misrepresentation to their sovereign, and picturing
her own isolated condition. She represented herself
as entirely deprived of the support of those great
personages, who, despite her positive assurances to
the contrary, persisted in believing that they were
held up to the King as conspirators, and were in danger
of being punished as traitors. Philip, on his
part, was conning Granvelle’s despatches, filled
with hints of conspiracy, and holding counsel with
Alva, who had already recommended the taking off several
heads for treason. The Prince of Orange, who
already had secret agents in the King’s household,
and was supplied with copies of the most private papers
in the palace, knew better than to be deceived by
the smooth representations of the Regent. Philip
had, however, at last begun secretly to yield.
He asked Alva’s advice whether on the whole
it would not be better to let the Cardinal leave the
Netherlands, at least for a time, on pretence of visiting
his mother in Burgundy, and to invite Count Egmont
to Madrid, by way of striking one link from the chain,
as Granvelle had suggested. The Duke had replied
that he had no doubt of the increasing insolence of
the three seigniors, as depicted in the letters of
the Duchess Margaret, nor of their intention to make
the Cardinal their first victim; it being the regular
principle in all revolts against the sovereign, to
attack the chief minister in the first place.
He could not, however, persuade himself that the King
should yield and Granvelle be recalled. Nevertheless,
if it were to be done at all, he preferred that the
Cardinal should go to Burgundy without leave asked
either of the Duchess or of Philip; and that he should
then write; declining to return, on the ground that
his life was not safe in the Netherlands.
After much hesitation, the monarch at last settled
upon a plan, which recommended itself through the
extreme duplicity by which it was marked, and the
complicated system of small deceptions, which it consequently
required. The King, who was never so thoroughly
happy or at home as when elaborating the ingredients
of a composite falsehood, now busily employed himself
in his cabinet. He measured off in various letters
to the Regent, to the three nobles, to Egmont alone,
and to Granvelle, certain proportionate parts of his
whole plan, which; taken separately, were intended
to deceive, and did deceive nearly every person in
the world, not only in his own generation, but for
three centuries afterwards, but which arranged synthetically,
as can now be done, in consequence of modern revelations,
formed one complete and considerable lie, the observation
of which furnishes the student with a lesson in the
political chemistry of those days, which was called
Macchiavellian statesmanship. The termination
of the Granvelle regency is, moreover, most important,
not only for the grave and almost interminable results
to which it led, but for the illustration which it
affords of the inmost characters of the Cardinal and
“his master.”