much interest in looking out husbands for them.
The King spoke to him, as hardly could be avoided,
of the famous fool’s-cap livery. The Count
laughed the matter off as a jest, protesting that it
was a mere foolish freak, originating at the wine-table,
and asseverating, with warmth, that nothing disrespectful
or disloyal to his Majesty had been contemplated upon
that or upon any other occasion. Had a single
gentleman uttered an undutiful word against the King,
Egmont vowed he would have stabbed him through and
through upon the spot, had he been his own brother.
These warm protestations were answered by a gentle
reprimand as to the past by Philip, and with a firm
caution as to the future. “Let it be discontinued
entirely, Count,” said the King, as the two were
driving together in the royal carriage. Egmont
expressed himself in handsome terms concerning the
Cardinal, in return for the wholesale approbation
quoted to him in regard to his own character, from
the private letters of that sagacious personage to
his Majesty. Certainly, after all this, the Count
might suppose the affair of the livery forgiven.
Thus amicably passed the hours of that mission, the
preliminaries for which had called forth so much eloquence
from the Prince of Orange and so nearly carried off
with apoplexy the President Viglius. On his departure
Egmont received a letter of instructions from Philip
as to the report which he was to make upon his arrival
in Brussels, to the Duchess. After many things
personally flattering to himself, the envoy was directed
to represent the King as overwhelmed with incredible
grief at hearing the progress made by the heretics,
but as immutably determined to permit no change of
religion within his dominions, even were he to die
a thousand deaths in consequence. The King, he
was to state, requested the Duchess forthwith to assemble
an extraordinary session of the council, at which certain
bishops, theological doctors, and very orthodox lawyers,
were to assist, in which, under pretence of discussing
the Council of Trent matter, it was to be considered
whether there could not be some new way devised for
executing heretics; not indeed one by which any deduction
should be made from their sufferings (which certainly
was not the royal wish, nor likely to be grateful
to God or salutary to religion), but by which all hopes
of glory—that powerful incentive to their
impiety—might be precluded. With regard
to any suggested alterations in the council of state,
or in the other two councils, the King was to be represented
as unwilling to form any decision until he should
hear, at length, from the Duchess Regent upon the
subject.