and the Catholic religion,” and that the Duke
of Alva was appointed chief by the advice of Cardinal
Spinosa, and by that of Cardinal Granvelle, as, appeared
by many letters written at the time to his friends.
By the same confessions; it appeared that the course
of policy thus distinctly recommended by Granvelle,
“was to place the country under a system of
government like that of Spain and Italy, and to reduce
it entirely under the council of Spain.”
When the terrible Duke started on his errand of blood
and fire, the Cardinal addressed him, a letter of fulsome
flattery; protesting “that all the world know
that no person could be found so appropriate as he,
to be employed in an affair of such importance;”
urging him to advance with his army as rapidly as possible
upon the Netherlands, hoping that “the Duchess
of Parma would not be allowed to consent that any
pardon or concession should be made to the cities,
by which the construction of fortresses would be interfered
with, or the revocation of the charters which had
been forfeited, be prevented,” and giving him
much advice as to the general measures to be adopted,
and the persons to be employed upon his arrival, in
which number the infamous Noircarmes was especially
recommended. In a document found among his papers,
these same points, with others, were handled at considerable
length. The incorporation of the provinces into
one kingdom, of which the King was to be crowned absolute
sovereign; the establishment of, a universal law for
the Catholic religion, care being taken not to call
that law inquisition, “because there was nothing
so odious to the northern nations as the word Spanish
Inquisition, although the thing in itself be most
holy and just;” the abolition and annihilation
of the broad or general council in the cities, the
only popular representation in the country; the construction
of many citadels and fortresses to be garrisoned with
Spaniards, Italians, and Germans. Such were the
leading features in that remarkable paper.
The manly and open opposition of the nobles was stigmatized
as a cabal by the offended priest. He repeatedly
whispered in the royal ear that their league was a
treasonable conspiracy, which the Attorney-General
ought to prosecute; that the seigniors meant to subvert
entirely the authority of the Sovereign; that they
meant to put their King under tutelage, to compel
him to obey all their commands, to choose another prince
of the blood for their chief, to establish a republic
by the aid of foreign troops. If such insinuations,
distilled thus secretly into the ear of Philip, who,
like his predecessor, Dionysius, took pleasure in listening
daily to charges against his subjects and to the groans
of his prisoners, were not likely to engender a dangerous
gangrene in the royal mind, it would be difficult
to indicate any course which would produce such a
result. Yet the Cardinal maintained that he had
never done the gentlemen ill service, but that “they
were angry with him for wishing to sustain the authority