of Spain was hardly necessary for men who had but
little prudence in concealing, and no inclination
to disavow their creed. “It is quite a
laughable matter,” wrote Granvelle, who occasionally
took a comic view of the inquisition, “that
the King should send us depositions made in Spain by
which we are to hunt for heretics here, as if we did
not know of thousands already. Would that I had
as many doubloons of annual income,” he added,
“as there are public and professed heretics
in the provinces.” No doubt the inquisition
was in such eyes a most desirable establishment.
“To speak without passion,” says the
Walloon, “the inquisition well administered is
a laudable institution, and not less necessary than
all the other offices of spirituality and temporality
belonging both to the bishops and to the commissioners
of the Roman see.” The papal and episcopal
establishments, in co-operation with the edicts, were
enough, if thoroughly exercised and completely extended.
The edicts alone were sufficient. “The
edicts and the inquisition are one and the same thing,”
said the Prince of Orange. The circumstance,
that the civil authorities were not as entirely superseded
by the Netherland, as by the Spanish system, was rather
a difference of form than of fact. We have seen
that the secular officers of justice were at the command
of the inquisitors. Sheriff, gaoler, judge,
and hangman, were all required, under the most terrible
penalties, to do their bidding. The reader knows
what the edicts were. He knows also the instructions
to the corps of papal inquisitors, delivered by Charles
and Philip: He knows that Philip, both in person
and by letter, had done his utmost to sharpen those
instructions, during the latter portion of his sojourn
in the Netherlands. Fourteen new bishops, each
with two special inquisitors under him, had also been
appointed to carry out the great work to which the
sovereign had consecrated his existence. The
manner in which the hunters of heretics performed their
office has been exemplified by slightly sketching
the career of a single one of the sub-inquisitors,
Peter Titelmann. The monarch and his minister
scarcely needed, therefore, to transplant the peninsular
exotic. Why should they do so? Philip,
who did not often say a great deal in a few words,
once expressed the whole truth of the matter in a
single sentence: “Wherefore introduce the
Spanish inquisition?” said he; “the inquisition
of the Netherlands is much more pitiless than that
of Spain.”
Such was the system of religious persecution commenced by Charles, and perfected by Philip. The King could not claim the merit of the invention, which justly belonged to the Emperor. At the same time, his responsibility for the unutterable woe caused by the continuance of the scheme is not a jot diminished. There was a time when the whole system had fallen into comparative desuetude. It was utterly abhorrent to the institutions and the manners of the Netherlanders.