<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XXIII——VARIOUS EVENTS FROM THE SAME COUNSEL </h2>
<p>Jacques Amiot, grand almoner of France, one day related to me this story,
much to the honour of a prince of ours (and ours he was upon several very
good accounts, though originally of foreign extraction),—[The Duc de
Guise, surnamed Le Balafre.]—that in the time of our first
commotions, at the siege of Rouen,—[In 1562]—this prince,
having been advertised by the queen-mother of a conspiracy against his
life, and in her letters particular notice being given him of the person
who was to execute the business (who was a gentleman of Anjou or of Maine,
and who to this effect ordinarily frequented this prince's house),
discovered not a syllable of this intelligence to any one whatever; but
going the next day to the St. Catherine's Mount,—[An eminence
outside Rouen overlooking the Seine. D.W.]—from which our battery
played against the town (for it was during the time of the siege), and
having in company with him the said lord almoner, and another bishop, he
saw this gentleman, who had been denoted to him, and presently sent for
him; to whom, being come before him, seeing him already pale and trembling
with the conscience of his guilt, he thus said, "Monsieur," such an one,
"you guess what I have to say to you; your countenance discovers it; 'tis
in vain to disguise your practice, for I am so well informed of your
business, that it will but make worse for you, to go about to conceal or
deny it: you know very well such and such passages" (which were the most
secret circumstances of his conspiracy), "and therefore be sure, as you
tender your own life, to confess to me the whole truth of the design." The
poor man seeing himself thus trapped and convicted (for the whole business
had been discovered to the queen by one of the accomplices), was in such a
taking, he knew not what to do; but, folding his hands, to beg and sue for
mercy, he threw himself at his prince's feet, who taking him up, proceeded
to say, "Come, sir; tell me, have I at any time done you offence? or have
I, through private hatred or malice, offended any kinsman or friend of
yours? It is not above three weeks that I have known you; what inducement,
then, could move you to attempt my death?" To which the gentleman with a
trembling voice replied, "That it was no particular grudge he had to his
person, but the general interest and concern of his party, and that he had
been put upon it by some who had persuaded him it would be a meritorious
act, by any means, to extirpate so great and so powerful an enemy of their
religion." "Well," said the prince, "I will now let you see, how much more
charitable the religion is that I maintain, than that which you profess:
yours has counselled you to kill me, without hearing me speak, and without
ever having given you any cause of offence; and mine commands me to
forgive you, convict as you are, by your own confession, of a design to
kill me without reason.—[Imitated by Voltaire. See Nodier,
Questions, p. 165.]—Get you gone; let me see you no more; and, if
you are wise, choose henceforward honester men for your counsellors in
your designs."—[Dampmartin, La Fortune de la Coup, liv. ii., p. 139]</p>
<p>The Emperor Augustus,—[This story is taken from Seneca, De
Clementia, i. 9.]—being in Gaul, had certain information of a
conspiracy L. Cinna was contriving against him; he therefore resolved to
make him an example; and, to that end, sent to summon his friends to meet
the next morning in counsel. But the night between he passed in great
unquietness of mind, considering that he was about to put to death a young
man, of an illustrious family, and nephew to the great Pompey, and this
made him break out into several passionate complainings. "What then," said
he, "is it possible that I am to live in perpetual anxiety and alarm, and
suffer my would-be assassin, meantime, to walk abroad at liberty? Shall he
go unpunished, after having conspired against my life, a life that I have
hitherto defended in so many civil wars, in so many battles by land and by
sea? And after having settled the universal peace of the whole world,
shall this man be pardoned, who has conspired not only to murder, but to
sacrifice me?"—for the conspiracy was to kill him at sacrifice.
After which, remaining for some time silent, he began again, in louder
tones, and exclaimed against himself, saying: "Why livest thou, if it be
for the good of so many that thou shouldst die? must there be no end of
thy revenges and cruelties? Is thy life of so great value, that so many
mischiefs must be done to preserve it?" His wife Livia, seeing him in this
perplexity: "Will you take a woman's counsel?" said she. "Do as the
physicians do, who, when the ordinary recipes will do no good, make trial
of the contrary. By severity you have hitherto prevailed nothing; Lepidus
has followed Salvidienus; Murena, Lepidus; Caepio, Murena; Egnatius,
Caepio. Begin now, and try how sweetness and clemency will succeed. Cinna
is convict; forgive him, he will never henceforth have the heart to hurt
thee, and it will be an act to thy glory." Augustus was well pleased that
he had met with an advocate of his own humour; wherefore, having thanked
his wife, and, in the morning, countermanded his friends he had before
summoned to council, he commanded Cinna all alone to be brought to him;
who being accordingly come, and a chair by his appointment set him, having
ordered all the rest out of the room, he spake to him after this manner:
"In the first place, Cinna, I demand of thee patient audience; do not
interrupt me in what I am about to say, and I will afterwards give thee
time and leisure to answer. Thou knowest, Cinna,—[This passage,
borrowed from Seneca, has been paraphrased in verse by Corneille. See
Nodier, Questions de la Literature llgale, 1828, pp. 7, 160. The monologue
of Augustus in this chapter is also from Seneca. Ibid., 164.]—that
having taken thee prisoner in the enemy's camp, and thou an enemy, not
only so become, but born so, I gave thee thy life, restored to thee all
thy goods, and, finally, put thee in so good a posture, by my bounty, of
living well and at thy ease, that the victorious envied the conquered. The
sacerdotal office which thou madest suit to me for, I conferred upon thee,
after having denied it to others, whose fathers have ever borne arms in my
service. After so many obligations, thou hast undertaken to kill me." At
which Cinna crying out that he was very far from entertaining any so
wicked a thought: "Thou dost not keep thy promise, Cinna," continued
Augustus, "that thou wouldst not interrupt me. Yes, thou hast undertaken
to murder me in such a place, on such a day, in such and such company, and
in such a manner." At which words, seeing Cinna astounded and silent, not
upon the account of his promise so to be, but interdict with the weight of
his conscience: "Why," proceeded Augustus, "to what end wouldst thou do
it? Is it to be emperor? Believe me, the Republic is in very ill
condition, if I am the only man betwixt thee and the empire. Thou art not
able so much as to defend thy own house, and but t'other day was baffled
in a suit, by the opposed interest of a mere manumitted slave. What, hast
thou neither means nor power in any other thing, but only to undertake
Caesar? I quit the throne, if there be no other than I to obstruct thy
hopes. Canst thou believe that Paulus, that Fabius, that the Cossii and
the Servilii, and so many noble Romans, not only so in title, but who by
their virtue honour their nobility, would suffer or endure thee?" After
this, and a great deal more that he said to him (for he was two long hours
in speaking), "Now go, Cinna, go thy way: I give thee that life as traitor
and parricide, which I before gave thee in the quality of an enemy. Let
friendship from this time forward begin betwixt us, and let us show
whether I have given, or thou hast received thy life with the better
faith"; and so departed from him. Some time after, he preferred him to the
consular dignity, complaining that he had not the confidence to demand it;
had him ever after for his very great friend, and was, at last, made by
him sole heir to all his estate. Now, from the time of this accident which
befell Augustus in the fortieth year of his age, he never had any
conspiracy or attempt against him, and so reaped the due reward of this
his so generous clemency. But it did not so happen with our prince, his
moderation and mercy not so securing him, but that he afterwards fell into
the toils of the like treason,—[The Duc de Guise was assassinated in
1563 by Poltrot.]—so vain and futile a thing is human prudence;
throughout all our projects, counsels and precautions, Fortune will still
be mistress of events.</p>
<p>We repute physicians fortunate when they hit upon a lucky cure, as if
there was no other art but theirs that could not stand upon its own legs,
and whose foundations are too weak to support itself upon its own basis;
as if no other art stood in need of Fortune's hand to help it. For my
part, I think of physic as much good or ill as any one would have me: for,
thanks be to God, we have no traffic together. I am of a quite contrary
humour to other men, for I always despise it; but when I am sick, instead
of recanting, or entering into composition with it, I begin, moreover, to
hate and fear it, telling them who importune me to take physic, that at
all events they must give me time to recover my strength and health, that
I may be the better able to support and encounter the violence and danger
of their potions. I let nature work, supposing her to be sufficiently
armed with teeth and claws to defend herself from the assaults of
infirmity, and to uphold that contexture, the dissolution of which she
flies and abhors. I am afraid, lest, instead of assisting her when close
grappled and struggling with disease, I should assist her adversary, and
burden her still more with work to do.</p>
<p>Now, I say, that not in physic only, but in other more certain arts,
fortune has a very great part.</p>
<p>The poetic raptures, the flights of fancy, that ravish and transport the
author out of himself, why should we not attribute them to his good
fortune, since he himself confesses that they exceed his sufficiency and
force, and acknowledges them to proceed from something else than himself,
and that he has them no more in his power than the orators say they have
those extraordinary motions and agitations that sometimes push them beyond
their design. It is the same in painting, where touches shall sometimes
slip from the hand of the painter, so surpassing both his conception and
his art, as to beget his own admiration and astonishment. But Fortune does
yet more evidently manifest the share she has in all things of this kind,
by the graces and elegances we find in them, not only beyond the
intention, but even without the knowledge of the workman: a competent
reader often discovers in other men's writings other perfections than the
author himself either intended or perceived, a richer sense and more
quaint expression.</p>
<p>As to military enterprises, every one sees how great a hand Fortune has in
them. Even in our counsels and deliberations there must, certainly, be
something of chance and good-luck mixed with human prudence; for all that
our wisdom can do alone is no great matter; the more piercing, quick, and
apprehensive it is, the weaker it finds itself, and is by so much more apt
to mistrust itself. I am of Sylla's opinion;—["Who freed his great
deeds from envy by ever attributing them to his good fortune, and finally
by surnaming himself Faustus, the Lucky."—Plutarch, How far a Man
may praise Himself, c. 9.]—and when I closely examine the most
glorious exploits of war, I perceive, methinks, that those who carry them
on make use of counsel and debate only for custom's sake, and leave the
best part of the enterprise to Fortune, and relying upon her aid,
transgress, at every turn, the bounds of military conduct and the rules of
war. There happen, sometimes, fortuitous alacrities and strange furies in
their deliberations, that for the most part prompt them to follow the
worst grounded counsels, and swell their courage beyond the limits of
reason. Whence it happened that several of the great captains of old, to
justify those rash resolutions, have been fain to tell their soldiers that
they were invited to such attempts by some inspiration, some sign and
prognostic.</p>
<p>Wherefore, in this doubt and uncertainty, that the shortsightedness of
human wisdom to see and choose the best (by reason of the difficulties
that the various accidents and circumstances of things bring along with
them) perplexes us withal, the surest way, in my opinion, did no other
consideration invite us to it, is to pitch upon that wherein is the
greatest appearance of honesty and justice; and not, being certain of the
shortest, to keep the straightest and most direct way; as in the two
examples I have just given, there is no question but it was more noble and
generous in him who had received the offence, to pardon it, than to do
otherwise. If the former—[The Duc de Guise.]—miscarried in it,
he is not, nevertheless, to be blamed for his good intention; neither does
any one know if he had proceeded otherwise, whether by that means he had
avoided the end his destiny had appointed for him; and he had, moreover,
lost the glory of so humane an act.</p>
<p>You will read in history, of many who have been in such apprehension, that
the most part have taken the course to meet and anticipate conspiracies
against them by punishment and revenge; but I find very few who have
reaped any advantage by this proceeding; witness so many Roman emperors.
Whoever finds himself in this danger, ought not to expect much either from
his vigilance or power; for how hard a thing is it for a man to secure
himself from an enemy, who lies concealed under the countenance of the
most assiduous friend we have, and to discover and know the wills and
inward thoughts of those who are in our personal service. 'Tis to much
purpose to have a guard of foreigners about one, and to be always fenced
about with a pale of armed men; whosoever despises his own life, is always
master of that of another man.—[Seneca, Ep., 4.]—And moreover,
this continual suspicion, that makes a prince jealous of all the world,
must of necessity be a strange torment to him. Therefore it was, that
Dion, being advertised that Callippus watched all opportunities to take
away his life, had never the heart to inquire more particularly into it,
saying, that he had rather die than live in that misery, that he must
continually stand upon his guard, not only against his enemies, but his
friends also;—[Plutarch, Apothegms.]—which Alexander much more
vividly and more roundly manifested in effect, when, having notice by a
letter from Parmenio, that Philip, his most beloved physician, was by
Darius' money corrupted to poison him, at the same time he gave the letter
to Philip to read, drank off the potion he had brought him. Was not this
to express a resolution, that if his friends had a mind to despatch him
out of the world, he was willing to give them opportunity to do it? This
prince is, indeed, the sovereign pattern of hazardous actions; but I do
not know whether there be another passage in his life wherein there is so
much firm courage as in this, nor so illustrious an image of the beauty
and greatness of his mind.</p>
<p>Those who preach to princes so circumspect and vigilant a jealousy and
distrust, under colour of security, preach to them ruin and dishonour:
nothing noble can be performed without danger. I know a person, naturally
of a very great daring and enterprising courage, whose good fortune is
continually marred by such persuasions, that he keep himself close
surrounded by his friends, that he must not hearken to any reconciliation
with his ancient enemies, that he must stand aloof, and not trust his
person in hands stronger than his own, what promises or offers soever they
may make him, or what advantages soever he may see before him. And I know
another, who has unexpectedly advanced his fortunes by following a clear
contrary advice.</p>
<p>Courage, the reputation and glory of which men seek with so greedy an
appetite, presents itself, when need requires, as magnificently in cuerpo,
as in full armour; in a closet, as in a camp; with arms pendant, as with
arms raised.</p>
<p>This over-circumspect and wary prudence is a mortal enemy to all high and
generous exploits. Scipio, to sound Syphax's intention, leaving his army,
abandoning Spain, not yet secure nor well settled in his new conquest,
could pass over into Africa in two small ships, to commit himself, in an
enemy's country, to the power of a barbarian king, to a faith untried and
unknown, without obligation, without hostage, under the sole security of
the grandeur of his own courage, his good fortune, and the promise of his
high hopes.—[ Livy, xxviii. 17.]</p>
<p>"Habita fides ipsam plerumque fidem obligat."<br/>
["Trust often obliges fidelity."—Livy, xxii. 22.]<br/></p>
<p>In a life of ambition and glory, it is necessary to hold a stiff rein upon
suspicion: fear and distrust invite and draw on offence. The most
mistrustful of our kings—[ Louis XI.]—established his affairs
principally by voluntarily committing his life and liberty into his
enemies' hands, by that action manifesting that he had absolute confidence
in them, to the end they might repose as great an assurance in him. Caesar
only opposed the authority of his countenance and the haughty sharpness of
his rebukes to his mutinous legions in arms against him:</p>
<p>"Stetit aggere fulti<br/>
Cespitis, intrepidus vultu: meruitque timeri,<br/>
Nil metuens."<br/>
["He stood on a mound, his countenance intrepid, and merited to be<br/>
feared, he fearing nothing."—Lucan, v. 316.]<br/></p>
<p>But it is true, withal, that this undaunted assurance is not to be
represented in its simple and entire form, but by such whom the
apprehension of death, and the worst that can happen, does not terrify and
affright; for to represent a pretended resolution with a pale and doubtful
countenance and trembling limbs, for the service of an important
reconciliation, will effect nothing to purpose. 'Tis an excellent way to
gain the heart and will of another, to submit and intrust one's self to
him, provided it appear to be freely done, and without the constraint of
necessity, and in such a condition, that a man manifestly does it out of a
pure and entire confidence in the party, at least, with a countenance
clear from any cloud of suspicion. I saw, when I was a boy, a gentleman,
who was governor of a great city, upon occasion of a popular commotion and
fury, not knowing what other course to take, go out of a place of very
great strength and security, and commit himself to the mercy of the
seditious rabble, in hopes by that means to appease the tumult before it
grew to a more formidable head; but it was ill for him that he did so, for
he was there miserably slain. But I am not, nevertheless, of opinion, that
he committed so great an error in going out, as men commonly reproach his
memory withal, as he did in choosing a gentle and submissive way for the
effecting his purpose, and in endeavouring to quiet this storm, rather by
obeying than commanding, and by entreaty rather than remonstrance; and I
am inclined to believe, that a gracious severity, with a soldierlike way
of commanding, full of security and confidence, suitable to the quality of
his person, and the dignity of his command, would have succeeded better
with him; at least, he had perished with greater decency and, reputation.
There is nothing so little to be expected or hoped for from this
many-headed monster, in its fury, as humanity and good nature; it is much
more capable of reverence and fear. I should also reproach him, that
having taken a resolution (in my judgment rather brave than rash) to
expose himself, weak and naked, in this tempestuous sea of enraged madmen,
he ought to have stuck to his text, and not for an instant to have
abandoned the high part he had undertaken; whereas, coming to discover his
danger nearer hand, and his nose happening to bleed, he again changed that
demiss and fawning countenance he had at first put on, into another of
fear and amazement, filling his voice with entreaties and his eyes with
tears, and, endeavouring so to withdraw and secure his person, that
carriage more inflamed their fury, and soon brought the effects of it upon
him.</p>
<p>It was upon a time intended that there should be a general muster of
several troops in arms (and that is the most proper occasion of secret
revenges, and there is no place where they can be executed with greater
safety), and there were public and manifest appearances, that there was no
safe coming for some, whose principal and necessary office it was to
review them. Whereupon a consultation was held, and several counsels were
proposed, as in a case that was very nice and of great difficulty; and
moreover of grave consequence. Mine, amongst the rest, was, that they
should by all means avoid giving any sign of suspicion, but that the
officers who were most in danger should boldly go, and with cheerful and
erect countenances ride boldly and confidently through the ranks, and that
instead of sparing fire (which the counsels of the major part tended to)
they should entreat the captains to command the soldiers to give round and
full volleys in honour of the spectators, and not to spare their powder.
This was accordingly done, and served so good use, as to please and
gratify the suspected troops, and thenceforward to beget a mutual and
wholesome confidence and intelligence amongst them.</p>
<p>I look upon Julius Caesar's way of winning men to him as the best and
finest that can be put in practice. First, he tried by clemency to make
himself beloved even by his very enemies, contenting himself, in detected
conspiracies, only publicly to declare, that he was pre-acquainted with
them; which being done, he took a noble resolution to await without
solicitude or fear, whatever might be the event, wholly resigning himself
to the protection of the gods and fortune: for, questionless, in this
state he was at the time when he was killed.</p>
<p>A stranger having publicly said, that he could teach Dionysius, the tyrant
of Syracuse, an infallible way to find out and discover all the
conspiracies his subjects could contrive against him, if he would give him
a good sum of money for his pains, Dionysius hearing of it, caused the man
to be brought to him, that he might learn an art so necessary to his
preservation. The man made answer, that all the art he knew, was, that he
should give him a talent, and afterwards boast that he had obtained a
singular secret from him. Dionysius liked the invention, and accordingly
caused six hundred crowns to be counted out to him. —[Plutarch,
Apothegms.]—It was not likely he should give so great a sum to a
person unknown, but upon the account of some extraordinary discovery, and
the belief of this served to keep his enemies in awe. Princes, however, do
wisely to publish the informations they receive of all the practices
against their lives, to possess men with an opinion they have so good
intelligence that nothing can be plotted against them, but they have
present notice of it. The Duke of Athens did a great many foolish things
in the establishment of his new tyranny over Florence: but this especially
was most notable, that having received the first intimation of the
conspiracies the people were hatching against him, from Matteo di Morozzo,
one of the conspirators, he presently put him to death, to suppress that
rumour, that it might not be thought any of the city disliked his
government.</p>
<p>I remember I have formerly read a story—[In Appian's Civil Wars,
book iv..]—of some Roman of great quality who, flying the tyranny of
the Triumvirate, had a thousand times by the subtlety of as many
inventions escaped from falling into the hands of those that pursued him.
It happened one day that a troop of horse, which was sent out to take him,
passed close by a brake where he was squat, and missed very narrowly of
spying him: but he considering, at this point, the pains and difficulties
wherein he had so long continued to evade the strict and incessant
searches that were every day made for him, the little pleasure he could
hope for in such a kind of life, and how much better it was for him to die
once for all, than to be perpetually at this pass, he started from his
seat, called them back, showed them his form,—[as of a squatting
hare.]—and voluntarily delivered himself up to their cruelty, by
that means to free both himself and them from further trouble. To invite a
man's enemies to come and cut his throat, seems a resolution a little
extravagant and odd; and yet I think he did better to take that course,
than to live in continual feverish fear of an accident for which there was
no cure. But seeing all the remedies a man can apply to such a disease,
are full of unquietness and uncertainty, 'tis better with a manly courage
to prepare one's self for the worst that can happen, and to extract some
consolation from this, that we are not certain the thing we fear will ever
come to pass.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />