but of mean stature, altogether an unlucky and forlorn
individual, he was not, after all, in very much inferior
plight to that in which his rival, the Bavarian bishop,
had found himself. Prince Ernest, archbishop of
Liege and Cologne, a hangeron of his brother, who
sought to shake him off, and a stipendiary of Philip,
who was a worse paymaster than Elizabeth, had a sorry
life of it, notwithstanding his nominal possession
of the see. He was forced to go, disguised and
in secret, to the Prince of Parma at Brussels, to
ask for assistance, and to mention, with lacrymose
vehemence, that both his brother and himself had determined
to renounce the episcopate, unless the forces of the
Spanish King could be employed to recover the cities
on the Rhine. If Neusz and Rheinberg were not
wrested from the rebels; Cologne itself would soon
be gone. Ernest represented most eloquently to
Alexander, that if the protestant archbishop were
reinstated in the ancient see, it would be a most
perilous result for the ancient church throughout all
northern Europe. Parma kept the wandering prelate
for a few days in his palace in Brussels, and then
dismissed him, disguised and on foot, in the dusk of
the evening, through the park-gate. He encouraged
him with hopes of assistance, he represented to his
sovereign the importance of preserving the Rhenish
territory to Bishop Ernest and to Catholicism, but
hinted that the declared intention of the Bavarian
to resign the dignity, was probably a trick, because
the archi-episcopate was no such very bad thing after
all.
The archi-episcopate might be no very bad thing, but
it was a most uncomfortable place of residence, at
the moment, for prince or peasant. Overrun by
hordes of brigands, and crushed almost out of existence
by that most deadly of all systems of taxations, the
‘brandschatzung,’ it was fast becoming
a mere den of thieves. The ‘brandschatzung’
had no name in English, but it was the well-known
impost, levied by roving commanders, and even by respectable
generals of all nations. A hamlet, cluster of
farm-houses, country district, or wealthy city, in
order to escape being burned and ravaged, as the penalty
of having fallen into a conqueror’s hands, paid
a heavy sum of ready money on the nail at command
of the conqueror. The free companions of the sixteenth
century drove a lucrative business in this particular
branch of industry; and when to this was added the
more direct profits derived from actual plunder, sack,
and ransoming, it was natural that a large fortune
was often the result to the thrifty and persevering
commander of free lances.