her crown on his own head as a reward for his heroism.
He had a single and concentrated kind of character.
He knew precisely the work which Philip required,
and felt himself to be precisely the workman that had
so long been wanted. Cool, incisive, fearless,
artful, he united the unscrupulous audacity of a condottiere
with the wily patience of a Jesuit. He could
coil unperceived through unsuspected paths, could strike
suddenly, sting mortally. He came prepared, not
only to smite the Netherlanders in the open field,
but to cope with them in tortuous policy; to outwatch
and outweary them in the game to which his impatient
predecessor had fallen a baked victim. He possessed
the art and the patience—as time was to
prove—not only to undermine their most impregnable
cities, but to delve below the intrigues of their
most accomplished politicians. To circumvent
at once both their negotiators and their men-at-arms
was his appointed task. Had it not been for the
courage, the vigilance, and the superior intellect
of a single antagonist, the whole of the Netherlands
would have shared the fate which was reserved for
the more southern portion. Had the life of William
of Orange been prolonged, perhaps the evil genius of
the Netherlands might have still been exorcised throughout
the whole extent of the country. As for religion,
Alexander Farnese was, of course, strictly Catholic,
regarding all seceders from Romanism as mere heathen
dogs. Not that he practically troubled himself
much with sacred matters—for, during the
life-time of his wife, he had cavalierly thrown the
whole burden of his personal salvation upon her saintly
shoulders. She had now flown to higher spheres,
but Alexander was, perhaps, willing to rely upon her
continued intercessions in his behalf. The life
of a bravo in time of peace—the deliberate
project in war to exterminate whole cities full of
innocent people, who had different notions on the
subject of image-worship and ecclesiastical ceremonies
from those entertained at Rome, did not seem to him
at all incompatible with the precepts of Jesus.
Hanging, drowning, burning and butchering heretics
were the legitimate deductions of his theology.
He was no casuist nor pretender to holiness:
but in those days every man was devout, and Alexander
looked with honest horror upon the impiety of the heretics,
whom he persecuted and massacred. He attended
mass regularly—in the winter mornings by
torch-light—and would as soon have foregone
his daily tennis as his religious exercises.
Romanism was the creed of his caste. It was the
religion of princes and gentlemen of high degree.
As for Lutheranism, Zwinglism, Calvinism, and similar
systems, they were but the fantastic rites of weavers,
brewers, and the like—an ignoble herd whose
presumption in entitling themselves Christian, while
rejecting the Pope; called for their instant extermination.
His personal habits were extremely temperate.
He was accustomed to say that he ate only to support
life; and he rarely finished a dinner without having
risen three or four times from table to attend to
some public business which, in his opinion, ought
not to be deferred.