attendance upon his person. He had for some time
felt inclined—like the Lalains, Meluns,
La Mottes, and others to reconcile himself with the
Crown, and he wisely thought that the terms accorded
to him would be more liberal if he could bring the
capital of Brabant with him as a peace offering to
his Majesty. His residence was in Brussels.
His regiment was stationed outside the gates, but
in the immediate neighbourhood of the city. On
the morning of the 4th of June he despatched his troopers—as
had been frequently his custom—on various
errands into the country. On their return, after
having summoned the regiment, they easily mastered
and butchered the guard at the gate through which they
had re-entered, supplying their place with men from
their own ranks. The Egmont regiment then came
marching through the gate in good order—Count
Philip at their head—and proceeded to station
themselves upon the Grande Place in the centre of
the city. All this was at dawn of day. The
burghers, who looked forth from their houses, were
astounded and perplexed by this movement at so unwonted
an hour, and hastened to seize their weapons.
Egmont sent a detachment to take possession of the
palace. He was too late. Colonel Van der
Tympel, commandant of the city, had been beforehand
with him, had got his troops under arms, and now secured
the rebellious detachment. Meantime, the alarm
had spread. Armed burghers came from every house,
and barricades were hastily thrown up across every
one of the narrow streets leading to the square.
Every issue was closed. Not a man of Egmont’s
adherents—if he indeed had adherents among
the townsmen—dared to show his face.
The young traitor and his whole regiment, drawn up
on the Grande Place, were completely entrapped.
He had not taken Brussels, but assuredly Brussels
had taken him. All day long he was kept in his
self-elected prison and pillory, bursting with rage
and shame. His soldiers, who were without meat
or drink, became insolent and uproarious, and he was
doomed also to hear the bitter and well-merited taunts
of the towns-people. A thousand stinging gibes,
suggested by his name and the locality, were mercilessly
launched upon him. He was asked if he came thither
to seek his father’s head. He was reminded
that the morrow was the anniversary of that father’s
murder upon that very spot—by those with
whom the son would now make his treasonable peace.
He was bidden to tear up but a few stones from the
pavement beneath his feet, that the hero’s blood
might cry out against him from the very ground.
Tears of shame and fury sprang from the young man’s eyes as he listened to these biting sarcasms, but the night closed upon that memorable square, and still the Count was a prisoner. Eleven years before, the summer stars had looked down upon a more dense array of armed men within that place. The preparations for the pompous and dramatic execution, which on the morrow was to startle all Europe, had been carried out in the midst of a hushed and overawed population; and now, on the very anniversary of the midnight in which that scaffold had risen, should not the grand spectre of the victim have started from the grave to chide his traitorous son?