only appeal to the King. “Convinced,”
she said, “that her husband was innocent of the
charges brought against him, she threw herself, overwhelmed
and consumed by tears and misery, at his Majesty’s
feet. She begged the King to remember the past
services of Montigny, her own youth, and that she
had enjoyed his company but four months. By all
these considerations, and by the passion of Jesus Christ,
she adjured the monarch to pardon any faults which
her husband might have committed.” The
reader can easily judge how much effect such a tender
appeal was like to have upon the heart of Philip.
From that rock; thus feebly smitten, there flowed
no fountain of mercy. It was not more certain
that Montigny’s answers to the interrogatories
addressed to him had created a triumphant vindication
of his course, than that such vindication would be
utterly powerless to save his life. The charges
preferred against him were similar to those which had
brought Egmont and Horn to the block, and it certainly
created no ground of hope for him, that he could prove
himself even more innocent of suspicious conduct than
they had done. On the 4th March, 1570, accordingly,
the Duke of Alva pronounced sentence against him.
The sentence declared that his head should be cut
off, and afterwards exposed to public view upon the
head of a pike. Upon the 18th March, 1570, the
Duke addressed a requisitory letter to the alcaldes,
corregidors, and other judges of Castile, empowering
them to carry the sentence into execution.
On the arrival of this requisition there was a serious
debate before the King in council. It seemed
to be the general opinion that there had been almost
severity enough in the Netherlands for the present.
The spectacle of the public execution of another distinguished
personage, it was thought, might now prove more irritating
than salutary. The King was of this opinion himself.
It certainly did not occur to him or to his advisers
that this consideration should lead them to spare the
life of an innocent man. The doubts entertained
as to the expediency of a fresh murder were not allowed
to benefit the prisoner, who, besides being a loyal
subject and a communicant of the ancient Church, was
also clothed in the white robes of an envoy, claiming
not only justice but hospitality, as the deputy of
Philip’s sister, Margaret of Parma. These
considerations probably never occurred to the mind
of His Majesty. In view, however, of the peculiar
circumstances of the case, it was unanimously agreed
that there should be no more blood publicly shed.
Most of the councillors were in favor of slow poison.
Montigny’s meat and drink, they said, should
be daily drugged, so that he might die by little and
little. Philip, however, terminated these disquisitions
by deciding that the ends of justice would not thus
be sufficiently answered. The prisoner, he had
resolved, should be regularly executed, but the deed
should be secret, and it should be publicly announced
that he had died of a fever.