: Frederick Schiller
: History of the Revolt in the Netherlands
: Seltzer Books
: 9781455390373
: 1
: CHF 0.10
:
: Geschichte
: English
: 267
: DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB
The prequel to the American Revolution.This struggle for political and religious freedom inspired America's Founding Fathers.Schiller tells the tale with a novelist's insight into character. According to Wikipedia: 'Johann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller (1759 - 1805) was a German poet, philosopher, historian, and dramatist. During the last few years of his life (1788-1805), Schiller struck up a productive, if complicated, friendship with already famous and influential Johann Wolfgang Goethe, with whom he greatly discussed issues concerning aesthetics, encouraging Goethe to finish works he left merely as sketches; this thereby gave way to a period now referred to as Weimar Classicism.'

 BOOK II.  CARDINAL GRANVELLA.


 

 ANTHONY PERENOT, Bishop of Arras, subsequently Archbishop of Malines, and Metropolitan of all the Netherlands, who, under the name of Cardinal Granvella, has been immortalized by the hatred of his contemporaries, was born in the year 1516, at Besancon in Burgundy.  His father, Nicolaus Perenot, the son of a blacksmith, had risen by his own merits to be the private secretary of Margaret, Duchess of Savoy, at that time regent of the Netherlands.  In this post he was noticed for his habits of business by Charles V., who took him into his own service and employed him in several important negotiations.  For twenty years he was a member of the Emperor's cabinet, and filled the offices of privy counsellor and keeper of the king's seal, and shared in all the state secrets of that monarch.  He acquired a large fortune.  His honors, his influence, and his political knowledge were inherited by his son, Anthony Perenot, who in his early years gave proofs of the great capacity which subsequently opened to him so distinguished a career. Anthony had cultivated at several colleges the talents with which nature had so lavishly endowed him, and in some respects had an advantage over his father.  He soon showed that his own abilities were sufficient to maintain the advantageous position which the merits of another had procured him.  He was twenty-four years old when the Emperor sent him as his plenipotentiary to the ecclesiastical council of Trent, where he delivered the first specimen of that eloquence which in the sequel gave him so complete an ascendancy over two kings.  Charles employed him in several difficult embassies, the duties of which he fulfilled to the satisfaction of his sovereign, and when finally that Emperor resigned the sceptre to his son he made that costly present complete by giving him a minister who could help him to wield it.

 

Granvella opened his new career at once with the greatest masterpiece of political genius, in passing so easily from the favor of such a father into equal consideration with such a son.  And he soon proved himself deserving of it.  At the secret negotiations of which the Duchess of Lorraine had, in 1558, been the medium between the French and Spanish ministers at Peronne, he planned, conjointly with the Cardinal of Lorraine, that conspiracy against the Protestants which was afterwards matured, but also betrayed, at Chateau-Cambray, where Perenot likewise assisted in effecting the so-called peace.

 

A deeply penetrating, comprehensive intellect, an unusual facility in conducting great and intricate affairs, and the most extensive learning, were wonderfully united in this man with persevering industry and never- wearying patience, while his enterprising genius was associated with thoughtful mechanical regularity.  Day and night the state found him vigilant and collected; the most important and the most insignificant things were alike weighed by him with scrupulous attention.  Not unfrequently he employed five secretaries at one time, dictating to them in different language