The Rise of the Dutch Republic, 1568 part 1 | Page 6

John Lothrop Motley
With her eleven children, all of tender age, she had
taken refuge in a convent. Frantic with despair, more utterly desolate,
and more deeply wronged than high-born lady had often been before,
she left no stone unturned to save her husband from his fate, or at least
to obtain for him an impartial and competent tribunal. She addressed

the Duke of Alva, the King, the Emperor, her brother the Elector
Palatine, and many leading Knights of the Fleece. The Countess
Dowager of Horn, both whose sons now lay in the jaws of death,
occupied herself also with the most moving appeals to the same high
personages. No pains were spared to make the triple plea to the
jurisdiction valid. The leading Knights of the Fleece, Mansfeld, whose
loyalty was unquestioned, and Hoogstraaten, although himself an
outlaw; called upon the King of Spain to protect the statutes of the
illustrious order of which he was the chief. The estates of Brabant,
upon the petition of Sabina, Countess Egmont, that they would take to
heart the privileges of the province, so that her husband might enjoy
that protection of which the meanest citizen in the land could not be
justly deprived, addressed a feeble and trembling protest to Alva, and
enclosed to him the lady's petition. The Emperor, on behalf of Count
Horn, wrote personally to Philip, to claim for him a trial before the
members of the realm.
It was all in vain. The conduct of Philip and his Viceroy coincided in
spirit with the honest brutality of Vargas. "Non curamus vestros
privilegios," summed up the whole of the proceedings. Non curamus
vestros privilegios had been the unanswerable reply to every
constitutional argument which had been made against tyranny since
Philip mounted his father's throne. It was now the only response
deemed necessary to the crowd of petitions in favor of the Counts,
whether they proceeded from sources humble or august. Personally, the
King remained silent as the grave. In writing to the Duke of Alva, he
observed that "the Emperor, the Dukes of Bavaria and Lorraine, the
Duchess and the Duchess-dowager, had written to him many times, and
in the most pressing manner, in favor of the Counts Horn and Egmont."
He added, that he had made no reply to them, nor to other Knights of
the Fleece who had implored him to respect the statutes of the order,
and he begged Alva "to hasten the process as fast as possible." To an
earnest autograph letter, in which the Emperor, on the 2nd of March,
1568, made a last effort to save the illustrious prisoners, he replied, that
"the whole world would at last approve his conduct, but that, at any rate,
he would not act differently, even if he should risk the loss of the
provinces, and if the sky should fall on his head."
But little heed was paid to the remonstrances in behalf of the imperial

Courts, or the privileges of Brabant. These were but cobweb
impediments which, indeed, had long been brushed away. President
Viglius was even pathetic on the subject of Madame Egmont's petition
to the council of Brabant. It was so bitter, he said, that the Duke was
slightly annoyed, and took it ill that the royal servants in that council
should have his Majesty's interests so little at heart. It seemed indecent
in the eyes of the excellent Frisian, that a wife pleading for her husband,
a mother for her, eleven children, so soon to be fatherless, should
indulge in strong language!
The statutes of the Fleece were obstacles somewhat more serious. As,
however, Alva had come to the Netherlands pledged to accomplish the
destruction of these two nobles, as soon as he should lay his hands
upon them, it was only a question of form, and even that question was,
after a little reflection, unceremoniously put aside.
To the petitions in behalf of the two Counts, therefore, that they should
be placed in the friendly keeping of the Order, and be tried by its
statutes, the Duke replied, peremptorily, that he had undertaken the
cognizance of this affair by commission of his Majesty, as sovereign of
the land, not as head of the Golden Fleece, that he should carry it
through as it had been commenced, and that the Counts should
discontinue presentations of petitions upon this point.
In the embarrassment created by the stringent language of these statutes,
Doctor Viglius found an opportunity to make himself very useful. Alva
had been turning over the laws and regulations of the Order, but could
find no loophole. The President, however, came to his rescue, and
announced it as his legal opinion that the Governor need concern
himself no further on the subject, and that the code of the Fleece
offered no legal impediment to the
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