who had known human nature at all, would have recognized
that Alexander Farnese was not the man to be put into
leading strings. A sovereign who was possessed
of any administrative sagacity, would have seen the
absurdity of taking the reins of government at that
crisis from the hands of a most determined and energetic
man, to confide them to the keeping of a woman.
A king who was willing to reflect upon the consequences
of his own acts, must have foreseen the scandal likely
to result from an open quarrel for precedence between
such a mother and son. Margaret of Parma was
instantly informed, however, by Alexander, that a divided
authority like that proposed was entirely out of the
question. Both offered to resign; but Alexander
was unflinching in his determination to retain all
the power or none. The Duchess, as docile to her
son after her arrival as she had been to the King
on undertaking the journey, and feeling herself unequal
to the task imposed upon her, implored Philip’s
permission to withdraw, almost as soon as she had
reached her destination. Granvelle’s opinion
was likewise opposed to this interference with the
administration of Alexander, and the King at last
suffered himself to be overruled. By the end
of the year 1581, letters arrived confirming the Prince
of Parma in his government, but requesting the Duchess
of Parma to remain, privately in the Netherlands.
She accordingly continued to reside there under an
assumed name until the autumn of 1583, when she was
at last permitted to return to Italy.
During the summer of 1581, the same spirit of persecution
which had inspired the Catholics to inflict such infinite
misery upon those of the Reformed faith in the Netherlands,
began to manifest itself in overt acts against the
Papists by those who had at last obtained political.
ascendency over them. Edicts were published in
Antwerp, in Utrecht, and in different cities of Holland,
suspending the exercise of the Roman worship.
These statutes were certainly a long way removed in
horror from those memorable placards which sentenced
the Reformers by thousands to the axe; the cord, and
the stake, but it was still melancholy to see the
persecuted becoming persecutors in their turn.
They were excited to these stringent measures by the
noisy zeal of certain Dominican monks in Brussels,
whose extravagant discourses were daily inflaming the
passions of the Catholics to a dangerous degree.
The authorities of the city accordingly thought it
necessary to suspend, by proclamation, the public
exercise of the ancient religion, assigning, as their
principal reason for this prohibition, the shocking
jugglery by which simple-minded persons were constantly
deceived. They alluded particularly to the practice
of working miracles by means of relics, pieces of the
holy cross, bones of saints, and the perspiration
of statues. They charged that bits of lath were
daily exhibited as fragments of the cross; that the
bones of dogs and monkeys were held up for adoration