A
few days after Francis’s arrival at Madrid, and when he began to be sensible of
his having relied without foundation on the emperor’s generosity, Henry VIII
concluded a treaty with the regent of France, which afforded him some hope of
liberty from another quarter. Henry’s extravagant demands had been received at
Madrid with that neglect which they deserved, and which he probably expected.
Charles, intoxicated with prosperity, no longer courted him in that respectful
and submissive manner which pleased his haughty temper. Wolsey, no less haughty
than his master, was highly irritated at the emperor’s discontinuing his wonted
caresses and professions of friendship to himself. These slight offences,
added to the weighty considerations formerly mentioned, induced Henry to enter
into a defensive alliance with Louise, in which all the differences between him
and her son were adjusted; at the same time he engaged that he would employ his
best offices in order to procure the deliverance of his new ally from a state
of captivity.
While
the open defection of such a powerful confederate affected Charles with deep
concern, a secret conspiracy was carrying on in Italy, which threatened him
with consequences still more fatal. The restless and intriguing genius of
Morone, chancellor of Milan, gave rise to this. His revenge had been amply
gratified by the expulsion of the French out of Italy, and his vanity no less
soothed by the re-establishment of Sforza, to whose interest he had attached
himself in the duchy of Milan. The delays, however, and evasions of the
Imperial court, in granting Sforza the investiture of his new acquired territories,
had long alarmed Morone; these were repeated so often, and with such apparent
artifice, as became a full proof to his suspicious mind that the emperor
intended to strip his master of that rich country which he had conquered in his
name.
Though Charles, in order to quiet the pope and Venetians, no less jealous
of his designs than Morone, gave Sforza, at last, the investiture which had
been so long desired; the charter was clogged with so many reservations, and
subjected him to such grievous burdens, as rendered the duke of Milan a
dependent on the emperor, rather than a vassal of the empire, and afforded him
hardly any other security for his possessions than the good pleasure of an
ambitious superior. Such an accession of power as would have accrued from the
addition of the Milanese to the kingdom of Naples, was considered by Morone as
fatal to the liberties of Italy, no less than to his own importance. Full of
this idea he began to revolve in his mind the possibility of rescuing Italy
from the yoke of foreigners; the darling scheme, as has been already observed,
of the Italian politicians in that age, and which it was the great object of
their ambition to accomplish. If to the glory of having been the chief
instrument of driving the French out of Milan, he could add that of delivering
Naples from the dominion of the Spaniards, he thought that nothing would be
wanting to complete his fame. His fertile genius soon suggested to him a
project for that purpose; a difficult, indeed, and daring one, but for that
very reason more agreeable to his bold and enterprising temper.
Bourbon
and Pescara were equally enraged at Lannoy’s carrying the French king into
Spain without their knowledge. The former, being afraid that the two monarchs
might, in his absence, conclude some treaty, in which his interests would be
entirely sacrificed, hastened to Madrid, in order to guard against that danger.
The latter, on whom the command of the army now devolved, was obliged to remain
in Italy; but in every company, he gave vent to his indignation against the
viceroy, in expressions full of rancor and contempt; he accused him, in a
letter to the emperor, of cowardice in the time of danger, and of insolence
after victory, towards the obtaining of which he had contributed nothing either
by his valor or his conduct; nor did be abstain from bitter complaints against
the emperor himself, who had not discovered, as he imagined, a sufficient sense
of his merit, nor bestowed any adequate reward on his services.
It was on this
disgust of Pescara, that Morone founded his whole system. He knew the boundless
ambition of his nature, the great extent of his abilities in peace as well as
war, and the intrepidity of his mind, capable alike of undertaking and of
executing the most desperate designs. The cantonment of the Spanish troops on
the frontier of the Milanese gave occasion to many interviews between him and
Morone, in which the latter took care frequently to turn the conversation to
the transactions subsequent to the battle of Pavia, a subject upon which the
marquis always entered willingly and with passion; and Morone, observing his
resentment to be uniformly violent, artfully pointed out and aggravated every
circumstance that could increase its fury.
He painted, in the strongest colors,
the emperor's want of discernment, as well as of gratitude, in preferring Lannoy
to him, and in allowing that presumptuous Fleming to dispose of the captive
king, without consulting the man to whose bravery and wisdom Charles was
indebted for the glory of having a formidable rival in his power. Having warned
him by such discourses, he then began to insinuate, that now was the time to
be avenged for these insults, and to acquire immortal renown as the deliverer
of his country from the oppression of strangers; that the states of Italy,
weary of the ignominious and intolerable dominion of barbarians, were at last
ready to combine in order to vindicate their own independence; that their eyes
were fixed on him as the only leader whose genius and good fortune could ensure
the happy success of that noble enterprise; that the attempt was no less
practicable than glorious, it being in his power to disperse the Spanish
infantry, the only body of the emperor’s troops that remained in Italy, through
the villages of the Milanese, that, in one night, they might be destroyed by
the people, who, having suffered much by their exactions and insolence, would
gladly undertake this service; that he might then, without opposition, take
possession of the throne of Naples, the station destined for him, and a reward
not unworthy the restorer of liberty to Italy; that the pope, of whom that
kingdom held and whose predecessors had disposed of it on many former
occasions, would willingly grant him the right of investiture; that the
Venetians, the Florentines, the duke of Milan, to whom he had communicated the
scheme together with the French, would be the guarantees of his right; that
the Neapolitans would naturally prefer the government of one of their
countrymen, whom they loved and admired, to that odious dominion of strangers,
to which they had been so long subjected; and that the emperor, astonished at a
blow so unexpected, would find that he had neither troops nor money to resist
such a powerful confederacy.
Pescara,
amazed at the boldness and extent of the scheme, listened attentively to
Morone, but with the countenance of a man lost in profound and anxious thought.
On the one hand, the infamy of betraying his sovereign, under whom he bore such
high command, deterred him from the attempt; on the other, the prospect of
obtaining a crown allured him to venture upon it. After continuing a short
space in suspense, the least commendable motives, as is usual after such
deliberations, prevailed, and ambition triumphed over honor. In order, however, to throw a color of
decency on his conduct, he insisted that some learned casuists should give
their opinion, “Whether it was lawful for a subject to take arms against his immediate
sovereign, in obedience to the lord paramount of whom the kingdom itself was
held?”. Such a resolution of the case as he expected was soon obtained from the
divines and civilians both of home and Milan; the negotiation went forward;
and measures seemed to be taking with great spirit for the speedy execution of
the design.
During
this interval, Pescara, either shocked at the treachery of the action that he
was going to commit, or despairing of its success, began to entertain thoughts
of abandoning the engagements which he had come under. The indisposition of
Sforza, who happened at that time to be taken ill of a distemper which was
thought mortal, confirmed his resolution, and determined him to make known the
whole conspiracy to the emperor, deemed it more prudent to expect the duchy of
Milan from him as the reward of this discovery, than to aim at a kingdom to be
purchased by a series of crimes. This resolution, however, proved the source of
actions hardly less criminal and ignominious.
The emperor, who had already
received full information concerning the conspiracy from other hands, seemed to
be highly pleased with Pescara’s fidelity, and commanded him to continue his
intrigues for some time with the pope and Sforza, both that he might discover
their intentions more fully, and that he might be able to convict them of the
crime with greater certainty. Pescara, conscious of guilt, as well as sensible
how suspicious his long silence must have appeared at Madrid, durst not decline
that dishonorable office and was obliged to act the meanest and most
disgraceful of all parts, that of seducing with a purpose to betray. Considering
the abilities of the persons with whom he had to deal, the part was scarcely
less difficult than base; but he acted it with such address, as to deceive even
the penetrating eye of Morone, who, relying with full confidence on his
sincerity, visited him at Novara, in order to put the last hand to their
machinations. Pescara received him in an apartment where Antonio de Leyva was
placed behind the tapestry, that he might overhear and bear witness to their
conversation; as Morone was about to take leave, that officer suddenly
appeared, and to his astonishment arrested him prisoner in the emperor’s name.
He was conducted to the castle of Pavia; and Pescara, who had so lately been
his accomplice, had now the assurance to interrogate him as his judge. At the
same time, the emperor declared Sforza to have forfeited all right to the duchy
of Milan, by his engaging in a conspiracy against the sovereign of whom he
held; Pescara, by his command, seized on every place in the Milanese, except
the castles of Cremona and Milan, which the unfortunate duke attempting to
defend, were closely blockaded by the Imperial troops.
But
though this unsuccessful conspiracy, instead of stripping the emperor of what
he already possessed in Italy, contributed to extend his dominions in that
country, it showed him the necessity of coming to some agreement with the
French king, unless he chose to draw on himself a confederacy of all Europe,
which the progress of his arms and his ambition, now as undisguised as it was
boundless, filled with general alarm. He had not hitherto treated Francis with
the generosity which that monarch expected, and hardly with the decency due to
his station. Instead of displaying the sentiments becoming a great prince,
Charles, by his mode of treating Francis, seems to have acted with the
mercenary art of a corsair, who, by the rigorous usage of his prisoners, endeavors
to draw from them a higher price for their ransom.
THE TREATY OF MADRID