cause which he had once begun to favour. A man
of singular ability, courage, and energy, distinguished
both for military and diplomatic services, he was
a formidable enemy to the party from which he was now
for ever estranged. As early as April of this
year, secret emissaries of Parma, dealing with Champagny
in his nominal prison, and with the disaffected burghers
at large, had been on the point of effecting an arrangement
with the royal governor. The negotiation had been
suddenly brought to a close by the discovery of a
flagrant attempt by Imbue, one of the secret adherents
of the King, to sell the city of Dendermonde, of which
he was governor, to Parma. For this crime he had
been brought to Ghent for trial, and then publicly
beheaded. The incident came in aid of the eloquence
of Orange, who, up to the latest moment of his life,
had been most urgent in his appeals to the patriotic
hearts of Ghent, not to abandon the great cause of
the union and of liberty. William the Silent
knew full well, that after the withdrawal of the great
keystone-city of Ghent, the chasm between the Celtic-Catholic
and the Flemish-Calvinist Netherlands could hardly
be bridged again. Orange was now dead. The
negotiations with France, too, on which those of the
Ghenters who still held true to the national cause
had fastened their hopes, had previously been brought
to a stand-still by the death of Anjou; and Champagny,
notwithstanding the disaster to Imbize, became more
active than ever. A private agent, whom the municipal
government had despatched to the French court for
assistance, was not more successful than his character
and course of conduct would have seemed to warrant;
for during his residence in Paris, he had been always
drunk, and generally abusive. This was not good
diplomacy, particularly on the part of an agent from
a weak municipality to a haughty and most undecided
government.
“They found at this court,” wrote Stafford
to Walsingham, “great fault with his manner
of dealing that was sent from Gaunt. He was scarce
sober from one end of the week to the other, and stood
so much on his tiptoes to have present answer within
three days, or else that they of Gaunt could tell
where to bestow themselves. They sent him away
after keeping him three weeks, and he went off in
great dudgeon, swearing by yea and nay that he will
make report thereafter.”
Accordingly, they of Ghent did bestow themselves very
soon thereafter upon the King of Spain. The terms
were considered liberal, but there was, of course,
no thought of conceding the great object for which
the patriots were contending—religious
liberty. The municipal privileges—such
as they might prove to be worth under the interpretation
of a royal governor and beneath the guns of a citadel
filled with Spanish troops—were to be guaranteed;
those of the inhabitants who did not choose to go
to mass were allowed two years to wind up their affairs
before going into perpetual exile, provided they behaved
themselves “without scandal;” while on
the other hand, the King’s authority as Count
of Flanders was to be fully recognised, and all the
dispossessed monks and abbots to be restored to their
property.