contemplated in the great transaction. All had
played well their parts in the past, all hoped the
best in the times which were to follow. The abdicating
Emperor was looked upon as a hero and a prophet.
The stage was drowned in tears. There is not
the least doubt as to the genuine and universal emotion
which was excited throughout the assembly. “Caesar’s
oration,” says Secretary Godelaevus, who was
present at the ceremony, “deeply moved the nobility
and gentry, many of whom burst into tears; even the
illustrious Knights of the Fleece were melted.”
The historian, Pontus Heuterus, who, then twenty
years of age, was likewise among the audience, attests
that “most of the assembly were dissolved in
tears; uttering the while such sonorous sobs that they
compelled his Caesarean Majesty and the Queen to cry
with them. My own face,” he adds, “was
certainly quite wet.” The English envoy,
Sir John Mason, describing in a despatch to his government
the scene which he had just witnessed, paints the
same picture. “The Emperor,” he said,
“begged the forgiveness of his subjects if he
had ever unwittingly omitted the performance of any
of his duties towards them. And here,”
continues the envoy, “he broke into a weeping,
whereunto, besides the dolefulness of the matter,
I think, he was moche provoked by seeing the whole
company to do the lyke before; there beyng in myne
opinion not one man in the whole assemblie, stranger
or another, that dewring the time of a good piece of
his oration poured not out as abundantly teares, some
more, some lesse. And yet he prayed them to
beare with his imperfections, proceeding of his sickly
age, and of the mentioning of so tender a matter as
the departing from such a sort of dere and loving
subjects.”
And yet what was the Emperor Charles to the inhabitants
of the Netherlands that they should weep for him?
His conduct towards them during his whole career
had been one of unmitigated oppression. What
to them were all these forty voyages by sea and land,
these journeyings back and forth from Friesland to
Tunis, from Madrid to Vienna. What was it to
them that the imperial shuttle was thus industriously
flying to and fro? The fabric wrought was but
the daily growing grandeur and splendor of his imperial
house; the looms were kept moving at the expense of
their hardly-earned treasure, and the woof was often
dyed red in the blood of his bravest subjects.
The interests of the Netherlands had never been even
a secondary consideration with their master.
He had fulfilled no duty towards them, he had committed
the gravest crimes against them. He had regarded
them merely as a treasury upon which to draw; while
the sums which he extorted were spent upon ceaseless
and senseless wars, which were of no more interest
to them than if they had been waged in another planet.
Of five millions of gold annually, which he derived
from all his realms, two millions came from these
industrious and opulent provinces, while but a half