was to move upon protocols and apostilles. Events
had no right to be born throughout his dominions,
without a preparatory course of his obstetrical pedantry.
He could never learn that the earth would not rest
on its axis, while he wrote a programme of the way
it was to turn. He was slow in deciding, slower
in communicating his decisions. He was prolix
with his pen, not from affluence, but from paucity
of ideas. He took refuge in a cloud of words,
sometimes to conceal his meaning, oftener to conceal
the absence of any meaning, thus mystifying not only
others but himself. To one great purpose, formed
early, he adhered inflexibly. This, however, was
rather an instinct than an opinion; born with him,
not created by him. The idea seemed to express
itself through him, and to master him, rather than
to form one of a stock of sentiments which a free
agent might be expected to possess. Although
at certain times, even this master-feeling could yield
to the pressure of a predominant self-interest-thus
showing that even in Philip bigotry was not absolute—yet
he appeared on the whole the embodiment of Spanish
chivalry and Spanish religious enthusiasm, in its
late and corrupted form. He was entirely a Spaniard.
The Burgundian and Austrian elements of his blood
seemed to have evaporated, and his veins were filled
alone with the ancient ardor, which in heroic centuries
had animated the Gothic champions of Spain. The
fierce enthusiasm for the Cross, which in the long
internal warfare against the Crescent, had been the
romantic and distinguishing feature of the national
character, had degenerated into bigotry. That
which had been a nation’s glory now made the
monarch’s shame. The Christian heretic was
to be regarded with a more intense hatred than even
Moor or Jew had excited in the most Christian ages,
and Philip was to be the latest and most perfect incarnation
of all this traditional enthusiasm, this perpetual
hate. Thus he was likely to be single-hearted
in his life. It was believed that his ambition
would be less to extend his dominions than to vindicate
his title of the most Catholic king. There could
be little doubt entertained that he would be, at least,
dutiful to his father in this respect, and that the
edicts would be enforced to the letter.
He was by birth, education, and character, a Spaniard,
and that so exclusively, that the circumstance would
alone have made him unfit to govern a country so totally
different in habits and national sentiments from his
native land. He was more a foreigner in Brussels,
even, than in England. The gay, babbling, energetic,
noisy life of Flanders and Brabant was detestable
to him. The loquacity of the Netherlanders was
a continual reproach upon his taciturnity. His
education had imbued him, too, with the antiquated
international hatred of Spaniard and Fleming, which
had been strengthening in the metropolis, while the
more rapid current of life had rather tended to obliterate
the sentiment in the provinces.