its own excesses had made more powerful, that its name
was already becoming a bye-word. It now, most
fatally and for ever, was to misunderstand its true
position. The Prince of Orange, the great architect
of his country’s fortunes, would have made it
the keystone of the arch which he was laboring to
construct. Had he been allowed to perfect his
plan, the structure might have endured for ages, a
perpetual bulwark against, tyranny and wrong.
The temporary and slender frame by which the great
artist had supported his arch while still unfinished,
was plucked away by rude and ribald hands; the keystone
plunged into the abyss, to be lost for ever, and the
great work of Orange remained a fragment from its
commencement. The acts of demagogues, the conservative
disgust at licence, the jealousy of rival nobles, the
venality of military leaders, threw daily fresh stumbling-blocks
in his heroic path. It was not six months after
the advent of Farnese to power, before that bold and
subtle chieftain had seized the double-edged sword
of religious dissension as firmly as he had grasped
his celebrated brand when he boarded the galley of
Muatapha Bey, and the Netherlands were cut in twain,
to be re-united nevermore. The separate treaty
of the Walloon provinces was soon destined to separate
the Celtic and Romanesque elements from the Batavian
and Frisian portion of a nationality, which; thoroughly
fused in all its parts, would have formed as admirable
a compound of fire and endurance as history has ever
seen.
Meantime, the grass was growing and the cattle were
grazing in the streets of Ghent, where once the tramp
of workmen going to and from their labor was like
the movement of a mighty army. The great majority
of the burghers were of the Reformed religion, and
disposed to make effectual resistance to the Malcontents,
led by the disaffected nobles. The city, considering
itself the natural head of all the southern country,
was indignant that the Walloon provinces should dare
to reassert that supremacy of Romanism which had been
so effectually suppressed, and to admit the possibility
of friendly relations with a sovereign who had been
virtually disowned. There were two parties, however,
in Ghent. Both were led by men of abandoned and
dangerous character. Imbize, the worse of the
two demagogues, was inconstant, cruel, cowardly, and
treacherous, but possessed of eloquence and a talent
for intrigue. Ryhove was a bolder ruffian—wrathful,
bitter, and unscrupulous. Imbize was at the time
opposed to Orange, disliking his moderation, and trembling
at his firmness. Ryhove considered himself the
friend of the Prince. We have seen that he had
consulted him previously to his memorable attack upon
Aerschot, in the autumn of the preceding year, and
we know the result of that conference.