They were practical, not theoretical; historical,
not philosophical. Still, such as they were,
they were facts, acquisitions. They had been purchased
by the blood and toil of brave ancestors; they amounted—however
open to criticism upon broad humanitarian grounds,
of which few at that day had ever dreamed—to
a solid, substantial dyke against the arbitrary power
which was ever chafing and fretting to destroy its
barriers. No men were more subtle or more diligent
in corroding the foundation of these bulwarks than
the disciples of Granvelle. Yet one would have
thought it possible to tolerate an amount of practical
freedom so different from the wild, social speculations
which in later days, have made both tyrants and reasonable
lovers of our race tremble with apprehension.
The Netherlanders claimed, mainly, the right to vote
the money which was demanded in such enormous profusion
from their painfully-acquired wealth; they were also
unwilling to be burned alive if they objected to transubstantiation.
Granvelle was most distinctly of an opposite opinion
upon both topics. He strenuously deprecated the
interference of the states with the subsidies, and
it was by his advice that the remorseless edict of
1550, the Emperor’s ordinance of blood and fire,
was re-enacted, as the very first measure of Philip’s
reign. Such were his sentiments as to national
and popular rights by representation. For the
people itself—“that vile and mischievous
animal called the people”—as he expressed
it, he entertained a cheerful contempt.
His aptitude for managing men was very great; his
capacity for affairs incontestable; but it must be
always understood as the capacity for the affairs
of absolutism. He was a clever, scheming politician,
an adroit manager; it remained to be seen whether
he had a claim to the character of a statesman.
His industry was enormous. He could write fifty
letters a day with his own hand. He could dictate
to half a dozen amanuenses at once, on as many different
subjects, in as many different languages, and send
them all away exhausted.
He was already rich. His income from his see
and other livings was estimated, in 1557, at ten thousand
dollars—[1885 approximation. The decimal
point more places to the right would in 2000 not be
out of line. D.W.]—; his property
in ready money, “furniture, tapestry, and the
like,” at two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
When it is considered that, as compared with our times,
these sums represent a revenue of a hundred thousand,
and a capital of two millions and a half in addition,
it may be safely asserted that the prelate had at least
made a good beginning. Besides his regular income,
moreover, he had handsome receipts from that simony
which was reduced to a system, and which gave him a
liberal profit, generally in the shape of an annuity,
upon every benefice which he conferred. He was,
however, by no means satisfied. His appetite
was as boundless as the sea; he was still a shameless