Spaniards entered with shouts of tri- umph — to find a solid mass of masonry confronting them, cannon opening upon ~] — \ — ^j^wiflnifrdKi.ieiiiii HARLEM. them from its top, and the ravelin blown up beneath them. Three hundred fell, and the rest retired. After this second repulse, Don Frederic sent Mendoza to his father for per- mission to raise the siege. Alva refused it with threats, though thousands of his men were dying. The besiegers suffered from the severe winter, and both sides from lack of food. The men of Harlem, growing desperate, welcomed the attacks of their foes, and in the intervals made their own. Once, in a heavy fog, 542 a party crept up to the largest Spanish battery and tried to spike the guns. Later, on March 25th, a thousand of them drove in the outposts, burned three hundred tents, killed nearly their own number with a loss of only four, and actually dragged into their gates seven cannon and many wagons of provisions, besides nine standards. The gentlest natures became heroic, the tenderest hearts rejoiced to shed the blood of their oppressors. Madame Hasselaer and her ama- zons bore their part in almost every fight Curey, who at first loved peace and hated arms, made himself a brilliant soldier, headed every forlorn hope, disdained helmet, corslet, and shield, and with his naked sword slew very many Spaniards. After each of these feats a reaction would come, and he lay sick for days, loath- ing such bloody deeds. Then he would rise and go forth to fight again like a madman. A MODERN HORATIUS. Alva, who had been familiar with battles and sieges from his childhood, ■wrote to Philip that "never was a place defended with such skill and bravery as Harlem," and that "such a war had never before been seen or heard of" Yet all this valor could only defer an end that was inevitable, unless the patriots could hold the lake before Harlem, or cut the dyke and starve out Amsterdam ; of this the viceroy had his fears. Winter had helped the defenders of their country ; but the ice broke up early in March, and Bossu brought some vessels near the city. Orange sent Sonoy to cut one of the dykes, but his men were driven off after a sharp water-fight, which was made illustrious by an exploit as heroic as that of the Roman Horatius at the -bridge. When all his com>rades . fled, John Haring of Horn, alone with his sword and shield, held the narrowest part of the causeway against a thousand foes, and than swam off safe. Oliver, the painter and conspirator of Mons, was among the slain in this affair. His head was thrown into Harlem, and the prisoners were hanged as usual by the neck or heels, in view of their beleaguered friends, who took such vengeance as they could. As Mendoza wrote, every man in and about Harlem " seemed in- spired by a spirit of special and personal vengeance." Whence the inspiration came did not occur to him, though the cause of it was not far to seek. Meantime Orange had been moving heaven and earth to get reinforcements — from Holland, Germany, France, England, anywhere. With a force at all proportioned to that of his enemies, he might have held his own or more ; but it was still a struggle of a few against many, of feeble Right against lawless and ruthless Might. He had gathered a hundred vessels or more, of one sort or another, under Brand and Batenburg; Bossu had fewer, but they were larger, and the Spaniards were by this time at home on the inland waters. On May 28th the control of the lake was disputed in a long, fierce, and destructive battle, and the patriots lost it. 543 Harlem was now doomed. Its provisions were giving out, its outer forts had fallen, its source of supply was closed. The citizens sent word to Orange that they could hold out but three weeks longer, and begged for speedy help. His ■carrier-doves bore them an encouraging reply. Through June they lived on seeds, hides, and grass, and many died of starvation. The prince recruited nearly five thousand volunteers, solid burghers of Delft, Rotterdam, Gouda, and other towns. He wished to lead them himself, but the cities objected; his life was of more value than even Harlem, and must not be exposed. So he gave up the DRESS OF ZEALAND WOMEN. command to the unlucky Batenburg, who left Gassenheim on the evening of July 8th, with seven cannon and four hundred wagons full of provisions. With these he hoped to enter and relieve the city, eluding the vigilance of the Span- iards ; but they were fully informed of his plans. Two of the prince's pigeons had been shot, and the letters they were carrying to the besieged revealed all. The fullest preparations were made ; the smoke from a mass of brush prevented the patriot signals from being seen, and concealed the dispositions of the foe. 544 As Batenburg approached the city from the south, he was surrounded and slain with many of his men ; the rest were taken or dispersed. A prisoner, with his nose and ears cut oft", was sent within the walls to tell the news. The burghers had already asked for terms, but none were granted. In their despair it was proposed that all the able-bodied men march out together and cut their way through the Spanish camp or die in the at- tempt. The tears of their wives and children changed this wild resolve to a yet more hope- less plan ; they would form a square around their iamilies, en- closing the help- less, the aged, and the sick, and thus go forth to peri-h sword in hand. Bute by this time Alva's son, who had lately scorned their pro- posal, began to fear that these desper- ate men might bum the town and die in its ruins by their own hands, leaving little glory for him and no pleasure or plunder for his troops. So he resorted to the usual Spanish policy of lying, and sent a promise of free forgiveness and full security if the gates were opened at once. His father's orders and his own purpose, of course, were of another com-olexion. ORGAN IN THE GREAT CHURCH, HARLEM. 545 FATE OF HARLEM. The city surrendered on July I2tli. The atrocities which followed were not so frightful as at Mechlin, Zutphen, and Naarden. Strange to say, the town was neither burned nor sacked; the latter privilege was commuted for a large sum to be paid in four instalments. Not all the survivors were murdered ; Alva gave the number as twenty-three hundred, the native historians put it somewhat lower. The garrison, which had been greatly reduced, furnished half of these victims, though six hundred Germans in it were let go. The officers were the first to suffer — or such of them as had not killed themselves. Among them was a nat- ural son of Cardinal Granvelle, who had no sympathy with his father's politics, and one of the noble family of Brederode. A case of Damon and Pythias mag- nanimity occurred here : one young Hasselaer had been arrested for another, and was going with closed lips to the scaffold, when his cousin gave himself up and insisted that he was the one to die. The miscellaneous slaughter did not begin till the third day, after a visit from Alva ; and the story of it is tame, compared with that of the atrocities in other places. The siege of Harlem was an expensive affair. It lasted seven months, dur- ing which twelve thousand of those engaged in it died of disease or wounds, and over ten thousand shots were discharged against the walls. To the inflamed eye of loyalty, all this outpouring of blood and iron was a good investment, since the news of the capture cured the king of a dangerous fever ; but it would have been much better for the world if he had died then. He was to live twenty- five years longer, and do a great deal more mischief In the five years of this war, on his side utterly foolish and wicked, on that of Orange and h s friends necessary, because forced on their manhood by intolerable oppression, twenty-five million florins had been sent from Spain to carry it on, besides prob- ably as much more raised by confiscation and Alva's patent taxes. As yet the conflict was only begun. It was to go on for a long and weary time, to the per- manent ruin of Spain, the temporary destruction of the southern provinces, the upbuilding of a free state in the north, and the everlasting instruction of such nations as are able to learn anything from history. CHAPTER XXXV. ALKMAAR, MOOK, AND LEYDEN. HE process of taking the revolted cities one by one was likely to be tedious, since Harlem, one of tbe weakest in defenses, bad been able to hold out for seven months. Accordingly Alva sent out a letter inviting all to return to their allegiance and taste Philip's parental clemency, rather than "wait for his rage, cruelty, and fury, and the approach of his army." He added a warning that if they per- sisted in rebellion the king would "utterly depopu- late the land, and cause it to be inhabited by strangers ; since otherwise he could not believe that the will of God and of his majesty had been accomplished." This proclamation had no effect. The Hollanders, thinking themselves better jiidges than Alva of the divine will, were resolved to dare and bear all for liberty. The Spanish troops, not having been paid in full, now broke out in a mutiny, the first of many. Besides terribly afflicting the natives at Harlem and elsewhere, they gave the viceroy a great deal of trouble. Some of them •oflFered, for a large sum, to hand over Harlem to Orange, but he could not raise the money. The small town of Alkmaar, in North Holland, had refused to surrender. By the end of August, 1573, it was surrounded by sixteen thousand soldiers, -and so closely beset that, as Alva claimed, a sparrow could not get in or out. He wrote to his master that, if he took it, he was resolved "not to leave a single creature alive : the knife shall be put to every throat. Since the example of Harlem has proved of no use, perhaps an example of cruelty will bring the other cities to their senses." He would much prefer to be lenient, he said; nobody liked mercy better than he ; but it was of no use with such obstinate heretics and traitors. The only way to deal with them was to exterminate them, or near it. But in this case his savage purpose was to be baffled. (546) 547 ALKMAAR SAVED. Alkmaar had a garrison of eiglit hundred, and thirteen hundred citizens able to fight. On September i8th it was cannonaded till three o'clock, and then assaulted in force on both sides, two fresh regiments from Italy leading. They were received with showers of pitch, lime, melted lead, boiling water, and oil. Hoops covered with tar were set on fire and thrown over their shoulders as they mounted to the attack. Bvery citizen was on the walls ; the women and children brought powder and shot, or stood by to help. Such of the assailants as gained a footing were met with cold steel and thrown down headlong. One of the few who lived to tell what he had seen, remembered only plain people inside, mostly THE WEIGH HOUSE, ALKMAAR. in fishermen's dress. For four hours the fight was kept up with desperate valor. Only thirty-seven of the defenders fell ; but when the Spaniards drew off at dark, they left at least a thousand dead. Don Frederic ordered a renewal of the assault next day, but his men positively refused, though some of them were killed by their officers. The besieged had taken one prisoner : after telling all he knew, he offered to "worship the devil as they did," if they would spare his life. Alkmaar could not hold out forever, and the only way to save it was to open the sluices and cut the dykes. As this would not merely drown out or drive off the Spaniards, but inundate the whole province and destroy much property, the 548 consent of friends at some distance was needed. A brave carpenter, Van der Mey, went forth at tlie imminent peril of his life with letters to Orange, Sonoy, and others, concealed in a hollow cane. He accomplished his mission and returned, after some of the dykes had been opened, with orders and promises to complete the work ; but when near the city he was so closely pursued that he lost his staff. The letters in it disclosed the plan to flood the region. Alva's son hastily called a council of war, which agreed that discretion was here the better part of valor. The siege was raised October 8th, and Alkmaar delivered without the desperate expedient on which the patriot leaders had determined. Meantime Louis of Nassau had been conducting negotiations in France, with at least the effect of weakening the dangerous alliance of that court with Philip. The business of St. Bartholomew, as he plainly told Charles IX., had delighted "the Spaniard, your mortal enemy, and enabled him to weaken your majesty more than he could have done by a war of thirty years." The blood- stained king, his ministers, and even his mother, were somewhat abashed by the indignation which the massacre had aroused. The Huguenots, as we have seen, though weakened, were not exterminated, nor was their spirit broken. Catherine de Medicis, in some dealings with their deputies, asked if a king's word was not enough, and was sharply answered, "No, madam; by St. Bartholomew, no!" Holland sorely needed foreign aid, and Schomberg said that Nassau's plan of a French protectorate was "grand and beautiful." France wanted help to secure the Polish crown, and it was not so clear then as it afterwards became that her weak and perjured princes could be of little service to Dutch liberty. The only things to admire in this tedious diplomacy are the manly frankness of Louis, and the steady patience of his great brother. "I have more than I can carry," Orange wrote, "and in the weight of these great affairs, financial, military, polit- ical, there is none to help me." In a published letter to Philip and other docu- ments he set forth, as he had done before, the facts and the principles underlying them, announced the resolution of the cities of Holland to stand to the last against Alva's tyranny, and appealed to the judgment and sympathy of Christendom. TWO NAVAL VICTORIES. , On October nth, three days after the siege of Alkmaar was raised, the patriots were gladdened by a naval victory. Bossu, who had thirty vessels on the Zuyder Zee, was attacked by twenty-five smaller ones under Dirkzoon. The Spaniards fled, were chased by most of the Dutch, and lost five ships. Only the admiral, in his great vessel "The Inquisition," maintained the fight. Three of the small craft grappled her, and a savage conflict went on from three P. M. till the next day, with heavy loss on both sides. The ships, locked together, drifted about and went aground. With the first light of morning John Haring, the hero of the Diemer D3^ke, hauled down the enemy's flag, and was killed in the n (-" ■I s o H U a S 3 ? 549 550 act. Tlie Spaniards held their own a few hours longer, but they were far from help, and boats came from the shore to reinforce the Hollanders. At elieven Bossu surrendered with three hundred of his men. His capture saved the head of Saint Aldegonde, who was taken soon after in a skirmish at Maas. Orange sent Alva word that life would be taken for life, and they were finally exchanged. Another prisoner of rank fell a victim to the last of Alva's hideous cruelties. Less as a heretic than as one of the captors of Brill, Uitenhoove was roasted at a slow fire, and the viceroy was angry at the executioner for ending his torments with a spear-thrust. Sufferers of another sort were soon left to mourn that they had trusted the governor. Requesens, the Grand Commander of St. Jago, came to succeed him on November 17th, and a month later Alva departed under a load of general execration. His debts were enormous, and he had no means of pay- ing them ; so he sent a trumpeter through Amsterdam to announce that all claims should be presented on a certain day, and in the night before sneaked off, leaving his creditors to be ruined. He got safely back to Spain, despite his fears of being shot from a window on the way, and lived nine years longer, most of the time in disgrace with the master he had served too well. The new governor was an average Spaniard of moderate ability and reputa- tion. He pretended to believe that religion had little to do with the rebellion, but favored Alva's policy of extermination. The finances were in a ruinous condition, and everybody else, even the Spaniards and native butchers like Noircarmes, desired peace ; but the king and his representative meant to have the war go on. A show of milder intentions was made, but only to deceive the patriots and divide their counsels, as Orange knew full well. Saint Aldegonde, still in danger and tired of captivity, advised submission and emigration ; but stouter hearts disdained the idea of abandoning the sacred cause. Mondragon, the old Spanish colonel who led the famous march through the sea to relieve Tergoes, was now closely besieged at Middleburg in the Isle of Walcheren. Two fleets, with over a hundred vessels under Romero and d'Avila, were gathered at Bergen-op Zoom and Antwerp to relieve him and provision the town. The governor stood on thd dyke to see them off, and in saluting him one of the ships blew up. The patriot fleet, commanded by Boisot, was ready to oppose their progress. Orange had roused the enthusiasm of his officers, and received their promises to live and die for their country. The action occurred on January 29th, 1574. Schot, the captain of the flag-ship, came on board nearly dead of a fever, and insisted that his men, instead of going below to avoid the first fire, should stay on deck, ready to grapple and board the enemy. The Spanish guns were discharged but once. Schot and his lieutenant fell ; the admiral lost an eye. Then the grappling-irons and pikes did their work. The Sea Beggars gave no more quarter than their foes. When twelve hundred of the king's men had been killed and fifteen of his ships taken, the rest 55 r- retreated, Romero's vessel ran aground and he swam to shore, remarking to- the viceroy, who was still on the dyke, "I told 3''ou I was not a sailor. If I had a hundred fleets, I could do no better." Mondragon, though nearly starved, swore to burn Middleburg if not granted. INTERIOR OF A HOUSK IN ALKMAAR. terms. They were allowed, and he marched out on February 21st with honors of war, promising to secure the release of five prisoners of rank, or return in their place. But Requesens would not let him keep his word. 552 LAST CAMPAIGN OF LOU.'S OF NASSAU. The patriots now held all Walcheren and practically the whole coast. They had proved their superiority at sea, and their heroism in defending cities ; but in an ordinary land battle they were no match for the Spaniards ; they had the valor, but not the discipline and experience for that. The relief of Leyden was now their first concern, but was to be effected by foreign aid. It had been in- vested by Valdez at the end of October; the siege was raised on March 21st, when all available troops were marched eastward to repel an invading force. Louis of Nassau, after receiving profuse promises from Anjou and Alenson, had raised an army in Germany, with the help of his brother John. He was highly esteemed throiigh Europe ; the victory of the Holy Lion and the capture of Mons had given him a military reputation perhaps higher than he deserved. The plan of his campaign had been arranged by Orange, who considered it "the only certain means for putting a speedy end to the war, and driving these devils of Spaniards out of the country, before the Duke of Alva has time to raise another army to support them." Louis was to take Maestricht if possible, then cross Limburg and Brabant, and join the prince, who had six thousand infantry in the isle of Bommel. The plan was not destined to succeed. The river was impassible, and Men- doza and Avila reached Maestricht before Nassau could cross it. On March 1 8th a night attack cut off seven hundred of his men, with a loss to the assail" ants of but seven. Others deserted, and on April 8th he moved northward. Avila kept pace with him, on the other side of the Meuse, to prevent his junction with his brother. The superstition of the country anticipated his doom. Early in February five men of Utrecht had sworn before the magistrates that they had seen a phantom battle in the sky by night. An army from the northwest, after giving way at the first onset of one from the opposite direction, had rallied and annihilated its opponents. The vision disappeared in clouds, and presently the heavens seemed to flow with blood. This account was widely circulated, and when the relative positions of Louis and Avila were known, men looked on the result as known beforehand. SLAUGHTER AT MOOK. The real battle took place at Mook, near the border of Cleves, on A.pril 14th, 1574. The German mercenaries were in mutiny, howling for their pay aS' usual, and little likely to stand against an equal force of Spaniards ; but Louis could not retreat with honor, or thought he could not. Avila had crossed the Meuse from the west, and chosen a strong position. He had five thousand men against Nassau's eight thousand; Valdez would arrive the next day with as many more, but the Spaniard would not wait to divide the honors of victory. After several hours of skirmishing, the village became the bone of contention ; each side advanced and receded in attack and counter-attack. Nassau with his 555 cavalry drove a portion of the enemy in utter rout ; the rest stood firm, and after a bloody action overthrew the Germans. Louis, with his brother Henry, led a last hopeless charge, and perished. His army was annihilated, and full four thousand slain in the fight and the pursuit, smothered in the marshes, BATTLE OF MOOK. drowned in the river, or burned in the houses near. The count's body, with that of Henry Nassau and Christopher, Duke of the Palatinate, was never recognized, nor the particulars of their fate known. They went down in a furious melee; the faces of the dead were trampled out of human semblance, and their bodies stripped of all that could identify them. A dark rumor went abroad that the 554 general had dragged himself from among the slain and to the river bank, where he was murdered by some prowling countrymen ; but no evidence was offered to support the tale. Thus, in the crash of ruinous defeat, obscurely, yet not inglo- riously, ended the earthly career of a gallant soldier, an accomplished and high- minded gentleman, an unselfish and devoted servant of his country and of human rights. He was admired and beloved by all except those who hated liberty ; in him Orange lost his strongest support, his most precious helper. Three of his mother's sons had now laid down their lives in the battles of free- dom : no family, in any age or land, ever did or suffered more for that sacred cause than the house of Nassau. Duke Christopher, who died with Louis and Henry, was another youth of promise. His father, the Elector Palatine, said^ "It was better so than to have wasted his time in idleness." Count John of Nassau had fortunately been sent to Cologne two days before to raise money for the troops. A MUTINY AND A BATTLE. The Spanish troops, to whom three years' pay was due, mutinied the day after their victory, Throwing off all authority not of their own appointment, they chose a governor and councillors, and submitted to a discipline quite as strict, it must be owned, as Alva had ever enforced. They marched to Antwerp, took possession of it on April 26th, quartered themselves upon the richest citi- zens, and lived on the fat of the land, Champagny, who had command there, sent for the viceroy and barricaded himself in a strong house. Requesens endeavored to recall the soldiers to their obedience ; they answered that they wanted dollars and not speeches. He asked the magistrates for four hundred thousand crowns. They demurred, but after twa weeks of this expensive hos- pitality offered part payment. The chief officer or "Eletto" of the mutineers urged his comrades to accept the terms, since each of them, so to speak, had a rope round his neck ; they deposed him and elected another. A similar mutiny broke out in the very citadel, but was soon suppressed, after its ringleaders had been cut down by a Spanish ensign, who would have been murdered if he had not gone into hiding. A few weeks later the town-council furnished the required sum, part in cash and part in goods, and received the governor's bond, which was not of much value. The delighted soldiers arrayed themselves in fine cloth^ brocades, satins, and silks, and sat down to gamble away their hard-won gains. Their festivities were interrupted by the sound of heavy guns down the river. The revellers rushed to arms and hurried to the dykes, but too late to disturb the sport of the Beggars. Admiral Boisot, desirous of adding to the laurels he had won at Bergen four months earlier, had come up the Scheld, encountered the Antwerp fleet of twenty-two vessels, destroyed fourteen of them with their crews» and made a prisoner of the royalist Vice-Admiral Haemstede. 555 SIEGE OF LEYDEN. Leyden was, as it still is, a fine city, near the head of the Harlem mere. Its inhabitants, after standing a siege throughout the winter, ought to have profited by the temporary absence of their enemies to lay in provisions and increase their garrison. They imprudently neglected to do this, relying on the success of Nas- sau's expedition. By the end of May they were again invested by Valdez with eight thousand men, while they had hardly any but volunteer troops. As else- where in Holland, the burghers were excellent at defending their own, and the commandant. Van der Does, was a man of rank, ability, accomplishments, and proved courage. On June 6th Requesens proclaimed the king's pardon to all who would return to the Roman Church, a few persons excepted. Orange feared the effect of this, but it had none. Holland and Zealand were now the only provinces in rebellion, and their population was almost solidly Calvinist. The prince had passed from his intermediate state of Lutheranism, and become one in profession with his fellow-patriots. These people were to be moved neither from their faith nor from their resolutions. Only two men, so far as known, came forward to claim the doubtful benefits of the pardon. Leyden put a price on Spanish heads, and many were brought in. Sallies and combats before the gates were at first so frequent and active that it was soon found best to forbid them, that the small number of fighting men might be pre- served for future emergencies. The besiegers attempted no assaults, having had enough of these at Alkmaar, but relied on starvation, varied with persuasion of a new kind. On July 30th Valdez urged the burghers to submit and accept the pardon. They refused, though food was now scarce among them. As the sharp tooth of hunger began to be felt, the citizens, accustomed to good living, became impatient, and frequented an ancient ruined tower in the centre of the town, whence they could look far and wide to see if help was com- ing. It could come, as all knew, but from one source — the sea. Some royalists, who had been alloyed to remain unmolested, taunted their neighbors with what seemed a vain hope. "Go up to the tower," they said, "and tell us if the ocean is coming over the dry land ; " for some miles of low and rich meadows inter- vened between the city and the mere. On August 21st word was sent to the prince, by the carrier doves which alone could go in and out, that the besieged had been a month almost without food, and could not hold out much longer. On the 27th they wrote to the Estates, complaining that they were deserted in their need. A prompt reply assured them that Holland stood or fell with Leyden : the waves should destroy all, before she should be forsaken. THE DYKES CUT. The hope of the watchers was not vain : the means of relief, though difficult and expensive, were not impossible. Through the Polderwaert fort, between 556 Rotterdam and Delft, Orange controlled the open country, or at least the means of making it untenable. The Spaniards had attacked this place on June 29th, and been repelled with loss. In July his plans were perfected, and the Estates brought to agree to them. " Better a drowned land than a lost land," became a motto. Subscriptions were taken and a fund raised, as for a work of construction rather than destruction ; ladies gave their jewels and plate to ruin the fields and expel the foe. Early in August the cutting of the dykes began, and the waters came slowly in. Two hundred vessels were loaded with provisions. A most ^^^imdy fever, brought on by undue mental labor and anxiety, laid the prince on his bed, NORTH HOLIvAND DYKES. and proved both tedious and dangerous. No one could take his place, and the work was unavoidably delayed. Valdez, alarmed at these proceedings, consulted his native allies, who said the country could not be flooded: they meant that it had not been done before by human hands. Had the general been better advised, he might have put more difficulties in the way of the patriots, whose task was hard at best. At length the flotilla was put in motion on an artificial sea. The boats were defended by twenty-five hundred fighting men, one-third of them wild Zealanders, 557 sworn to give no quarter, and wearing on their caps a crescent, with the motto, " Rather Turk than Pope." Admiral Boisot had brought these from their native islands, and now took command of the expedition. The distance, not great in itself, was multiplied by obstacles. Five miles from Ley den was the Land-scheiding, a strong dyke eighteen inches above water. This was taken on the night of September loth, and its few guards killed or driven away. With the first light the Spaniards attacked in force, but were routed with heavy loss. A Sea Beggar cut out the heart of one whom he had killed, bit it, and then threw it to a dog, saying, "Too bitter." The mangled heart was picked up and preserved as a curiosity, or rather as an illustration of the savage hatred felt toward the foreign persecutors. The dyke was cut through, the fleet passed on : within a mile was another, no better guarded than the first. Beyond it the sea became too shallow : the way led through a canal lined by the enemy, who also held a bridge across it. Boisot attacked them fiercely, but found their position and their force too strong. The boats, drawing but eighteen or twenty inches, scraped upon the bottom and stood fast: a precious week went by. By the 19th the waters had risen enough for them to move again : they reached a third dyke, strongly guarded at each end, but the defenders fled. Two forts and villages were fired ; the relieving fleet and the alarmed Spaniards moved on toward Ley den. At North Aa was yet another dyke, and but nine inches of water. Here Orange, barely able to leave his bed, visited the fleet and urged it on ; but the wind was wrong, and another week was lost. Meantime Leyden was really starving. The people saw the fires which hinted at coming help, but knew not what to make of this long delay. Pestilence came in the train of famine, and carried oif some seven thousand. Valdez, who knew that his time was short, sent daily letters, promising everything if the gates were opened. Fainting wretches beset the burgomaster with entreaties and threats : he told them it was better to starve than trust the tender mercies of the wicked and fall by Spanish hands. His words put new courage into their hearts ; the citizens mounted the walls and exchanged taunts and defiance ■with the besiegers. RELIEF OF LEYDEN. On September 28th a pigeon brought an encouraging letter from the admi- ral, which raised their hopes ; still, as Boisot wrote to Orange the next day, all depended on wind and tide. It was a belated equinoctial storm that saved Ley- den from perishing. On the night of October ist, on a sea that raged among fruit-trees and chimneys, by the light of their own cannon-flashes, the patriots •destroyed the opposing vessels of Valdez, and drew near tie city. As day dawned, two forts were deserted by their garrisons, who made haste to escape westward. The Zealanders leaped from their boats and chased them through the rising 558 MONUMENT AT ALKMAAR. Erected to commemorate the victory of 11,100 ProUstaiUs against 16,000 soldiers, undttr the Duke of Alva. 559 waters ; hundreds were slain or drowned. One obstacle remained : the fort of Ivammen, directly between the fleet and the town, was firmly held by a Borgia, and could not be passed. Boisot, brave but prudent, anchored just out of range of its guns, and wrote to Orange that he would attack next day, but doubted the result. That evening the burgomaster and many citizens climbed Hengist's tower. "Behind that fort," he said, "are bread and meat, and thousands of our friends. Shall we help them ? " They agreed, weak and famished as they were, to attack Lammen the next morning. That night there was little sleep : the watchers on the towers and mast-heads saw lights moving from the fort over the water, and heard the ominous sound of a falling wall. Boisot's men feared that the ■city had been taken. They feared it more when, straining their eyes in the faint dawning, they could see no signs of life about the fort. No ; there was a. boy, waving his cap from the battlements ; and presently a man came wading to them from the shore. The boy had seen the Spanish retreat and been the first to prove it. The very giving way of a part of the wall, which laid the city open to its besiegers, had scared them off. Valdez had fled from the shore, and Borgia from Lammen : not a living enemy remained in sight. Every creature who could move in Ley den hurried or crept to the wharves as the vessels entered the canals. Thousands of loaves were thrown on shore, and the starving wretches seized oti this late relief so eagerly that some choked to death, and many were made sick, before arrangements could be carried out for distributing and administering the food, now too abundant. Magistrates, citizens, soldiers, sailors, went in long procession to the huge church, where prayers were said and a hymn of thanksgiving raised — but not sung through, for sobs and tears of joy checked the music. A letter was sent to Orange, and reached him the same afternoon, October 3d, in the church of Delft, where it was read by the minister. The next day the prince, though by no means fully restored to Tiealth, visited Leyden, and witnessed, as if by providential ordering, the receding of the waters under a sharp northeast wind. In a few days the land emerged, and those who had cut the dykes began to repair them. A noble memorial was reared to commemorate the ending of this famous siege. The university of Leyden, soon to become one of the foremost in the world, was opened and consecrated with great ceremony on February 5th, 1575. Thus, in the early stages of a fierce struggle for existence, did the heroic Hol- landers erect a temple at once to learning and to piety. CHAPTER XXXVL MUTINY AND MASSACRE. HE Spaniards were somewhat discouraged by their failure to take Leyden, and in the months which followed their military operations were compara- tively slack. Holland was glad of a breathing- space in which to repair some of the damage wrought by the waters and the war. Orange, not wholly satisfied with the conduct of the cities, oflFered to resign his post : the Estates refused ta allow this, and in November, 1574, increased his powers. Sundry negotiations between the contend- ing parties, and an attempt at mediation by the Emperor Maximilian, have little of interest or im- portance. Ten commissioners, five on each side, met at Breda in March, 1575, and sat for over four months, but accomplished nothing. In April Hol- land and Zealand formed a closer union than before,^ and gave the prince absolute powers of defense, instructing him to protect the Reformed worship and suppress the exercise of the Roman religion. He struck out the last two words, and put in their place " religions at variance with the Gospel," which left him free to judge and act. No power could force him into persecution ; and the provinces never asked him to inquire into men's personal beliefs. His second marriage had been far from happy. Anne of Saxony proved the reverse of what a wife ought to be. He obtained a divorce with scrip- tural warrant for it, and in June, 1575, espoused Charlotte of Bourbon, daughter of the Duke of Montpensiier, who was active in the French Catholic league. The lady was far from sharing her father's sentiments ; she had been a nun^ but from 1573 was a Protestant and lived at the court of the Elector Palatine, having been disowned by her family. This third marriage was much objected to. It was in the interest of William's private happiness, but not of any political ambitions : in fact, it estranged his German allies, and cut off help from them. About this time Sonoy, Governor of North Holland, disgraced his cause by committing horrible cruelties on certain persons accused of traitorous plans. (560) ■"/Jl Orange stopped the outrages as soon as lie lieard of them, but Sonoy was too powerful, and had done too much good service, to be displaced as La Marck had been. As if to remind the world that the Spaniards claimed a monopoly of savageness, Hierges, on August 7th, after a short siege, took the small town of Oudewater, in the province of Utrecht, and perpetrated the usual barbarities. The place had seen the birth of Arminius, the famous theologian, fifteen years before : it was now almost blotted out of existence. Schoonhoven soon after surrendered on fair terms. LOSS OF SCHOUVl^EN. Another disaster to the patriot cause was the loss of Schouwen, an island northeast of Walcheren. Helpless in vessels, the Spaniards reached it by an enterprise similar to that which had conducted them to the relief of Tergoes, and even more difficult and dangerous. The way was shown them by traitors : it was again a sub- merged and narrow causeway, some five feet under water at low tide, between the isles of Phllipsland and Duiveland. Over this, a terrible six hours' journey, three thousand men started on a stormy night, Sep- tember 27th. Zealanders in boats attacked them, and many were killed or drowned. The tide came up and swallowed two hundred sappers and miners : the rear-guard had to retreat ; but the main body reached town hall, i^eyden Duiveland, drove off a force of auxiliaries there, and passed, by a similar but shorter way, to Schouwen. Here they took Brouwershaven, destroyed Bommenede with almost every creature in it, and laid siege to Zierickzee on the south coast. The estates of Holland had already voted that it was their duty to "abandon the king, as a tyrant who sought. to oppress and destroy his subjects." The 562 sovereignty was now offered to Elizabeth, of England ; but she, afraid to break openly witb Philip and yet unwilling to abandon her Protestant allies, entered on a long course of tedious and tricky negotiations. The prince, profoundly ■discouraged, turned his mind to the desperate step of wholesale emigration. His idea was to get together every vessel within reach ; to place the entire popula- tion of Holland and Zealand upon them, with, all movable goods ; to cut the ■dykes, open the sluices, and drown the land completely ; and to sail for some foreign land. As Motley remarks, this plan, if carried out, might have had the most momentous effects on history and human welfare. Imagination is free to trace the possible growth of a new state in the far west or east, founded by the wisest and purest man of his time, with settlers unsurpassed in courage, intelligence, and virtue. But the scheme was scattered to the winds by an event in itself of no great im- portance, but which opened the way to a train of conse- quences s.% vast as to raise new hopes for liberty. The viceroy died suddenly on March 5th, 1576, a little preceded by Vitelli, one of his ablest SENATE CHAMBER, UNIVERSITY OF LEVDEN. oflS-CerS. Requesens was a colorless character, and far from intrinsic greatness of any kind; but he had represented royalty, and he named no successor. The stupid advice of Hopper, then envoy at Madrid, and the idiotic delays of Philip, who could fix on neither a man nor a policy, prolonged the confusion which ensued, until it rose to anarchy. The State Council assumed control ; as natives, most of its members were despised by the Spaniards ; as tools of foreign tyranny, they were hated by their countrymen. Holland and Zealand, poor and suffering as they were, afforded to the obedient provinces an example of manly resistance and successful self-government. Their union was modified and cemented by a new act of April 25th, 1576. Orange was loaded with business, forgetful of nothing, writing innumerable letters, seeking allies everywhere. He was to find them before long. 563 THE MUTINY. Zierickzee had been besieged by Mondragon since tbe fall. A fleet attempted to relieve it, but tbe harbor bad been blocked. On May 25tli Boisot's vessel, the Red Lion, dashed against the obstructions, grounded, and was in danger from the shore ; the others were driven away. The admiral and his men could escape only by swimming, and he was drowned in the darkness. The death of this brave sailor and able commander, who had relieved Leyden and won several notable victories, was a heavy loss to the patriots. On June 21st, Zierickzee surrendered on honorable terms. Two hundred thousand guilders were de- manded. There was but half that much money in the town ; but a temporary mint was set up, and the people brought their spoons, forks, whatever they had of silver, to be melted down and turned into coin. The soldiers began to mutiny ; Mondragon could not control them ; they locked up their officers, and elected others, as at Antwerp two years before. Having eaten the isle of Schouwen bare, they made their way back to Brabant, and moved southward. After threatening Brussels, Mechlin, and other places, they seized Alost in East Flanders, and established themselves there, in numbers about two thousand, and doing what they pleased. Great were the wrath and terror throughout the provinces, and especially in the capital. The State Council, moved by the general clamor, denounced the mutineers in the king's name as murderers and traitors. The Spanish officers, rejected by their men and suspected, if not imprisoned, by the citizens, were between two fires, and soon made common cause with the soldiers. Avila, the conqueror of Louis Nassau, now commandant of the citadel at Antwerp, laughed at the decree of outlawry. Verdugo, Roda, and others joined him there. Cham- pagny, the native Governor of the city, dared not proclaim the edict. By Sep- tember all the troops had mutinied. Orange was not slow to improve his opportunity. In letters to the Kstates of Brabant, to those of Gelderland, and to many leading men, he urged the necessity of union against the common foe. A congress met at Ghent in October to discuss the situation, which had almost assumed the shape of civil war. In many places the people rose against the soldiers, but only to be slaughtered. At Tisnacq, in an unequal contest of this kind, two Spaniards and two thousand citizens fell. The army threatened to attack Brussels,^ end the council took no steps for its defense. Its members had alread}'- fallen into popular disfavor, and on September 5th they were arrested and put in prison — a bold step, for which no one wished to appear responsible. Del Rio, the Spanish Blood-Councillor, was sent to Orange, who kept him close and asked him many unpleasant questions. The garrison of Ghent was besieged in the citadel. The prince was asked for troops to help in this, and sent them, relieving the fears of the Catholic malcontents by assuring them that their 564 religion should not be disturbed. Tbe cannonading and tbe sessions of the con- gress went on together. Maestricht rose, won over tbe Germans of its garrison, and drove out tbe Spaniards. Tbey returned witb reinforcements, and took tbe city by a disgraceful stratagem : tbe women of a suburb were seized, and each soldier of tbe attacking column held one before him, firing over her shoulder. The burghers, unwilling to train their cannon on their neighbors and relatives, A CANAL IN LEYDEN. were overcome, and Maestricht, on October 20tb, suflfered the usual horrors in full measure. ANTWERP IN DANGER. Antwerp was now trembling, and the provinces trembled for Antwerp. All knew that the soldiers, thirsting for plunder and blood, had turned covetous eyes 565 upon the richest city in the world. The richest city was commanded by the strongest fortress, and that was full of bandits. Avila, their leader, was in close communication with the mutineers at Alost, Maestricht, and elsewhere ; mutineers no longer indeed, for all their officers had joined them, and Roda, as a member of the State Council, claimed to represent the king. When all the Spaniards in the country should have been collected in the citadel, what defense had Ant- werp against their fury ? Only some German troops, led by Van Ende and Oberstein. Van Ende and his men were in league with Avila : Oberstein, whose wits were none of the brightest, had been beguiled, on October 29th, into signing a treaty with the others, which bound him to disarm the town. When he found what it meant, he refused to fulfil his promise, informed the authorities, and did his part manfully, backed by those under his command. To help in the defense, Brussels sent six thousand Walloons under the Marquis of Havr^, brother of the Duke of Aerschot : with him came Egmont's son and other young nobles. They entered Antwerp on November 3d, after being kept outside for a day and a night. Champagny, the governor, hated the Spaniards more than he loved Philip, and was in correspondence with Orange ; but he distrusted these Walloons, and not without reason. They gave much trouble during their brief stay, and were of no use at all when most needed. Havre brought letters, taken from couriers on the way, showing that Avila had invited the Spaniards from Alost and other places. A ditch was dug and a breastwork erected, chiefly by the citizens and their wives, opposite the castle : progress was soon interrupted by a cannonade. Champagny seemed to be the only efiicient ofl&cer in the city ; his orders were not fully carried out, the barri- cades were imperfect, and there were few cannon. Next morning early, the troops of Romero, Valdez, Vargas, and others arrived from many directions, leaving the posts they had been appointed to hold, and coming to make war on their own account upon a city which had never renounced its allegiance to the king. It was no strife now between Papist and Protestant, nor between royalists and rebels : the natives of the land were striving simply to protect their homes against a foreign army. The Spaniards were all on one side, defying the edict of the State Council : the Germans were divided, some in the citadel and others among the defenders of the town. " THE SPANISH FURY." About nine that morning, Sunday, November 4th, a small party emerged from the citadel and were driven back by the burghers. Soon after, a moving wood, like that which Macbeth saw from Dunsinane, came into sight from the southwest ; it was the mutineers of Alost, near three thousand strong, each with a twig on his helmet. Avila had waited only for this important portion of his force. He offered them food, but though they had marched twenty-four miles in 566 the last seven hours, they were impatient for the assault, saying that they would sup in Antwerp or dine in Paradise : another place might have been more cor- rectly named for the alternative. They marched out together at eleven, kneel- ing first to say their prayers, and carrying a banner with the crucifix and the Virgin Mary on it. There were but five thousand infantry and six hundred horse in all ; the defenders of that city, not counting the burghers, were more numer- ous. With equal discipline and steadiness of valor, the sack of Antwerp might THE UNIVERSITY OF LBYDEN. have been prevented ; but alas, no troops had yet been found who could stand face to face against the Spaniards on dry land. They came in two nearly equal bodies by two different streets. The feeble barrier gave way before them ; the worthless Walloons turned and fled. The Bletto was first on the wall; he was shot down. Over the breastwork they swarmed with their terrible war-cries, " Saint James ! Spain ! blood, flesh, fire, sack!" Van Ende's Germans joined them ; those of Count Oberstein, faithful to their trust, fought till all were slain. Champagny also did his duty, and did 567 it nobly. He tried to fill the place of Havr6, who had demanded the post of honor and of danger, and the places of Havre's officers, who had likewise van- ished from the scene. He was everywhere, striving to rally the flying cowards, rousing the burghers, pleading with the cavalry to make a stand by the horse- market; it was in vain. The citizens indeed did what they could; with the last of Oberstein's Germans they stood before their beautiful Exchange, opposing a wall of flesh to the butchers, and went down in hundreds. Others fought along the streets, and died, sword or pike in hand, before their doors. The carnage was frightful ; the streets and the river changed their hue. In the square around which were ranged the splendid City Hall and the houses of the great guilds, many made their last resistance, till Vargas' horsemen sabred and trampled them out of life. Others ^^ picked ofi" the bandits from the "^^iii^ windows and balconies of the buildings, till these were set on fire. Near a thousand houses were burned, with hun- dreds of their inmates. In a street near by, behind the town house, the bur- gomaster and many of his colleagues and neighbors checked the invaders for a time. There the corpses lay thick, and not all were men of Antwerp. The margrave of the city was the last to fall here, per- haps the last to be slain, fighting, in Antwerp, but by no means the last to die. Women.and children, as well as men, were mur- dered, to the number of eight thousand. For the citizens there was no escape : cooped up among their flaming homes, they fell sword in hand, or survived at the precarious mercy of their conquerors. Those who had come from without to defend them had more chance to get away, WATER GATE. 568 especially if they were mounted and in full armor. Among these were Havr6 and several of his ofi&cers, who had won no glory. Obersteinwas drowned while making for a boat. Champagny, who had exposed his life for hours, when he could do no more, made his way to the river, and was received on a vessel of Orange. INCIDENTS OF THE MASSACRE. With nightfall the fight was practically over, but not the slaughter. The sack was more horrible than the combat, for the terrors and torments of the defenseless are worse than the wounds and death of those who can strike as well as suffer. The greed of these human bloodhounds was a positive mania. Treasr nre, when they secured it, was of little use to them, being in most cases speed- ily wasted or gambled away ; but to get it they would break every law of God and man, and shrink from no atrocity. Two ladies shut themselves in their cellar : the door was blown up with powder, the mother killed, the daughter strung up again and again, and let down when nearly strangled, to extort inform- ation which she could not give. The villains left her hanging : she was released by a servant who chanced to enter, but her mind was gone. In another wealthy house, a wedding had unluckily been appointed for this wretched day. The feast ■which followed was rudely interrupted by the sounds of slaughter, but neither family nor guests could fly. When the robbers entered, money, jewels, what- ever wa,s portable, was given them, but all was not enough. The bridegroom "was stabbed, then the bride's mother and many more. The bride, a noted beauty, was seized, taken to the citadel, and locked in a room, while her abductor went off to seek more plunder. Her father snatched a sword from one of the Span- iards, and killed two or three of them before he was cut down. The bride, left alone in the fortress, tried to hang herself with a heavy gold chain. The kid- napper came back, stripped her bare, flogged her till the blood came in streams, and turned her into the street to die. These are but specimen outrages, two cases out of many. If the earth had opened to swallow the ruined and bleeding city, if the fires of heaven had descended to consume it while the massacre yet raged, it would have been a relief to the survivors, and scant justice to the fiends who laid it waste. The murdering and pillaging went on for two days. Only about two hun- dred Spaniards fell. There were three thousand corpses in the streets, almost as many more in the houses, and another three thousand, it was believed, in the river. For destruction of life, the Spanish Fury, as it was called, was another St. Bartholomew. As to property, the value of six million crowns was stolen, and as much more burned. The criminals in the city jail, or such of them as could pay for their release, were set free by a captain who took his part of the plunder in this shape. The exchange was turned into a gambling-hell ; one dragoon lost ten thousand dollars in a single day. Most of the finest buildings 569 were in ruins. All the public documents and other contents of the City Hall were destroyed. As the Estates of Brabant wrote to the States-General of the provinces, "Antwerp was but yesterday the chief ornament of Europe, the refuge of all nations, the source and supply of countless treasure, the nurse of arts and industry : she is now a gloomy cavern, full of robbers and mur- derers, the enemies of God and man." Yet Roda had the impu- dence to write to Philip, congratu- lating him on a "very great victory, and enormous damage to the city," and praising Avila, Romero, and the rest, for their conduct. He knew what would please his master. TREATY OF GHENT Madrid might be gratified at the news, but the Netherlands felt quite differently. A howl of exe- cration went up everywhere, and the deliberations of the congress at Ghent received fresh stimulus and a much sharper point. A letter from Orange, written just before the massacre, was read in ^^ the glaring light that streamed from Antwerp, and helped the deputies to see their way. On November 8th, a treaty was concluded between the commissioners of the Prince, representing Holland and Zealand, and those of Brabant, Flanders, Utrecht, and the other central and southern provinces. We need not enlarge on its provisions, for they were not long in force; but they bound all the provinces to- gether in amity and alliance against THE GREAT TOWER, ZIERICKZEE. the Spaniards. Their expulsion was the first object: other matters were to be settled by the States-General. The past was to be forgotten, and religious per- secution to cease. Hasty and imperfect as was this agreement, diflScult as its 57P execution was to prove, it achieved the most important end accomplislied by diplomacy in all these years. Two military events in the same interest occurred at the same time. The fort or citadel of Ghent fell before the cannon of its besiegers, and Zierickzee,. with the rest of Schouwen and the adjoining island, was regained by Count Hohenlo, acting for the prince. Another incident boded less well for liberty. Don John of Austria, the new governor, reached Luxemburg, on the southeast border of the provinces, on November 3d. He came disguised as a Moorish slave, with a single Italian cavalier and six soldiers. W^ . , .■ ■ ■ ■ f - fi« .| jni|t i i ii nnaj.n T ,| .... >»,, . tM , . j^.n .^ y . y . ■< rwB DtTTCH OFFICER. CHAPTER XXXVII. DON JOHN. HE new governor had been publicly acknowledged as a brother by the king, and as a son by the Emperor Charles V., though his mother, a Ger- man laundress, in one of her frequent furies,, denied this paternity. He was a gallant soldier, and had won great fame at the naval battle of Lepanto against the Turks. Young, adventurous, and romantic, he regarded the Netherlands merely as a stepping-stone to future and higher honors, not knowing that he was to find there little glory, much discomfort, and an early death. Such per- sonal virtues as he had could be only an encum- brance in his new position, and of small profit to the friends of liberty, for Spain produced nothing but bigots, and Philip was not one to change his plans. To lie, to conquer, to tyrannize and persecute, were all he wanted of his viceroys. The counsels of Orange to his new allies went straight to the point at issue. "Make no agreement with him," he wrote to the States-General on November 30th, "unless the Spanish and other foreign troops have first been sent away. Beware, meantime, of disbanding your own forces, for that would be to put the knife into his hands to cut your throats. Remember, this is not play, and you have to choose between total ruin and manly self-defense." He went on to say that all the old privileges must be maintained, the citadels destroyed, and all affairs managed by the body he was addressing. This advice was heeded. Early in December deputies waited on Don John, who was still at Luxemburg, and stated their case plainly. They demanded that the troops be removed, the Ghent treaty maintained, and the States-General assembled as of old. On these conditions they would accept him as governor, and render due and loyal obedience. He agreed to send off the army, but insisted that it should go by sea. This, as they soon found reason to suspect, meant a descent on England, so they opposed it vehemently. While the matter was still under discussion, the so-called Union of Brussels was drawn up in January, (571) 572 i577> ^^^ signed by all tlie chief men of the provinces, including Friesland and Groningen. It was a popular movement in the same interest, to get rid of the odious foreign soldiers. DEMANDS OF THE ESTATES GRANTED. More discussions, held at Huy in Liege on January 24th, ended in a violent quarrel. The governor lost his temper, and called the deputies rebels and traitors. From words they nearly came to blows, and all went to bed in a rage. But by next morning Don John had cooled down and bent to necessity. Yes, he would maintain the pe^ce and the treaty, if they were not against the king's authority and the Catholic religion. That was a large z/, of which advantage might be taken later. For the present there was a new emperor in Germany, Spain was far away, and the provinces were imited and resolute. Let him once get firmly in the saddle, and then he would see what he could do. Since it was necessary first to get there, he yielded every point, one after another. The troops should go by land, and the sanction of the local clergy was admitted ap proving the Treaty of Ghent satisfactory and harmless to king and Church An edict to this effect was signed by both parties on February 12th and 17th. It was signed by both parties, but not by alL The deputies of Orange with- held their names. The prince was disappointed and dissatisfied. He would have demanded more, had he supposed that the viceroy would concede so much. He knew the value of Spanish promises, and had a bundle of intercepted letters prov- ing bad faith. He complained that the Estates "had rushed upon the boar-spear." Don John once installed, who could force him to expel the knaves who had ruined Antwerp? That should have been done before the new man was admitted. Why should the Estates, which had outlawed these assassins before their worst crime was committed, permit them to go with all their plunder, and even pay their wages too? If peace was really meant, why was his son, the young Count Buren, still kept a prisoner in Spain ? Holland and Zealand, though again alone, were united as one man. Better another war than be entrapped, deceived, destroyed. ATTEMPTS TO BRIBE ORANGE. But the governor was not for war, or not just then. On the contrary, he sincerely desired peace, and peace meant the conciliation of Orange. " This is the pilot who guides the bark," he wrote to Madrid. "He alone can destroy or save it. The greatest obstacles would disappear if he could be gained." To this end, therefore, he bent his efforts, supposing, as many later statesmen have done, that every man has his price. His letters to Philip were extremely frank. "Your majesty's name is as much abhorred and despised in the Netherlands as that of the Prince of Orange is loved and feared. I am negotiating with him, and giving him every security, for I see that everything depends on him. Matters iave reached such a pass that we must make a virtue of necessity. If he lend A WOMAN OF HOLLAND, WITH GOLD HEAD DRESS. 573 574 an ear to my proposals, it will be only on very advantageous conditions. We will have to submit to these, rather than lose all." The prince, however, was not to be purchased. He told the viceroy's envoys that he had had some experience of royal promises, and preferred to lay any propositions before the F"t"tc" of Holland and m ., for whom he was icting. To Don John's letters he re- plied, in language worthy of a patriot, that the chief thing in his eye was the welfare of the people, in comparison with which it was not his habit to consider his private and per- sonal interests. His prudent fears proved somewhat un- just to the Es- tates, which did not accept the new governor till the condi- tions were fulfilled, and to Don John, who was not so bad a man as his master. At least, he was honest enough with regard to the removal of the troops. This ZEALAND JEWELRY. ■v^ras delayed some time, for there was difficulty in raising money for the expenses of the journey; but they inarched in the end of April, and went straight on to Italy, leaving ten thousand Germans in the royal service. Meanwhile the viceroy was making himself agree- able at Lou vain, and gaining a good deal of transient popularity. The departing 575 Spaniards gave up the Antwerp citadel to the Duke of Aerschot, who was promi- nent by virtue of his rank, but a weak character and an extremely poor patriot On May ist Don John was received at Brussels with much pomp and elabo- rate festivities ; but he was not happy there. He did not like the country or the people ; he had been disappointed in all his schemes ; he believed there were plots against his liberty. He wrote dolefully to Madrid, and soon began to ask in vain to be relieved of an irksome post, in which he could do nothing. His gloom -would have been yet greater, had he known that he was suspected of treacherous intentions, and caught in the meshes of a plot at once infernal and insane. Philip, guided by the secretary Perez, tried to elicit his inmost thoughts by con- £dential letters, hoping to find or manufacture some evidence of treason on the part of this too faithful servant ; and Don John's confident, Escovedo, was •decoyed to Spain within the year, and there murdered by order of the king, who rewarded the assassin with presents, pensions, and commissions in the army. Such was the detestable diplomacy of Spain. THE VICEROY DISAPPOINTED. In May the Governor made a last effort to come to terms with Orange. A long conference was held at Middleburg ; it accomplished nothing, for the vexed question of faith and worship was in the way. The prince was forced to say plainly to the envoys, " We see that you intend to extirpate us. We have suTj* mitted to you in good faith, and now you would compel us to maintain the Roman xeligion. That can be done only by destroying us." The viceroy now made up his mind to war. He issued a persecuting edict, and presided at the beheading of a poor tailor of Mechlin. Soon after, he seized the citadel of Namur, near the French border, and established himself there. This was a mistake, for it showed the obedient provinces that his intentions were treacherous and hostile, and set them against him, so that he was soon involved in an angry controversy with the Estates. He had already written the king that the people hated him and that he abhorred them. Very different was the feeling toward Orange. Respected everywhere, he ■was deeply loved and absolutely trusted in Holland and Zealand. When he travelled, the people cried with joy, " Father William has come ! " He was invited to Utrecht, and his visit led to an alliance with that city and province, on a basis of entire toleration, Don John felt more and more the wretchedness of his false position. He was a soldier, with no especial gifts except for war, and he was in no position to fight. An attempt to possess himself of Antwerp citadel failed, and brought him deeper into discredit. Some troops of the states, led by Champagny's nephew, defeated and drove off Van Ende's regiment, which had taken part in the massa- cre. The other German soldiers barricaded themselves in the New Town, and 576 were bargaining -witTi the burghers, who offered them a hundred and fifty thou- sand crowns to leave, and were ready to double the amount. Suddenly rose a cry, "The Beggars are coming." The ships of Orange, under Admiral Haul- tain, sailed up the Scheld, and fired two or three shots at the barricades. The Germans ran in a panic, and the merchants kept their money. This was on August 1st. The mercenaries took refuge in Bergen and Breda, where they were besieged and forced to surrender. Their colonels, Fugger and Frondsberger, were given up with the towns. These villains had joined with the Spaniards in the Antwerp Fury, and ought to have been hanged for their crimes ; but the scaf- fold in those days generally found the wrong victims. Great was the joy in Antwerp, delivered, for the first time in twelve years, from its foreign oppressors. The survivors of the massacre made haste to pull down the hated citadel. Citizens of every rank, ten thousand of them or more, labored day and night till all the side fronting the city was in ruins. Then they slept in peace, for the fortress could no longer shelter robbers and murderers. In a cellar was found Alva's statue, which Requesens had removed. It was dragged in triumph through the streets, insulted, defaced, destroyed. Most of it was turned into cannon for the national defense ; bits of it were kept as relics of the detested past. ORANGE AT BRUSSELS. As Don John had written, Orange was the chief man in the country. Though only stadtholder of two small provinces, it was his counsels that guided affairs throughout the Netherlands, so far as they were guided with wisdom or to any useful end. The Estates-General now invited him to Brussels, which he had left on Alva's approach, eleven 3'-ears before. In all that interval lie had been a proscribed rebel under sentence of death. Of late the tyrant's vicegerent had offered him any terms he chose to name : he had refused, for he was not fighting for his own hand. Now the governor dared not leave the citadel of Namur ; the country was practically in rebellion, and even the great nobles, rigid Catholics as they were, admitted that nothing could be done without the heretic outlaw. Champagny, Aerschot, and other envoys went to Holland to beg his presence at the capital. He told them he could not go without the consent of his free prov- inces J and this was not easily won. Setting out almost alone, he received an ovation at Antwerp, and another at Brussels on September 23 d. His first work was to stop the negotiations with the governor. The envoys of the Estates had made a treaty at Namur : Orange, whose word was law for the moment, said it must not be ratified, and insisted on other and more stringent terms. Don John must give up the Namur citadel and all the forts, disband all his troops, retire to Luxemburg, restore all confiscated property, release prisoners, and procure the immediate return from Spain of Count Buren, the prince's son. The viceroy, of course, could not accept these humiliating conditions ; so war was 577 ^78 declared. He wished it to be deferred a little, but the Estates, knowing that he was constantly receiving reinforcements from the south and east, would allow no more than three days of truce. To set themselves right before the world, they issued a pamphlet in seven languages, stating their case, and adding intercepted letters to show the governor's bad faith. He replied in a similar publication, ^ving his side of the story. Two factions at this time divided the Catholic provinces. The plain people were attached to Orange and glad to follow his lead: but the nobles, jealous of his rising power, held other views. Most of these were men of small ability, less principle, and no real patriotism. Till lately they had been the willing servants of tyranny. Carried along perforce on the current of events, all that Aerschot, his son Havre, and others like them cared about was their own great- ness and the means of increasing it. Orange trusted them "as he would adders fanged," knowing that their services to liberty could be but slight and casual. They had sent an envoy to Vienna in August, to offer a sort of doubtful sover- eignty to the Archduke Matthias, bf-other of the Emperor Rudolph and a boy of twenty years. He was allured by their proposals, and early in October set forth with a few attendants, disguised and in the night. He was received at Antwerp by Orange, who, through his own management and that of his ally the English queen, had accepted the post of lieutenant-general, thus turning what might lave be,en defeat for himself and his cause into a step forward. He was also elected Ruward of Brabant, an ancient office, long vacant, and nearly equal to that of dictator. Of Flanders he had several times been stadtholder, and might resume the place almost at will. Matthias, when formally accepted as governor-general, was but a puppet in the hands of his subjects and their real ruler. RISING AT GHENT. His inauguration was deferred for several months, during which Ghent became a scene of strife. Aerschot, appointed by the State Council Governor of Flanders, repaired on October 20th to that city, where he was far from wel- corne. It contained many Protestants, more lovers of liberty, and not a few who would now be communists or anarchists, always ready for revolt. A secret society of twenty thousand members was pledged to rise at the call of leaders who knew the duke too well to love or trust him. The chief of these were two men of rank, whose sentiments at every point were the extreme reverse of those held by nnost of the nobles. Ryhove and Imbize were young, restless, radical, vehement laters of Spain and Rome, lovers of the prince and popular liberty, and ready ibr any desperate deed. Aerschot' s manners did not lessen his unpopularity in Ghent, and an inter- ■cepted letter (whether genuine or forged) of the old Blood-Councillor Hessels iastened the outbreak, for it intimated that the duke was in the interest of Philip 579 and Don John, and would soon "cii-cumvent the scandalous heretic with all his adherents." The reactionists grew loud and threatening; the old charters should never be restored, they said, and those who talked of privileges would get halters. Ryhove visited Orange at Antwerp early in November, and asked for help: the prince could not openly favor so irregular a project, but allowed it to be understood that its success would not displease him. That night the conspirators rose in Ghent, arrested Aerschot and the leaders of his party, and established a provisional government, with Ryhove at its head. No blood was shed, though the duke's person was attacked, and manfully shielded by the patriot captain at the risk of his own life. This local revolution caused much excitement through the country, and served as an example for similar efforts. It was too irregular for the authorities to approve ; even Orange found it necessary to offer some mild censure, and to ask for the release of the prisoners. Aerschot was freed, but the rest wer( kept in prison, whence Hessels and another were taken out only to be hanged t year later. RIVAL GOVERNORS. On December yth, the States-General declared Don John to be no longer governor, but a public enemy, and his native supporters rebels and traitors. Three days later a new Union was signed at Brussels, on a basis of equality between the two religions. So far, all had gone to the prince's mind and after his heart. His wise counsels, his mighty influence, had done their work at last Young Egmont and the other Catholic nobles assented, or at least submitted with professed cheerfulness, to this triumph of liberal statesmenship. Protestant- ism, supposed to be suppressed long ago in Brabant and Flanders, reared its head again ; the Calvinists came out of their hiding-places, and praised God in their own language without fear. An alliance was soon made with Elizabeth of Bngland, who agreed to lend troops and money. Matthias was to be governor- general, taking an oath of allegiance to the king (this fiction was still preserved, as before by Holland when it was alone in rebellion) and to the States-General. •Orange was to retain his post of Ruward, and to be lieutenant-general. The archduke accepted the conditions on December 17th, and a month later was installed with the usual processions and spectacles at Brussels. It was a very empty honor on which he entered, and a merely nominal part that he played in Netherlands history for nearly foiir years. Don John's wrath and disgust were freely expressed in a long letter to the ■emperor, whom he asked to recall his intruding brother. Princes, he said, ought to stand by each other in keeping their subjects in order, since "liberty is a con- tagious disease, which goes on infecting one after another, if the cure be not promptly applied." But he did more than write and complain ; he was gathering an army at Luxemburg. Mansfeld had brought troops from France, and others 58o came from the south under Prince Alexander of Parma, a nephew and former schoolmate of Don John. The Spaniards had come back, and would soon be heard from after their old fashion. Mondragon and Mendoza were in the prov- inces again, with over twenty thousand veterans. Thus backed, and with a lieutenant who was soon to rival or eclipse his fame, the most admired soldier of Europe might be expected to carve out a career more creditable to himself, and more painful to his rebellious subjects, than had been his for the last fourteen inglorious months. On January 25th, 1578, he put forth a proclamation in French, German, and Flemish, summoning all to return to their allegiance and ST. ANTHONY'S WEIGH-HOUSE, AMSTERDAM. repeating his intention to maintain the rights of Philip and the pope against all rebels and heretics. It was no idle threat. As in 1572, the advance of freedom was to be followed by disasters, and the work to be done over again or broken tO' pieces and left past mending. It would be too much to expect that a great statesman and a model patriot, should be also a mighty warrior. The place of Orange was in the council- chamber rather than the field ; and he had neither the disposition nor the power 58i of a tyrant. He did what he could, but lie could not repress base jealousies, nor ignore rank that had little merit to support it ; he could not make traitors loyal nor cowards brave. The army of the States was about equal to the enemy in numbers, but inferior in every other respect. Most of the men were mercenaries ; the officers, except Champagny and Bossu, who commanded the centre, were not of eminent ability, and few of them were devoted to the cause. Incredible as it may appear, and impossible as it would be under stricter discipline, the three chief commanders, Lalain of the infantry, Melun of the cavalry, and La Motte of the artillery, were actually absent from their posts, attending a wedding, when the armies met. They were justly charged with treachery. If the States' forces were half-hearted in this business, the Spaniards were not. They enjoyed also the consolations and encouragements of religion — of a certain kind. The pope had rushed to their support after his manner, proclaim- ing this a holy war, offering full pardon of all sins to those who took up arms oi?. the right side, and — which was much more expensive — authorizing Don John to tax or use church property. How much the Catholic officers on the other side were afflicted by these thunders is left to the imagination ; perhaps such, denouncements of Heaven's wrath or favor were growing a little stale. DISASTER AT GEMBLOURS. The chief officers present with the rebel army were De Goignies, who had at least experience, and Havr6. On January 31st they turned from the nighbor- hood of Namur and marched in a northwesterly direction towards Gemblours. Most of the cavalry, about fifteen hundred, were at the rear, under Egmont and La Marck, a relative of the late admiral. These horsemen might better have been at the bottom of the sea, for they did vastly more harm than good. Don John pursued, with his banner bearing a cross and the Latin motto, "In this sign I vanquished the Turks, in this I will overcome the heretics." His cavalry were in the van ; some of these, with a thousand foot, under Gonzaga and Mondragon, were detained to harass the enemy's rear, which was moving, not in the best order, on the edge of a wet and perilous ravine. While the skirmishing was going on, Parma came up and saw his opportunity. With the foremost horse he floundered through the ravine and attacked in flank and rear. Egmont did his duty, but he did it almost alone. The States' cavalry, seized with panic, thought only of escape, and galloped through or over their friends in front, throwing the centre ia hopeless confusion. Goignies tried in vain to rally his men ; without making the least resistance, they cast down their arms and followed the cavalry, though with far less chance of saving their worthless bodies. For an hour and a half Parma and his small force, reckoned at from six to twelve hundred, rode about hacking and hewing, with ■ scarcely a man hurt. It was a massacre, rot a battle. Eight or ten thousand 582 perislied — ^half the army that had been hired to fight for freedom. Six hun- dred prisoners were taken, and all were hanged or drowned. All the cannon and munitions of war, with thirty-four standards, fell into the hands of the Spaniards. AMSTERDAM WON. This victory of Parma's (for it was his alone) profited the governor less than might have been expected. Louvain and other small towns opened their S1,AUGHTER OF THE STATSS' FORCES AT GEMBOURS. gates to him, and several more were taken by force and cruelly punished ; but these included no place of great importance. It was midwinter, and the roads 585. were in no condition for military movements. The patriots laid their late defeat . at the door of absent, incompetent, or treacherous commanders. There was much indignation at Brussels, and Orange with difi&culty prevented an attack upon cer- tain nobles. Amsterdam, the chief city and capital of Holland, had all this time refused to join the confederacy. Most of its people were Protestants, but the magistrates were not, and the monks were numerous and active. Ever since the Spanish garrison was removed, the town had been looked up jn with angry and covetous ej''es by the zealous liberals of its own province and of Zealand. Orange^ whose love for orderly measures and respect for local liberty were perhaps carried- to excess in so turbulent a time, had forbidden any attack from without. Others,, who were less scrupulous, engaged in frequent plots to take the city ; and in Kovember, 15 7 7, an enterprise projected by Sonoy ended in bloodshed and failure. At length, through the good offices of Utrecht, a treaty was made on February 8th, 1578. By this the Calvinists were allowed to hold their services outside the walls, and to bury their dead within them. Though this measure of toleration^ was less than that granted in the central and southern provinces, it brought Amsterdam over to the national cause ; and this gain was thought to more than, match whatever Don John's arms had won. But the thoroughgoing Reformers within the city were not satisfied till they could control the magistrates and the militia. Bardez, a warm patriot, planned. a model rising, and secured the help of Sonoy. On May 28th he went to the coun- cil-house with others, to complain of their grievances. At noon one of them appeared on the balcony and raised his hat. At this signal a sailor raised a flag on the square and called on all who loved the Prince of Orange to follow him. Instantly the streets were full of armed men. Bardez arrested the magistrates,, while parties went here and there and secured the monks. The prisoners were taken to the wharves and placed upon a ship, the mob shouting, " Hang them ! "^ They thought they were to be drowned, in vengeance for their cruelties ; one of the council refused a parcel sent by his wife, saying that he would need no- more clean shirts in this world. But no violep.ce was done ; they were simply landed on a. dyke and told not to return to the city at their peril. New magis- trates were installed, the train-bands filled with trusty patriots, amd the churches opened to the Protestants. Amsterdam was now securely on the side of freedom. A similar rising, not quite so peaceably conducted, occurred the next day at Harlem. Holland and Zealand were now united, and the last vestige of the Spanish occupation gone. In these provinces the prince had to defend the rights, of Catholic worship, which the people were minded to disregard or deny. In. Flanders and Brabant he protected the eqiial liberty, so recently won, of those who believed as he did. The burgomaster of Antwerp came to complain that fif- teen Reformed ministers were preaching in the city, and asked him to suppress the scandal. " Do you think," said William with some dry humor, " that I, at 584 this late day, can do what the Duke of Alva could not with all his power ? " It was far from his desire to do anything of the kind. He wished to see no more meddling with private consciences, but absolute and equal liberty of belief and worship.. The Anabaptists were still generally hated, and they held some strange notions regarding government : Orange was their only champion. He rebuked the authorities of Middelburg for disturbing these people, and ordered that they be let alone. Meantime a native envoy had returned from Spain and started some perfectly useless negotiations. It was soon apparent to both parties that the controversy could be decided only by the sword. Philip had sent his viceroy nearly two million dollars, and promised him two hundred thousand a month. Orange was raising funds by equal taxation, except that Holland and Zealand, which till lately had carried the whole war, were left to contribute what they could or would. This righteous exemption worked well, for they raised more than their share for the common need. A BARREN CAMPAIGN. Military preparations went on during the spring and early summer, but little came of them. Don John had near thirty thousand men ; the Estates had about twenty thousand, under Bossu and the Huguenot La Noue. The well- -rounded feeling against the nobles had subsided or been disregarded, for Aer- schot and the rest were still in high places. Duke Casimir of the Palatinate, with twelve thousand Germans, was stalled for some weeks near Zutphen, for lack of money to pay his troops, who would not advance without it. The two armies faced each other for a while on the borders of Limburg, Antwerp, and South Brabant, east of the chief cities, but only the outposts were engaged. On August 1st there was a fight at Rijnemants, in which, strange to say, the Span- iards were defeated with the loss of a thousand. After this, as ofien before it, the viceroy offered battle, but it was refused. Bossu was much blamed for this conduct : the patriots remembered that he had long been an officer of Philip and Alva, and doubted his fidelity ; but he was probably wise in declining a general engagement with a force so much superior to his own. Don John soon retired to Namur, having won no new laurels. Casimir arrived on August 26th, but there was to be no more fighting just then. In its stead came confused intrigues and profitless diplomacy, on which we have no need to dwell. The Duke d'Alen^on, whom Motley calls "the most despicable personage who ever entered the Netherlands," came with professions of friendship to Orange and the Estates, but with designs to find for himself a throne. Here was a third pretender — for we must not forget poor Matthias, a harmless youth, often in tears at the slights that were put upon his mock dignity. The real ruler of the provinces was one who cared little for titles, who had no selfish schemes, whose arts were all employed for the welfare of his country. 585: The north, for the present, was united, peaceful and safe. Count John of Nassau, the generous and faithful brother of Orange, was now governor of Gel+ derland. In Brabant and Flanders the Silent Prince was thwarting the plots of ene- mies and false friends, and doing his best to enforce mutual toleration and repress CHILDREN OF THE PROTESTANT ORPHANAGE, IN AMSTERDAM, THEIR DRESS HALF RED AND HALF BLACK. the wretched bigotry which cursed the land and blocked the advance of freedom. Champagny and other nobles offered a formal protest against the licensing of 586 heresy : the people of Brussels rose with cries of " Paris" and " St. Bartholo- mew," and threw these petitioners into prison. DEATH OF DON JOHN. In the south, baffled ambition and helpless rage were eating out the heart of the conqueror of Le panto. Philip's promises were not kept, the army was unpaid. Alencon had declared war against him from Mons; the States' troops threatened him on the other side. Outwitted by Orange, hated by his rebellious subjects, unjustly suspected by his royal brother, his friend Escovedo murdered^ his soaring plans all brought to naught, he sat in his camp near Namur and mused on the vanity of human hopes. He wrote bitterly to the ting, "The work here is enough to destroy any constitution and any life ; " and to a friend in Italy, "They have cut off our hands, and we have now nothing for it but to stretch out our heads also to the axe " In another letter he complained that he was kept in ignorance of his master's intentions, and left, crying out for help in vain, " to pine away till his last breath." These gloomy predictions were. soon fulfilled. On October ist, 1578, Don John died of a fever, or, as some thought, of poison. He was but thirty-three^ and had qualities which, with an another education, might have made him useful ; but the position of Spaniards in that age was so fatally false, so hostile to liberty, progress, and real civilization, that the removal of any of them who meddled with foreign lands was no calamity — except as he might make way for one yet worse. CHAPTER XXXVIII. HARD TIMES. LEXANDER FARNESE, Prince of Parma, the next of Philip's governors, had the advantage of being already on the spot. He was a few months younger than his late uncle, Don John, whom he equalled in valor and far surpassed in ability. The great-grandson of a pope and grandson of an emperor, he seemed bom for high destinies : his ancestor, Paul III., had predicted for him a great career in arms. His father was a distin- guished soldier ; almost cradled in battles and sieges, his chief delight was war. Enough of his youth was passed in Spain to receive the stamp of its indomitable chivalry and its ruth- less bigotry. He made acquaintance with the Netherlands during his mother's regency there. While unoccupied at Parma, he varied the tedium of domestic life by midnight duels with strangers in the streets, till his disguise was penetrated and this amusement stopped. At Lepanto, receiving from his uncle several galleys in the front rank, he boarded the Turkish treasure-ship,. led the assault in person, slew with his own hand its captain and many more, and took this vessel and another, with an immense booty. Maturer years, with- out lessening his courage, had taken off its edge of rashness, and brought a grim kind of cold and resolute wisdom. He was no longer a knight-errant, but he meant to be a conqueror. During the lifetime of his wife, the Princess Maria of Portugal, who had been taken to Brussels for her wedding, he trusted his safety in this world and the next to her prayers. After her death, his religion consisted of a rigid attendance at daily mass and a determination to put down all blackguard heretics. He stood by the principles of his order, which were chiefly the Church of Rome and the absolutism of his uncle Philip: humanity, common justice, and popular rights had of course no place in his scheme. For the rest, he was temperate, dignified, and distant. Don John, under more favoring circumstances, might (587) 588 have been loved by some ; Parma was cue to be feared by all. Even m his looks there was something of threat as well as of command. If trained under a different system and to ideas the opposite of those he held most firmly, he might have been a great and useful man. Trained as he had been, he was the most dangerous foe that Dutch liberty had yet encountered or was likely to encounter. To a task more delicate and difficult than that of Alva he brought qualities far finer than Alva's dense brutality. "He knew precisely the work which Philip required, and felt himself to be precisely the workman that had so long been waited. Cool, incisive, fearless, artful, he united the unscrupulous audacity of a condottiere with the wily patience of a Jesuit. He could coil unperceived through unsuspected paths, could strike suddenly and sting mor- tally. He came prepared not only to smite the Netherlanders in the open field, but to cope with them in tortuous policy, to outwatch and outweary them in the game to which his impatient predecessor had fallen a baffled victim. To circumvent at once both their negotiators and their men-at-arms was his appointed task." ' CONFUSION IN THE PROVINCES. He found the central and southern provinces in a condition more favorable to his schemes than to the ends of liberty. The old religious feuds were rampant, the Pacification of Ghent was slighted and disregarded. Some Catho- lics stood firm for the national cause ; others, including the nobles, were more than half ready to make their peace with the king. Bands of " Malcontents " roved about in search of plunder. The Protestants, not finding the toleration which had been promised, were sore and angry. Four armies, idle and unpaid, remained in the countr}^, and contributed nothing to its prosperity and peace. Two foreign intermeddlers of high degree, D'Alengon and John Casimir, made matters worse by their foolish and selfish intrigues, until their departure in the winter of 1 578-79. Ghent, always factious and turbulent, disgraced the cause of freedom by its lawless disorders. Ryhove took Blood-Councillor Hessels and another dignitary out of prison on October 4th, carried them beyond the gates, and hanged them. Violent riots occurred; the churches were attacked, images and ornaments destroyed, and the Catholics driven from the town. Brussels offered remonstrances on these proceedings : Orange visited Ghent at the end of the year, and strove to restore order. The second city of the provinces had fallen from her high estate : " grass was growing and cattle were grazing in the streets." Outside the walls of the various cities there was still less security for property or life. The Malcontents under Montigny, the disbanded troops of Alengiou and the others, swept the land bare. Havre complained that "they demanded the most delicate food, and drank champagne and burgundy by the pailful." The Germans who had been brought by Casimir, after coolly asking PUI