was but the phantom of that ancient municipal liberty
which it had been the especial care of his father
and his great-grandfather to destroy. Most patiently
did Philip, by his steady inactivity, bring about the
decay of the last ruins of free institutions in the
peninsula. The councils and legislative assemblies
were convoked and then wearied out in waiting for that
royal assent to their propositions and transactions,
which was deferred intentionally, year after year,
and never given. Thus the time of the deputies
was consumed in accomplishing infinite nothing, until
the moment arrived when the monarch, without any violent
stroke of state, could feel safe in issuing decrees
and pragmatic edicts; thus reducing the ancient legislative
and consultative bodies to nullity, and substituting
the will of an individual for a constitutional fabric.
To criticise the expenses of government or to attempt
interference with the increase of taxation became
a sorry farce. The forms remained in certain provinces
after the life had long since fled. Only in Arragon
had the ancient privileges seemed to defy the absolute
authority of the monarch; and it was reserved for
Antonio Perez to be the cause of their final extirpation.
The grinning skulls of the Chief Justice of that kingdom
and of the boldest and noblest advocates and defenders
of the national liberties, exposed for years in the
market-place, with the record of their death-sentence
attached, informed the Spaniards, in language which
the most ignorant could read, that the crime of defending
a remnant of human freedom and constitutional law
was sure to draw down condign punishment. It was
the last time in that age that even the ghost of extinct
liberty was destined to revisit the soil of Spain.
It mattered not that the immediate cause for pursuing
Perez was his successful amour with the king’s
Mistress, nor that the crime of which he was formally
accused was the deadly offence of Calvinism, rather
than his intrigue with the Eboli and his assassination
of Escovedo; for it was in the natural and simple sequence
of events that the last vestige of law or freedom
should be obliterated wherever Philip could vindicate
his sway. It must be admitted, too, that the king
seized this occasion to strike a decisive blow with
a promptness very different from his usual artistic
sluggishness. Rarely has a more terrible epigram
been spoken by man than the royal words which constituted
the whole trial and sentence of the Chief Justice
of Arragon, for the crime of defending the law of
his country: “You will take John of Lanuza,
and you will have his head cut off.” This
was the end of the magistrate and of the constitution
which he had defended.