a generous sentiment, not a profound or acute suggestion
in his retreat has been recorded from his lips.
The epigrams which had been invented for him by fabulists
have been all taken away, and nothing has been substituted,
save a few dull jests exchanged with stupid friars.
So far from having entertained and even expressed that
sentiment of religious toleration for which he was
said to have been condemned as a heretic by the inquisition,
and for which Philip was ridiculously reported to
have ordered his father’s body to be burned,
and his ashes scattered to the winds, he became in
retreat the bigot effectually, which during his reign
he had only been conventionally. Bitter regrets
that he should have kept his word to Luther, as if
he had not broken faith enough to reflect upon in
his retirement; stern self-reproach for omitting to
put to death, while he had him in his power, the man
who had caused all the mischief of the age; fierce
instructions thundered from his retreat to the inquisitors
to hasten the execution of all heretics, including
particularly his ancient friends, preachers and almoners,
Cazalla and Constantine de Fuente; furious exhortations
to Philip—as if Philip needed a prompter
in such a work—that he should set himself
to “cutting out the root of heresy with rigor
and rude chastisement;”—such explosions
of savage bigotry as these, alternating with exhibitions
of revolting gluttony, with surfeits of sardine omelettes,
Estramadura sausages, eel pies, pickled partridges,
fat capons, quince syrups, iced beer, and flagons of
Rhenish, relieved by copious draughts of senna and
rhubarb, to which his horror-stricken doctor doomed
him as he ate—compose a spectacle less attractive
to the imagination than the ancient portrait of the
cloistered Charles. Unfortunately it is the one
which was painted from life.
Etext editor’s bookmarks:
Burned, strangled, beheaded,
or buried alive (100,000)
Despot by birth and
inclination (Charles V.)
Endure every hardship
but hunger
Gallant and ill-fated
Lamoral Egmont
He knew men, especially
he knew their weaknesses
His imagination may
have assisted his memory in the task
Little grievances would
sometimes inflame more than vast
Often much tyranny in
democracy
Planted the inquisition
in the Netherlands
MOTLEY’S HISTORY OF THE NETHERLANDS, PG EDITION, VOLUME 4.
The rise of the Dutch republic
John Lothrop Motley, D.C.L., LL.D.
1855
Philip the second in the
Netherlands
1555-1558 [chapter ii.]