for seven years longer. Alva was, to be sure,
much encouraged at first by the language of the French
princes and nobles who were present at Bayonne.
Monluc protested that “they might saw the Queen
Dowager in two before she would become Huguenot.”
Montpensier exclaimed that “he would be cut in
pieces for Philip’s service—that
the Spanish monarch was the only hope for France,”
and, embracing Alva with fervor, he affirmed that “if
his body were to be opened at that moment, the name
of Philip would be found imprinted upon his heart.”
The Duke, having no power to proceed to an autopsy,
physical or moral, of Montpensier’s interior,
was left somewhat in the dark, notwithstanding these
ejaculations. His first conversation with the
youthful King, however, soon dispelled his hopes.
He found immediately, in his own words, that Charles
the Ninth “had been doctored.” To
take up arms, for religious reasons, against his own
subjects, the monarch declared to be ruinous and improper.
It was obvious to Alva that the royal pupil had learned
his lesson for that occasion. It was a pity for
humanity that the wisdom thus hypocritically taught
him could not have sunk into his heart. The Duke
did his best to bring forward the plans and wishes
of his royal master, but without success. The
Queen Regent proposed a league of the two Kings and
the Emperor against the Turk, and wished to arrange
various matrimonial alliances between the sons and
daughters of the three houses. Alva expressed
the opinion that the alliances were already close
enough, while, on the contrary, a secret league against
the Protestants would make all three families the safer.
Catherine, however, was not to be turned from her position.
She refused even to admit that the Chancellor de l’Hospital
was a Huguenot, to which the Duke replied that she
was the only person in her kingdom who held that opinion.
She expressed an intention of convoking an assembly
of doctors, and Alva ridiculed in his letters to Philip
the affectation of such a proceeding. In short,
she made it sufficiently evident that the hour for
the united action of the French and Spanish sovereigns
against their subjects had not struck, so that the
famous Bayonne conference was terminated without a
result. It seemed not the less certain, however,
in the general opinion of mankind, that all the particulars
of a regular plot had been definitely arranged upon
this occasion, for the extermination of the Protestants,
and the error has been propagated by historians of
great celebrity of all parties, down to our own days.
The secret letters of Alva, however, leave no doubt
as to the facts.