almost every potentate who had arrayed himself in arms
against him. Clement and Francis, the Dukes and
Landgraves of, Clever, Hesse, Saxony, and Brunswick,
he had bound to his chariot wheels; forcing many to
eat the bread of humiliation and captivity, during
long and weary years. But the concluding portion
of his reign had reversed all its previous glories.
His whole career had been a failure. He had been
defeated, after all, in most of his projects.
He had humbled Francis, but Henry had most signally
avenged his father. He had trampled upon Philip
of Hesse and Frederic of Saxony, but it had been reserved
for one of that German race, which he characterized
as “dreamy, drunken, and incapable of intrigue,”
to outwit the man who had outwitted all the world,
and to drive before him, in ignominious flight, the
conqueror of the nations. The German lad who
had learned both war and dissimulation in the court
and camp of him who was so profound a master of both
arts, was destined to eclipse his teacher on the most
august theatre of Christendom. Absorbed at Innspruck
with the deliberations of the Trent Council, Charles
had not heeded the distant mutterings of the tempest
which was gathering around him. While he was
preparing to crush, forever, the Protestant Church,
with the arms which a bench of bishops were forging,
lo! the rapid and desperate Maurice, with long red
beard streaming like a meteor in the wind, dashing
through the mountain passes, at the head of his lancers—arguments
more convincing than all the dogmas of Granvelle!
Disguised as an old woman, the Emperor had attempted
on the 6th April, to escape in a peasant’s wagon,
from Innspruck into Flanders. Saved for the time
by the mediation of Ferdinand, he had, a few weeks
later, after his troops had been defeated by Maurice,
at Fussen, again fled at midnight of the 22nd May,
almost unattended, sick in body and soul, in the midst
of thunder, lightning, and rain, along the difficult
Alpine passes from Innspruck into Carinthia.
His pupil had permitted his escape, only because in
his own language, “for such a bird he had no
convenient cage.” The imprisoned princes
now owed their liberation, not to the Emperor’s
clemency, but to his panic. The peace of Passau,
in the following August, crushed the whole fabric
of the Emperor’s toil, and laid-the foundation
of the Protestant Church. He had smitten the Protestants
at Muhlberg for the last time. On the other hand,
the man who had dealt with Rome, as if the Pope, not
he, had been the vassal, was compelled to witness,
before he departed, the insolence of a pontiff who
took a special pride in insulting and humbling his
house, and trampling upon the pride of Charles, Philip
and Ferdinand. In France too, the disastrous siege
of Metz had taught him that in the imperial zodiac
the fatal sign of Cancer had been reached. The
figure of a crab, with the words “plus citra,”
instead of his proud motto of “plus ultra,”
scrawled on the walls where he had resided during