million came from Spain and another half from the
Indies. The mines of wealth which had been opened
by the hand of industry in that slender territory
of ancient morass and thicket, contributed four times
as much income to the imperial exchequer as all the
boasted wealth of Mexico and Peru. Yet the artisans,
the farmers and the merchants, by whom these riches
were produced, were consulted about as much in the
expenditure of the imposts upon their industry as were
the savages of America as to the distribution of the
mineral treasures of their soil. The rivalry
of the houses of Habsburg and Valois, this was the
absorbing theme, during the greater part of the reign
which had just been so dramatically terminated.
To gain the empire over Francis, to leave to Don Philip
a richer heritage than the Dauphin could expect, were
the great motives of the unparalleled energy displayed
by Charles during the longer and the more successful
portion of his career. To crush the Reformation
throughout his dominions, was his occupation afterward,
till he abandoned the field in despair. It was
certainly not desirable for the Netherlanders that
they should be thus controlled by a man who forced
them to contribute so largely to the success of schemes,
some of which were at best indifferent, and others
entirely odious to them. They paid 1,200,000
crowns a year regularly; they paid in five years an
extraordinary subsidy of eight millions of ducats,
and the States were roundly rebuked by the courtly
representatives of their despot, if they presumed
to inquire into the objects of the appropriations,
or to express an interest in their judicious administration.
Yet it maybe supposed to have been a matter of indifference
to them whether Francis or Charles had won the day
at Pavia, and it certainly was not a cause of triumph
to the daily increasing thousands of religious reformers
in Holland and Flanders that their brethren had been
crushed by the Emperor at Muhlberg. But it was
not alone that he drained their treasure, and hampered
their industry. He was in constant conflict with
their ancient and dearly-bought political liberties.
Like his ancestor Charles the Bold, he was desirous
of constructing a kingdom out of the provinces.
He was disposed to place all their separate and individual
charters on a procrustean bed, and shape them all
into uniformity simply by reducing the whole to a
nullity. The difficulties in the way, the stout
opposition offered by burghers, whose fathers had
gained these charters with their blood, and his want
of leisure during the vast labors which devolved upon
him as the autocrat of so large a portion of the world,
caused him to defer indefinitely the execution of
his plan. He found time only to crush some of
the foremost of the liberal institutions of the provinces,
in detail. He found the city of Tournay a happy,
thriving, self-governed little republic in all its
local affairs; he destroyed its liberties, without
a tolerable pretext, and reduced it to the condition
of a Spanish or Italian provincial town.