of obloquy among the Reformers, because of his leniency
to Catholics? Nay more, was not his intimate councillor,
the accomplished Saint Aldegonde, in despair because
the Prince refused to exclude the Anabaptists of Holland
from the rights of citizenship? At the very moment
when William was straining every nerve to unite warring
sects, and to persuade men’s hearts into a system
by which their consciences were to be laid open to
God alone—at the moment when it was most
necessary for the very existence of the fatherland
that Catholic and Protestant should mingle their social
and political relations, it was indeed a bitter disappointment
for him to see wise statesmen of his own creed unable
to rise to the idea of toleration. “The
affair of the Anabaptists,” wrote Saint Aldegonde,
“has been renewed. The Prince objects to
exclude them from citizenship. He answered me
sharply, that their yea was equal to our oath, and
that we should not press this matter, unless we were
willing to confess that it was just for the Papists
to compel us to a divine service which was against
our conscience.” It seems hardly credible
that this sentence, containing so sublime a tribute
to the character of the Prince, should have been indited
as a bitter censure, and that, too, by an enlightened
and accomplished Protestant. “In short,”
continued Saint Aldegonde, with increasing vexation,
“I don’t see how we can accomplish our
wish in this matter. The Prince has uttered reproaches
to me that our clergy are striving to obtain a mastery
over consciences. He praised lately the saying
of a monk who was not long ago here, that our pot had
not gone to the fire as often as that of our antagonists,
but that when the time came it would be black enough.
In short, the Prince fears that after a few centuries
the clerical tyranny on both sides will stand in this
respect on the same footing.”
Early in the month of May, Doctor Leoninus and Caspar
Schetz, Seigneur de Grobbendonck, had been sent on
a mission from the states-general to the Prince of
Orange. While their negotiations were still pending,
four special envoys from Don John arrived at Middelburg.
To this commission was informally adjoined Leoninus,
who had succeeded to the general position of Viglius.
Viglius was dead. Since the memorable arrest of
the State Council, he had not appeared on the scene
of public affairs. The house-arrest, to which
he had been compelled by a revolutionary committee,
had been indefinitely prolonged by a higher power,
and after a protracted illness he had noiselessly
disappeared from the stage of life. There had
been few more learned doctors of both laws than he.
There had been few more adroit politicians, considered
from his point of view. His punning device was
“Vita mortalium vigilia,” and he acted
accordingly, but with a narrow interpretation.
His life had indeed been a vigil, but it must be confessed
that the vigils had been for Viglius.