of the Church: the holy inquisitors, with their
officials and familiars, followed, all on horseback,
with the blood-red flag of the “sacred office”
waving above them, blazoned upon either side with the
portraits of Alexander and of Ferdinand, the pair of
brothers who had established the institution.
After the procession came the rabble. When all
had reached the neighborhood of the scaffold, and had
been arranged in order, a sermon was preached to the
assembled multitude. It was filled with laudations
of the inquisition, and with blasphemous revilings
against the condemned prisoners. Then the sentences
were read to the individual victims. Then the
clergy chanted the fifty-first psalm, the whole vast
throng uniting in one tremendous miserere. If
a priest happened to be among the culprits, he was
now stripped of the canonicals which he had hitherto
worn; while his hands, lips, and shaven crown were
scraped with a bit of glass, by which process the oil
of his consecration was supposed to be removed.
He was then thrown into the common herd. Those
of the prisoners who were reconciled, and those whose
execution was not yet appointed, were now separated
from the others. The rest were compelled to mount
a scaffold, where the executioner stood ready to conduct
them to the fire. The inquisitors then delivered
them into his hands, with an ironical request that
he would deal with them tenderly, and without blood-letting
or injury. Those who remained steadfast to the
last were then burned at the stake; they who in the
last extremity renounced their faith were strangled
before being thrown into the flames. Such was
the Spanish inquisition—technically—so
called: It was, according’ to the biographer
of Philip the Second, a “heavenly remedy, a
guardian angel of Paradise, a lions’ den in which
Daniel and other just men could sustain no injury,
but in which perverse sinners were torn to pieces.”
It was a tribunal superior to all human law, without
appeal, and certainly owing no allegiance to the powers
of earth or heaven. No rank, high or humble,
was safe from its jurisdiction. The royal family
were not sacred, nor, the pauper’s hovel.
Even death afforded no protection. The holy office
invaded the prince in his palace and the beggar in
his shroud. The corpses of dead heretics were
mutilated and burned. The inquisitors preyed
upon carcases and rifled graves. A gorgeous festival
of the holy office had, as we have seen, welcomed Philip
to his native land. The news of these tremendous
autos-da fe, in which so many illustrious victims
had been sacrificed before their sovereign’s
eyes, had reached the Netherlands almost simultaneously
with the bulls creating the new bishoprics in the
provinces. It was not likely that the measure
would be rendered more palatable by this intelligence
of the royal amusements.