to them alone, a site was granted
outside the town for the erection of a church. In return they were
compelled to pledge themselves to the most rigid obedience to the
municipal authorities, and to active co-operation in the proceedings
against the Iconoclasts. He pursued similar measures through all
Flanders and Artois. One of his noblemen, John Cassembrot, Baron of
Beckerzeel, and a leaguer, pursuing the Iconoclasts at the head of some
horsemen of the league, surprised a band of them just as they were
about to break into a town of Hainault, near Grammont, in Flanders,
and took thirty of them prisoners, of whom twenty-two were hung upon
the spot, and the rest whipped out of the province.
Services of such importance one would have thought scarcely deserved
to be rewarded with the displeasure of the king; what Orange, Egmont,
and Horn performed on this occasion evinced at least as much zeal and
had as beneficial a result as anything that was accomplished by
Noircarmes, Megen, and Aremberg, to whom the king vouchsafed to
show his gratitude both by words and deeds. But their zeal, their
services came too late. They had spoken too loudly against his edicts,
had been too vehement in their opposition to his measures, had insulted
him too grossly in the person of his minister Granvella, to leave room
for forgiveness. No time, no repentance, no atonement, however great,
could efface this one offence from the memory of their sovereign.
Philip lay sick at Segovia when the news of the outbreak of the
Iconoclasts and the uncatholic agreement entered into with the
Reformers reached him. At the same time the regent renewed her
urgent entreaty for his personal visit, of which also all the letters treated,
which the President Viglius exchanged with his friend Hopper. Many
also of the Belgian nobles addressed special letters to the king, as, for
instance, Egmont, Mansfeld, Megen, Aremberg, Noircarmes, and
Barlaimont, in which they reported the state of their provinces, and at
once explained and justified the arrangements they had made with the
disaffected. Just at this period a letter arrived from the German
Emperor, in which he recommended Philip to act with clemency
towards his Belgian subjects, and offered his mediation in the matter.
He had also written direct to the regent herself in Brussels, and added
letters to the several leaders of the nobility, which, however, were
never delivered. Having conquered the first anger which this hateful
occurrence had excited, the king referred the whole matter to his
council.
The party of Granvella, which had the preponderance in the council,
was diligent in tracing a close connection between the behavior of the
Flemish nobles and the excesses of the church desecrators, which
showed itself in similarity of the demands of both parties, and
especially the time which the latter chose for their outbreak. In the
same month, they observed, in which the nobles had sent in their three
articles of pacification, the Iconoclasts had commenced their work; on
the evening of the very day that Orange quitted Antwerp the churches
too were plundered. During the whole tumult not a finger was lifted to
take up arms; all the expedients employed were invariably such as
turned to the advantage of the sects, while, on the contrary, all others
were neglected which tended to the maintenance of the pure faith.
Many of the Iconoclasts, it was further said, had confessed that all that
they had done was with the knowledge and consent of the princes;
though surely nothing was more natural, than for such worthless
wretches to seek to screen with great names a crime which they had
undertaken solely on their own account. A writing also was produced in
which the high nobility were made to promise their services to the
"Gueux," to procure the assembly of the states general, the genuineness
of which, however, the former strenuously denied. Four different
seditious parties were, they said, to be noticed in the Netherlands,
which were all more or less connected with one another, and all worked
towards a common end. One of these was those bands of reprobates
who desecrated the churches; a second consisted of the various sects
who had hired the former to perform their infamous acts; the "Gueux,"
who had raised themselves to be the defenders of the sects were the
third; and the leading nobles who were inclined to the "Gueux" by
feudal connections, relationship, and friendship, composed the fourth.
All, consequently, were alike fatally infected, and all equally guilty.
The government had not merely to guard against a few isolated
members; it had to contend with the whole body. Since, then, it was
ascertained that the people were the seduced party, and the
encouragement to rebellion came from higher quarters, it would be
wise and expedient
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