of transmitting a record of their language or demonstrations,
to the inmost sanctuary of Philip’s cabinet at
Madrid. The Prince knew, too, that the King was
very sincere in his determination to maintain the
inquisition, however dilatory his proceedings might
appear. He was well aware that an armed force
might be expected ere long to support the royal edicts.
Already the Prince had organized that system of espionage
upon Philip, by which the champion of his country was
so long able to circumvent its despot. The King
left letters carefully locked in his desk at night,
and unseen hands had forwarded copies of them to William
of Orange before the morning. He left memoranda
in his pockets on retiring to bed, and exact transcripts
of those papers found their way, likewise, ere he
rose, to the same watchman in the Netherlands.
No doubt that an inclination for political intrigue
was a prominent characteristic of the Prince, and
a blemish upon the purity of his moral nature.
Yet the dissimulating policy of his age he had mastered
only that he might accomplish the noblest purposes
to which a great and good man can devote his life-the
protection of the liberty and the religion of a whole
people against foreign tyranny. His intrigue served
his country, not a narrow personal ambition, and it
was only by such arts that he became Philip’s
master, instead of falling at once, like so many great
personages, a blind and infatuated victim. No
doubt his purveyors of secret information were often
destined fearfully to atone for their contraband commerce,
but they who trade in treason must expect to pay the
penalty of their traffic.
Although, therefore, the great nobles held themselves
aloof from the confederacy, yet many of them gave
unequivocal signs of their dissent from the policy
adopted by government. Marquis Berghen wrote to
the Duchess; resigning his posts, on the ground of
his inability to execute the intention of the King
in the matter of religion. Meghen replied to
the same summons by a similar letter. Egmont assured
her that he would have placed his offices in the King’s
hands in Spain, could he have foreseen that his Majesty
would form such resolutions as had now been proclaimed.
The sentiments of Orange were avowed in the letter
to which we have already alluded. His opinions
were shared by Montigny, Culemburg, and many others.
The Duchess was almost reduced to desperation.
The condition of the country was frightful. The
most determined loyalists, such as Berlaymont, Viglius
and Hopper, advised her not to mention the name of
inquisition in a conference which she was obliged to
hold with a deputation from Antwerp. She feared,
all feared, to pronounce the hated word. She
wrote despairing letters to Philip, describing the
condition of the land and her own agony in the gloomiest
colors. Since the arrival of the royal orders,
she said, things had gone from bad to worse. The
King had been ill advised. It was useless to
tell the people that the inquisition had always existed