Visconti in like manner waited upon the Princess of
Orange; other nobles attending to the other ladies.
Forty-eight pages in white, yellow, and red scarves
brought and removed the dishes. The dinner, of
courses innumerable, lasted two hours and a half,
and the ladies, being thus fortified for the more serious
business of the evening, were led to the tiring-rooms
while the hall was made ready for dancing. The
ball was opened by the Princess of Conde and Spinola,
and lasted until two in the morning. As the apartment
grew warm, two of the pages went about with long staves
and broke all the windows until not a single pane
of glass remained. The festival was estimated
by the thrifty chronicler of Antwerp to have cost
from 3000 to 4000 crowns. It was, he says, “an
earthly paradise of which soon not a vapour remained.”
He added that he gave a detailed account of it “not
because he took pleasure in such voluptuous pomp and
extravagance, but that one might thus learn the vanity
of the world.” These courtesies and assiduities
on the part of the great “shopkeeper,”
as the Constable called him, had so much effect, if
not on the Princess, at least on Conde himself, that
he threatened to throw his wife out of window if she
refused to caress Spinola. These and similar accusations
were made by the father and aunt when attempting to
bring about a divorce of the Princess from her husband.
The Nuncius Bentivoglio, too, fell in love with her,
devoting himself to her service, and his facile and
eloquent pen to chronicling her story. Even poor
little Philip of Spain in the depths of the Escurial
heard of her charms, and tried to imagine himself in
love with her by proxy.
Thenceforth there was a succession of brilliant festivals
in honour of the Princess. The Spanish party
was radiant with triumph, the French maddened with
rage. Henry in Paris was chafing like a lion at
bay. A petty sovereign whom he could crush at
one vigorous bound was protecting the lady for whose
love he was dying. He had secured Conde’s
exclusion from Holland, but here were the fugitives
splendidly established in Brussels; the Princess surrounded
by most formidable suitors, the Prince encouraged
in his rebellious and dangerous schemes by the power
which the King most hated on earth, and whose eternal
downfall he had long since sworn to accomplish.
For the weak and frivolous Conde began to prattle
publicly of his deep projects of revenge. Aided
by Spanish money and Spanish troops he would show
one day who was the real heir to the throne of France—the
illegitimately born Dauphin or himself.
The King sent for the first president of Parliament,
Harlay, and consulted with him as to the proper means
of reviving the suppressed process against the Dowager
and of publicly degrading Conde from his position
of first prince of the blood which he had been permitted
to usurp. He likewise procured a decree accusing
him of high-treason and ordering him to be punished
at his Majesty’s pleasure, to be prepared by
the Parliament of Paris; going down to the court himself
in his impatience and seating himself in everyday
costume on the bench of judges to see that it was
immediately proclaimed.