he must have been an ecclesiastic, and as vile as priests
always were. They witnessed the daily contumely
which she heaped upon poor Viglius, both because he
was a friend of Granvelle and was preparing in his
old age to take orders. The days were gone, indeed,
when Margaret was so filled with respectful affection
for the prelate, that she could secretly correspond
with the Holy Father at Rome, and solicit the red hat
for the object of her veneration. She now wrote
to Philip, stating that she was better informed as
to affairs in the Netherlands than she had ever formerly
been. She told her brother that all the views
of Granvelle and of his followers, Viglius with the
rest, had tended to produce a revolution which they
hoped that Philip would find in full operation when
he should come to the Netherlands. It was their
object, she said, to fish in troubled waters, and,
to attain that aim, they had ever pursued the plan
of gaining the exclusive control of all affairs.
That was the reason why they had ever opposed the
convocation of the states-general. They feared
that their books would be read, and their frauds, injustice,
simony, and rapine discovered. This would be the
result, if tranquillity were restored to the country,
and therefore they had done their best to foment and
maintain discord. The Duchess soon afterwards
entertained her royal brother with very detailed accounts
of various acts of simony, peculation, and embezzlement
committed by Viglius, which the Cardinal had aided
and abetted, and by which he had profited.—[Correspondence
de Phil. II, i. 318-320.]—These revelations
are inestimable in a historical point of view.
They do not raise our estimate of Margaret’s
character, but they certainly give us a clear insight
into the nature of the Granvelle administration.
At the same time it was characteristic of the Duchess,
that while she was thus painting the portrait of the
Cardinal for the private eye of his sovereign, she
should address the banished minister himself in a
secret strain of condolence, and even of penitence.
She wrote to assure Granvelle that she repented extremely
having adopted the views of Orange. She promised
that she would state publicly every where that the
Cardinal was an upright man, intact in his morals and
his administration, a most zealous and faithful servant
of the King. She added that she recognized the
obligations she was under to him, and that she loved
him like a brother. She affirmed that if the Flemish
seigniors had induced her to cause the Cardinal to
be deprived of the government, she was already penitent,
and that her fault deserved that the King, her brother,
should cut off her head, for having occasioned so great
a calamity.—["Memoires de Granvelle,”
tom. 33, p. 67.]
There was certainly discrepancy between the language thus used simultaneously by the Duchess to Granvelle and to Philip, but Margaret had been trained in the school of Macchiavelli, and had sat at the feet of Loyola.