Page:History of Freedom.djvu/153

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MASSACRE OF ST. BARTHOLOMEW
109


of language she may have used, the action of 1572 was uninfluenced by deliberations which were seven years old.

During the spring and summer the Tuscan agents diligently prepared their master for what was to come. Petrucci wrote on the 19th of March that, for a reason which he could not trust to paper, the marriage would certainly take place, though not until the Huguenots had delivered up their strongholds. Four weeks later Ala- manni announced that the Queen's pious design for restoring unity of faith would, by the grace of God, be speedily accomplished. On the 9th of August Petrucci was able to report that the plan arranged at Bayonne was near execution.[1] Yet he was not fully initiated. The Queen afterwards assured him that she had confided the secret to no foreign resident except the Nuncio,[2] and Petrucci resentfully complains that she had also consulted the Ambassador of Savoy. Venice, like Florence and Savoy, was not taken by surprise. In February the ambassador Contarini explained to the Senate the specious tranquillity in France, by saying that the Government reckoned on the death of the Admiral or the Queen of Navarre to work a momentous change.[3] Cavalli, his successor, judged that a business so grossly mismanaged showed no signs of deliberation.[4] There was another Venetian at Paris who was better informed. The Republic was seeking to withdraw from the league against the Turks; and her most illustrious statesman, Giovanni Michiel, was sent to solicit the help of France in negotiating peace.[5] The account which he gave of his

mission has been pronounced by a consummate judge

    Ministri di Francia. . . . II Signor Duca di Alva si satisfa piu di questa delibera- tione di me, perchè io non trovo cbe serva all' estirpation dell' heresia il castigar quelli cbe banno contravenuto all' editto (Santa Croce to Borromeo, Bayonne, July I, 1565, MS,).

  1. Desjardins, Négociations avec la Toscane, iii. 756, 765, 802,
  2. Io non ho fatto intendere co sa alcuna a nessuno principe; ho ben parlato al nunzio solo (Desp, Aug, 31; Desjardins, iii, 828).
  3. Alberi, Relazioni Vente, xii, 250.
  4. Alberi, xii. 3 28 .
  5. Son principal but et dessein estoit de sentir queUe espérance ilz pourroient avoir de parvenir à la paix avec Ie G, S, dont il s'est ouvert et a demandé ce qu'il en pouvoit espérer et attendre (Charles IX. to Du Ferrier, Sept. 28, 1572; Charrière, Négociations dans le Levant, iii. 310).