all his-influence, having entirely withdrawn his own
claims to that office. No satisfactory explanation
was ever given of this singular conclusion to a courtship,
begun with the apparent consent of all parties.
It was hinted that the young lady did not fancy the
Prince; but, as it was not known that a word had ever
been exchanged between them, as the Prince, in appearance
and reputation, was one of the most brilliant cavaliers
of the age, and as the approval of the bride was not
usually a matter of primary consequence in such marriages
of state, the mystery seemed to require a further
solution. The Prince suspected Granvelle and
the King, who were believed to have held mature and
secret deliberation together, of insincerity.
The Bishop was said to have expressed the opinion,
that although the friendship he bore the Prince would
induce him to urge the marriage, yet his duty to his
master made him think it questionable whether it were
right to advance a personage already placed so high
by birth, wealth, and popularity, still higher by
so near an alliance with his Majesty’s family.
The King, in consequence, secretly instructed the
Duchess of Lorraine to decline the proposal, while
at the same time he continued openly to advocate the
connexion. The Prince is said to have discovered
this double dealing, and to have found in it the only
reasonable explanation of the whole transaction.
Moreover, the Duchess of Lorraine, finding herself
equally duped, and her own ambitious scheme equally
foiled by her unscrupulous cousin—who now,
to the surprise of every one, appointed Margaret of
Parma to be Regent, with the Bishop for her prime
minister—had as little reason to be satisfied
with the combinations of royal and ecclesiastical
intrigue as the Prince of Orange himself. Soon
after this unsatisfactory mystification, William turned
his attentions to Germany. Anna of Saxony, daughter
of the celebrated Elector Maurice, lived at the court
of her uncle, the Elector Augustus. A musket-ball,
perhaps a traitorous one, in an obscure action with
Albert of Brandenbourg, had closed the adventurous
career of her father seven years before. The
young lady, who was thought to have inherited much
of his restless, stormy character, was sixteen years
of age. She was far from handsome, was somewhat
deformed, and limped. Her marriage-portion was
deemed, for the times, an ample one; she had seventy
thousand rix dollars in hand, and the reversion of
thirty thousand on the death of John Frederic the
Second, who had married her mother after the death
of Maurice. Her rank was accounted far higher
in Germany than that of William of Nassau, and in
this respect, rather than for pecuniary considerations,
the marriage seemed a desirable one for him.
The man who held the great Nassau-Chalons property,
together with the heritage of Count Maximilian de
Buren, could hardly have been tempted by 100,000 thalers.
His own provision for the children who might spring
from the proposed marriage was to be a settlement