residence of Aerschot at Saint Bavon. The guards,
seeing the fierce mob approaching, brandishing spears
and waving, torches, had scarce time to close the
gates; as the people loudly demanded entrance and the
delivery to them of the Governor. Both claims
were refused. “Let us burn the birds in
their nests,” cried Ryhove, without hesitation.
Pitch, light wood, and other combustibles, were brought
at his command, and in a few moments the palace would
have been in flames, had not Aerschot, seeing that
the insurgents were in earnest, capitulated.
As soon as the gates were open, the foremost of the
mob rushed upon him, and would have torn him limb
from limb, had not Ryhove resolutely interfered, and
twice protected the life of the governor, at the peril
of his own. The Duke was then made a prisoner,
and, under a strong guard, was conveyed, still in
his night-gown, and bare-footed, to the mansion of
Ryhove. All the other leading members of the
Catholic party were captured, the arrests proceeding
till a late hour in the night. Rassinghem, Sweveghem,
Fisch, De la Porta, and other prominent members of
the Flemish estates or council, were secured, but
Champagny was allowed to make his escape. The
Bishops of Bruges and Ypres were less fortunate.
Blood-councillor Hessels, whose letter—genuine
or counterfeited—had been so instrumental
in hastening this outbreak, was most carefully guarded,
and to him and to Senator Fisch the personal consequences
of that night’s work were to be very tragic.
Thus audaciously, successfully, and hitherto without
bloodshed, was the anti-Catholic revolution commenced
in Flanders. The event was the first of a long
and most signal series. The deed was done.
The provisional government was established, at the
head of which was placed Ryhove, to whom oaths of
allegiance were rendered, subject to the future arrangements
of the states-general and Orange: On the 9th of
November, the nobles, notables, and community of Ghent
published an address, in which they elaborately defended
the revolution which had been effected and the arrests
which had taken place; while the Catholic party, with
Aerschot at its head, was declared to be secretly in
league with Don John to bring back the Spanish troops,
to overthrow the Prince of Orange, to deprive him
of the protectorate of Brabant, to set at nought the
Ghent treaty, and to suppress the Reformed religion.
The effect of this sudden rising of the popular party
was prodigious throughout the Netherlands. At
the same time, the audacity of such extreme proceedings
could hardly be countenanced by any considerable party
in the states-general. Champagny wrote to the
Prince of Orange that, even if the letter of Hessels
were genuine, it proved nothing against Aerschot,
and he urged the necessity of suppressing such scene
of licence immediately, through the influence of those
who could command the passions of the mob. Otherwise,
he affirmed that all legitimate forms of justice would