to depart in peace. In his own lofty language,
he wished to be sprinkled on taking his leave “with
the holy water of the court.” Moreover,
he was fond of his salary, although he disliked the
sarcasms of the Duchess. Egmont and others had
advised him to abandon the office of President to
Hopper, in order, as he was getting feeble, to reserve
his whole strength for the state-council. Viglius
did not at all relish the proposition. He said
that by giving up the seals, and with them the rank
and salary which they conferred, he should become
a deposed saint. He had no inclination, as long
as he remained on the ground at all, to part with
those emoluments and honors, and to be converted merely
into the “ass of the state-council.”
He had, however, with the sagacity of an old navigator,
already thrown out his anchor into the best holding-ground
during the storms which he foresaw were soon to sweep
the state. Before the close of the year which
now occupies, the learned doctor of laws had become
a doctor of divinity also; and had already secured,
by so doing, the wealthy prebend of Saint Bavon of
Ghent. This would be a consolation in the loss
of secular dignities, and a recompence for the cold
looks of the Duchess. He did not scruple to ascribe
the pointed dislike which Margaret manifested towards
him to the awe in which she stood of his stern integrity
of character. The true reason why Armenteros
and the Duchess disliked him was because, in his own
words, “he was not of their mind with regard
to lotteries, the sale of offices, advancement to
abbeys, and many other things of the kind, by which
they were in such a hurry to make their fortune.”
Upon another occasion he observed, in a letter to
Granvelle, that “all offices were sold to the
highest bidder, and that the cause of Margaret’s
resentment against both the Cardinal and himself was,
that they had so long prevented her from making the
profit which she was now doing from the sale of benefices,
offices, and other favors.”
The Duchess, on her part, characterized the proceedings
and policy, both past and present, of the cardinalists
as factious, corrupt, and selfish in the last degree.
She assured her brother that the simony, rapine, and
dishonesty of Granvelle, Viglius, and all their followers,
had brought affairs into the ruinous condition which
was then but too apparent. They were doing their
best, she said, since the Cardinal’s departure,
to show, by their sloth and opposition, that they
were determined to allow nothing to prosper in his
absence. To quote her own vigorous expression
to Philip—“Viglius made her suffer
the pains of hell.” She described him as
perpetually resisting the course of the administration,
and she threw out dark suspicions, not only as to
his honesty but his orthodoxy. Philip lent a
greedy ear to these scandalous hints concerning the
late omnipotent minister and his friends. It
is an instructive lesson in human history to look
through the cloud of dissimulation in which the actors