talent, and bigoted without opinions. Incapable
of religious convictions himself, he had alternately
aspired to be a commander of Catholic and of Huguenot
zealots, and he had acquired nothing by his vacillating
course, save the entire contempt of all parties and
of both religions. Scared from the aide of Navarre
and Conde by the menacing attitude of the “league,”
fearing to forfeit the succession to the throne, unless
he made his peace with the court, he had recently
resumed his place among the Catholic commanders.
Nothing was easier for him than to return shamelessly
to a party which he had shamelessly deserted, save
perhaps to betray it again, should his interest prompt
him to do so, on the morrow. Since the peace
of 1576, it had been evident that the Protestants could
not count upon his friendship, and he had soon afterwards
been placed at the head of the army which was besieging
the Huguenots of Issoire. He sought to atone
for having commanded the troops of the new religion
by the barbarity with which he now persecuted its
votaries. When Issoire fell into his hands, the
luckless city was spared none of the misery which
can be inflicted by a brutal and frenzied soldiery.
Its men were butchered, its females outraged; its
property plundered with a thoroughness which rivalled
the Netherland practice of Alva, or Frederic Toledo,
or Julian Romero. The town was sacked and burned
to ashes by furious Catholics, under the command of
Francis Alencon,—almost at the very moment
when his fair sister, Margaret, was preparing the way
in the Netherlands for the fresh treason—which
he already meditated to the Catholic cause. The
treaty of Bergerac, signed in the autumn of 1577,
again restored a semblance of repose to France, and
again afforded an opportunity for Alencon to change
his politics, and what he called his religion.
Reeking with the blood of the Protestants of Issoire,
he was now at leisure to renew his dalliance with
the Queen of Protestant England, and to resume his
correspondence with the great-chieftain of the Reformation
in the Netherlands.
It is perhaps an impeachment upon the perspicacity
of Orange, that he could tolerate this mischievous
and worthless “son of France,” even for
the grave reasons which influenced him. Nevertheless,
it must be remembered that he only intended to keep
him in reserve, for the purpose of irritating the
jealousy and quickening the friendship of the English
Queen. Those who see anything tortuous in such
politics must beware of judging the intriguing age
of Philip and Catherine de’ Medici by the higher
standard of later, and possibly more candid times.
It would have been puerile for a man of William the
Silent’s resources, to allow himself to be outwitted
by the intrigues of all the courts and cabinets in
Europe. Moreover, it must be remembered that,
if he alone could guide himself and his country through
the perplexing labyrinth in which they were involved;
it was because he held in his hand the clue of an honest
purpose. His position in regard to the Duke of
Alencon, had now become sufficiently complicated,
for the tiger that he had led in a chain had been
secretly unloosed by those who meant mischief.
In the autumn of the previous year, the aristocratic
and Catholic party in the states-general had opened
their communications with a prince, by whom they hoped
to be indemnified for their previous defeat.