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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Charles the Bold, by Ruth Putnam
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Charles the Bold
+ Last Duke Of Burgundy, 1433-1477
+
+Author: Ruth Putnam
+
+Release Date: December 28, 2004 [EBook #14496]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHARLES THE BOLD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Lesley Halamek and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: CHARLES THE BOLD OF BURGUNDY (1433-1477) (FROM MS.
+STATUTE BOOK OF THE ORDER OF THE GOLDEN FLEECE, VIENNA) PAINTED
+BETWEEN 1518-1531]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHARLES THE BOLD
+
+LAST DUKE OF BURGUNDY
+
+1433-1477
+
+
+BY
+
+
+RUTH PUTNAM
+
+AUTHOR OF "WILLIAM THE SILENT," "A MEDIAEVAL PRINCESS," ETC.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS
+
+NEW YORK AND LONDON
+
+The Knickerbocker Press
+
+1908
+
+ * * * * *
+
+COPYRIGHT 1908,
+
+BY
+
+G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
+
+The Knickerbocker Press, New York
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+The admission of Charles, Duke of Burgundy into the series of Heroes
+of the Nations, is justified by his relation to events rather than by
+his national or his heroic qualities. _"Il n'avait pas assez de sens
+ni de malice pour conduire ses entreprises,"_ is one phrase of Philip
+de Commines in regard to the master he had once served. Render _sens_
+by _genius_ and _malice_ by _diplomacy_ and the words are not far
+wrong. Yet in spite of the failure to obtain either a kingly or an
+imperial crown, the story of those same unaccomplished enterprises
+contains the germs of much that has happened later in the borderlands
+of France and Germany where the projected "middle kingdom" might have
+been erected. A sketch of the duke's character with its traits of
+ambition and shortcomings may therefore be placed, not unfitly, among
+the pen portraits of individuals who have attempted to change the map
+of Europe.
+
+The materials for an exhaustive study of the times, and of the
+participants in the scenes thereof, are almost overwhelming
+in quantity. Into this narrative, I have woven the words of
+contemporaries when these related what they saw and thought, or at
+least what they said they saw or thought, about events passing within
+their sight or their ken. The veracity attained is only that of a
+mosaic of bits, each with its morsel of truth. And the rim in which
+these bits are set is too slender to contain all the illumination
+necessary. The narrative is, of necessity, partial and fragmentary,
+for a complete story would require a series of biographies presented
+in parallel columns. My own preliminary chapter to this book--a
+mere explanation of the presence of the dukes of Burgundy in the
+Netherlands--grew into an account of a sovereign whom they deposed and
+was published under the title of _A Mediaeval Princess._
+
+John Foster Kirk gave 1713 pages to his record of Charles the Bold,
+Duke of Burgundy. Forty years have elapsed since that publication
+appeared and a mass of interesting material pertinent to the subject
+has been given out to the public, while separate phases of it have
+been minutely discussed by competent critics, so that at every point
+there is new temptation for the biographer to expand the theme where
+the scope of his work demands brevity.
+
+In using the later fruit of historical investigation, it is delightful
+for an American to find that scholars of all nations do justice to
+Mr. Kirk's accuracy and industry even when they may differ from his
+conclusions. It has been my privilege to be permitted free access to
+this scholar's collection of books, and I would here express my deep
+gratitude to the Kirk family for their generosity and courtesy towards
+me.
+
+After some preliminary reading at Brussels and Paris and in England,
+the work for this volume has been completed in America, where the
+opportunity of securing the latest results of research and criticism
+is constantly increasing, although these results are still lodged
+under many roofs. I have had many reasons to thank the librarians of
+New York, Boston, and Washington, and also those of Harvard, Columbia,
+and Cornell universities for courtesies and for serviceable aid; and
+just as many reasons to regret the meagreness of what can be put
+between two covers as the gleanings from so rich a harvest.
+
+One word further in explanation of the use of _Bold_. The adjective
+has been retained simply because it has been so long identified with
+Charles in English usage. I should have preferred the word _Rash_ as
+a better equivalent for the contemporary term, applied to the duke in
+his lifetime,--_le temeraire_.
+
+R.P.
+
+WASHINGTON, D.C., 1908.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+* * *
+
+CHAPTER I
+CHILDHOOD
+
+CHAPTER II
+YOUTH
+
+CHAPTER III
+THE FEAST OF THE PHEASANT
+
+CHAPTER IV
+BURGUNDY AND FRANCE
+
+CHAPTER V
+THE COUNT AND THE DAUPHIN
+
+CHAPTER VI
+THE WAR OF PUBLIC WEAL
+
+CHAPTER VII
+LIEGE AND ITS FATE
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+THE NEW DUKE
+
+CHAPTER IX
+THE UNJOYOUS ENTRY
+
+CHAPTER X
+THE DUKE'S MARRIAGE
+
+CHAPTER XI
+THE MEETING AT PERONNE
+
+CHAPTER XII
+AN EASY VICTORY
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+A NEW ACQUISITION
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+ENGLISH AFFAIRS
+
+CHAPTER XV
+NEGOTIATIONS AND TREACHERY
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+GUELDERS
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+THE MEETING AT TREVES
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+COLOGNE, LORRAINE, AND ALSACE
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+THE FIRST REVERSES
+
+CHAPTER XX
+THE CAMPAIGNS OF 1475 AND 1476
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+THE BATTLE OF NANCY
+
+BIBLIOGRAPHY
+
+INDEX
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+* * *
+
+CHARLES THE BOLD, DUKE OF BURGUNDY _Frontispiece_
+From MS. statute book of the Order of the Golden
+Fleece at Vienna. The artist is unknown. Date
+of the codex is between 1518 and 1565. This
+portrait is possibly redrawn from that attributed
+to Roger van der Weyden. That, however,
+shows a much stronger face.
+
+PHILIP THE GOOD AS FOUNDER OF THE ORDER OF
+THE GOLDEN FLEECE
+From a reproduction of a miniature in MS. at Brussels.
+
+A DUKE OF BURGUNDY AND THE POPE AT AVIGNON
+From a contemporary miniature reproduced in
+Petit's _Hist. de Bourgogne_.
+
+PHILIP THE GOOD, DUKE OF BURGUNDY, AS PATRON
+OF LETTERS
+From a reproduction of part of a miniature in a
+beautiful MS. copy in Brussels Library of Jacques
+de Guise's _Annales_. The author is depicted
+presenting his book to the duke, who is attended
+by his son and his courtiers. The miniature is
+attributed by turns to Roger van der Weyden, to
+Guillaume Wijelant or Vrelant, and to Hans
+Memling.
+
+A CASTLE IN BURGUNDY
+From Petit's _Hist. de Bourgogne_.
+
+FRONTISPIECE OF A XVTH CENTURY ACCOUNT BOOK
+
+COUNT OF ST. POL AND HIS JESTER
+From reproduction of a miniature in Barante, _Les
+ducs de Bourgogne_,
+
+THE STATUE OF CHARLES OF BURGUNDY AT INNSBRUeCK
+
+LOUIS XI
+From an engraving by A. Boilly after a drawing by
+G. Boilly.
+
+PHILIP AND CHARLES OF BURGUNDY
+From a drawing in a MS. at Arras.
+
+BATTLE OF MONTL'HERY (JULY 16, 1465)
+From a contemporary miniature reproduced in
+Comines-Lenglet.
+
+LOUIS XI, WITH THE PRINCES AND SEIGNEURS OF THE
+WAR OF THE PUBLIC WEAL
+From a contemporary miniature reproduced in
+Comines-Lenglet.
+
+ANTHONY OF BURGUNDY
+After Hans Memling, Dresden Gallery.
+
+CHARLES, DUKE OF BURGUNDY, PRESIDING OVER A
+CHAPTER OF THE ORDER OF THE GOLDEN FLEECE
+From reproduction of a miniature in MS. at
+Brussels.
+
+PHILIP DE COMMINES
+
+OLIVIER DE LA MARCHE
+From sketch in MS. at Arras reproduced in
+_Memoires couronnes de l'acad. royale de Belgique,_
+xlix.
+
+MARY OF BURGUNDY
+From a contemporary miniature reproduced in
+Barante, _Les ducs de Bourgogne_.
+
+MAP OF ALSACE AND ADJACENT TERRITORIES
+From Toutey, _Charles le temeraire_.
+
+MEDAL OF CHARLES, DUKE OF BURGUNDY
+
+BURGUNDIAN STANDARD CAPTURED AT BEAUVAIS
+
+ARNOLD, DUKE OF GUELDERS
+From engraving by G. Robert in Comines-Lenglet.
+
+MARY OF BURGUNDY
+After design by C. Laplante.
+
+CHARLES THE BOLD
+Idealised by P. P. Rubens, Vienna Gallery. (By
+permission of J. J. Loewy, Vienna.)
+
+MAXIMILIAN OF AUSTRIA
+Medal.
+
+A FORTIFIED CHURCH IN BURGUNDY
+From Petit's _Hist. de Bourgogne_,
+
+KING RUHMREICH AND HIS DAUGHTER EHRENREICH
+(These characters in Maximilian's poem of _Theuerdank_
+represent Charles and Mary of Burgundy.)
+From a reproduction of a wood engraving by
+Schaeufelein in edition of 1517.
+
+A PLAN OF THE BATTLE OF MORAT
+Used by kind permission of Miss Sophia Kirk and
+J. B. Lippincott Company.
+
+PHILIBERT, DUKE OF SAVOY
+After a design by Matthey reproduced in
+Comines-Lenglet.
+
+PLAN OF THE BATTLE OF NANCY
+Used by kind permission of Miss Sophia Kirk and
+the J. B. Lippincott Company.
+
+PLAN OF THE BATTLE OF NANCY
+From contemporary miniature reproduced in
+Comines-Lenglet.
+
+A MONUMENT ON THE BATTLEFIELD AT NANCY
+From Barante, _Let ducs de Bourgogne_.
+
+THE TOMB OF CHARLES OF BURGUNDY
+Church of Notre Dame, Bruges
+
+
+
+
+
+CHARLES THE BOLD
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+CHILDHOOD
+
+1433-1440
+
+
+On St. Andrew's Eve, in the year 1433, the good people of Dijon were
+abroad, eager to catch what glimpses they might of certain stately
+functions to be formally celebrated by the Duke of Burgundy. The mere
+presence of the sovereign in the capital of his duchy was in itself
+a gala event from its rarity. Various cities of the dominions
+agglomerated under his sway claimed his attentions successively. His
+residence was now here and now there, without long tarrying anywhere.
+His coming was usually very welcome. In times of peaceful submission
+to his behest, the city of his sojourn reaped many advantages besides
+the amusement of seeing her streets alive beyond their wont. In the
+outlay for the necessities and the luxuries of the peripatetic ducal
+court, the expenditures were lavish, and in the temporary commercial
+activity enjoyed by the merchants, the fact that the burghers' own
+contributions to this luxury were heavy, passed into temporary
+oblivion.[1]
+
+This autumn visit of Philip the Good to Dijon was more significant
+than usual. It had lasted several weeks, and among its notable
+occasions was an assembly of the Knights of the Golden Fleece for the
+third anniversary of their Order. On this November 30th, Burgundy was
+to witness for the first time the pompous ceremonials inaugurated at
+Bruges in January, 1430. Three years had sufficed to render the new
+institution almost as well known as its senior English rival, the
+Order of the Garter, which it was destined to outshine for a brief
+period at least. Its foundation had formed part of the elaborate
+festivities accompanying the celebration of the marriage of Philip,
+Duke of Burgundy, to Isabella of Portugal. As a signal honour to his
+bride, Philip published his intention of creating a new order of
+knighthood which would evince "his great and perfect love for the
+noble state of chivalry."
+
+Rumour, indeed, told various tales about the duke's real motives. It
+was whispered that a certain lady of Bruges, whom he had distinguished
+by his attentions, was ridiculed for her red hair by a few merry
+courtiers, whereupon Philip declared that her tresses should be
+immortally honoured in the golden emblem of a new society.[2] But that
+may be set down as gossip. Philip's own assertion, when he instituted
+the Order of the Golden Fleece, was that he intended to create a
+bulwark
+
+ "for the reverence of God and the sustenance of our Christian
+ faith, and to honour and enhance the noble order of chivalry, and
+ also for three reasons hereafter declared; first, to honour the
+ ancient knights ...; second, to the end that these present.... may
+ exercise the deeds of chivalry and constantly improve; third, that
+ all gentlemen marking the honour paid to the knights will exert
+ themselves to attain the dignity." [2]
+
+The special homage to the new duchess was expressed in the device
+
+ _Aultre n'aray
+ Dame Isabeau tant que vivray[4]_
+
+This pledge of absolute fidelity to Dame Isabella was, indeed, utterly
+disregarded by the bridegroom, but in outward and formal honour to her
+he never failed.
+
+The new institution was, from the beginning, pre-eminently significant
+of the duke's magnificent state existence, wherein his Portuguese
+consort proved herself an efficient and able helpmeet. Again and again
+during a period of thirty years, rich in diplomatic parleying, did
+Isabella act as confidential ambassador for her husband, and many were
+the negotiations conducted by her to his satisfaction.[5]
+
+But it must be noted that whatever lay at the exact root of Philip's
+motives when he conceived the plan of his Order, the actual result of
+his foundation was not affected. He failed, indeed, to bring back into
+the world the ancient system of knighthood in its ideal purity and
+strength. Rather did he make a notable contribution to its decadence
+and speed its parting. What was brought into existence was a house
+of peers for the head of the Burgundian family, a body of faithful
+satellites who did not hamper their chief overmuch with the criticism
+permitted by the rules of their society, while their own glory added
+shining rays to the brilliant centre of the Burgundian court.
+
+Twenty-five, inclusive of the duke, was the original number appointed
+to form the chosen circle of knights. This was speedily increased to
+thirty-one, and a duty to be performed in the session of 1433, was
+the election of new members to fill vacancies and to round out the
+allotted tale.
+
+[Illustration: PHILIP THE GOOD AS FOUNDER OF THE ORDER OF THE GOLDEN
+FLEECE]
+
+In their manner of accomplishing the appointed task, the new
+chevaliers had, from the outset, evinced a readiness to cast their
+votes to the satisfaction of their chief, even if his pleasure
+directly conflicted with the regulations they had sworn to obey. No
+candidate was to be eligible whose birth was not legitimate,[6] a
+regulation quite ignored when the duke proposed the names of his sons
+Cornelius and Anthony. For his obedient knights did not refuse to open
+their ranks to these great bastards of Burgundy, who carried a bar
+sinister proudly on their escutcheon. So, too, others of Philip's many
+illegitimate descendants were not rejected when their father proposed
+their names.
+
+Again, it was plainly stipulated that the new member should have
+proven himself a knight of renown. Yet, in this session of 1433, one
+of the candidates proposed for election, though nominally a knight,
+had assuredly had no time to show his mettle. The dignity was his only
+because his spurs had been thrown right royally into his cradle before
+his tiny hands had sufficient baby strength to grasp a rattle, and
+before he was even old enough to use the pleasant gold to cut his
+teeth upon.[7]
+
+Among the eight elected at Dijon in 1433, was Charles of Burgundy,
+Count of Charolais, son of the sovereign duke, born at Dijon on the
+previous St. Martin's Eve, November 10th.[8]
+
+ "The new chevaliers, with the exception of the Count of
+ Virnenbourg who was absent, took the accustomed oath at the hands
+ of the sovereign in a room of his palace."
+
+
+So runs the record. Jean le Fevre, Seigneur de St. Remy, present on
+the occasion in his capacity of king-at-arms of the Order, is a trifle
+more communicative.[9] According to him, all the gentlemen were very
+joyous at their election as they received their collars and made their
+vows as stated. He excepted no member in the phrase about the joy
+displayed, though, as a matter of inference, the pleasure experienced
+by the Count of Charolais may be reckoned as somewhat problematical.
+
+The heir of Burgundy had attained the ripe age of just twenty days
+when thus officially listed among the chevaliers present at the
+festival. Born on November 10th of this same year, 1433,[10] he had
+been knighted on the very day of his baptism, when Charles, Count of
+Nevers, and the Seigneur of Croy were his sponsors. The former gave
+his name to the infant while the latter's name was destined to be
+identified with many unpleasant incidents in the career of the future
+man. This brief span of life is sufficient reason for the further item
+in the archives of the Golden Fleece:
+
+ "As to the Count of Charolais, he was carried into the same room.
+ There the sovereign, his father, and the duchess, his mother, took
+ the oath on his behalf. Afterwards the duke put the collars upon
+ all." [11]
+
+
+Thus was emphasised at birth the parental conviction that Charles of
+Burgundy was of different metal than the rest of the world. The great
+duke of the Occident made a distinct epoch in the history of chivalry
+when he conferred its dignities upon a speechless, unconscious infant.
+The theory that knighthood was a personal acquisition had been
+maintained up to this period, the Children of France[12] alone being
+excepted from the rule, though in his _Lay de Vaillance_ Eustache
+Deschamps complains that the degree of knighthood is actually
+conferred on those who are only ten or twelve years old, and who do
+not know what to do with the honour.[13] That plaint was written not
+later than the first years of the fifteenth century, and the poet's
+prediction that ruin of the institution was imminent when affected by
+such disorders seemed justified if, in 1433, even the years of the
+eligible age had shrunk to days. Philip himself had not received the
+accolade until he was twenty-five.
+
+How his predecessor in Holland, Count William VI., had acquitted
+himself valiantly the moment that he was dubbed knight is told by
+Froissart, and the tales of other accolades of the period are too well
+known to need reference.
+
+It is said that the baby cavalier was nourished by his own mother.
+Having lost her first two infants, Isabella was solicitous for the
+welfare of this third child, who also proved her last. He was,
+moreover, Philip's sole legal heir, as Michelle of France and Bonne of
+Artois, his first wives, had left no offspring. The care and devotion
+expended on the boy were repaid. Charles became a sturdy child who
+developed into youthful vigour. In person, he strangely resembled
+his mother and her Portuguese ancestors, rather than the English
+Lancastrians, from whom she was equally descended.
+
+His dark hair and his features were very different from the fair type
+of his paternal ancestors, the vigorous branch of the Valois family.
+Possibly other characteristics suggesting his Portuguese origin were
+intensified by close association with his mother, who supervised the
+education directed by the Seigneur d' Auxy. They often lived at The
+Hague, where Isabella acted as chief and official adviser to the
+duke's stadtholder in the administration. [14]
+
+Charles was a diligent pupil, if we may believe his contemporaries,
+surprisingly so, considering his early taste for all martial pursuits
+and his intense interest in military operations.
+
+At two years of age he received his first lesson in horsemanship, on
+a wooden steed constructed for his especial use by Jean Rampart, a
+saddler of Brussels.
+
+His biographers repeat from each other statements of his proficiency
+in Latin. This must be balanced by noting that the only texts which
+he could have read were probably not classic. In the inventory of the
+various Burgundian libraries of the period, there are not six Greek
+and Latin classical texts all told, and excepting Sallust, not a
+single Roman historian in the original.[15] There was a translation
+of Livy by the Prior of St. Eloi and late abridgments of Sallust,
+Suetonius, Lucan, and Caesar,[16] with a French version of Valerius
+Maximus, but nothing of Tacitus. Doubtless these versions and a volume
+called _Les faits des Romains_ were used as text-books to teach the
+young count about the world's conquerors. The last mentioned book
+shows what travesties of Roman history were gravely read in the
+fifteenth century.
+
+There are stories[17] that the bit of history most enjoyed by the
+pupil was the narrative of Alexander. Books about that hero were easy
+to come by long before the invention of printing, though Alexander
+would have had difficulty in recognising his identity under the
+strange mediaeval motley in which his namesake wandered over the land.
+No single man, with the possible exception of Charlemagne, was so
+much written about or played so brilliantly the part of a hero to
+the Middle Ages and after.[18] The simplicity and universality of his
+success were of a type to appeal to the boy Charles, himself built on
+simple lines. The fact, too, that Alexander was the son of a Philip
+stimulated his imagination and instilled in his breast hopes of
+conquering, not the whole world perhaps, but a good slice of territory
+which should enable him to hold his own between the emperor and the
+French king. Tales of definite schemes of early ambition are often
+fabricated in the later life of a conqueror, but in this case they may
+be believed, as all threads of testimony lead to the same conclusion.
+
+The air breathed by the boy when he first became conscious of his
+own individuality was certainly heavy with the aroma of satisfied
+ambition. The period of his childhood was a time when his father stood
+at the very zenith of his power. In 1435, was signed the Treaty of
+Arras, the death-blow to the long coalition existing between Burgundy
+and England to the continual detriment of France. Philip was
+reconciled with great solemnity to the king, responsible in his
+dauphin days for the murder of the late Duke of Burgundy. After
+ostentatiously parading his filial resentment sixteen long years,
+Philip forgave Charles VII. his share in the death of John the
+Fearless, on the bridge at Montereau, and swore to lend his support to
+keep the French monarch on the throne whither the efforts of Joan of
+Arc had carried him from Bourges, the forlorn court of his exile.
+
+England's pretensions were repudiated. To be sure, the recent
+coronation of Henry VI. at Paris was not immediately forgotten, but
+while the Duke of Bedford had actually administered the government as
+regent, in behalf of his infant nephew, it was a mere shadow of his
+office that passed to his successor. Bedford's death, in 1435, was
+almost coincident with the compact at Arras when the English Henry's
+realms across the Channel shrank to Normandy and the outlying
+fortresses of Picardy and Maine. Later events on English soil were to
+prove how little fitted was the son of Henry V. for sovereignty of any
+kind.
+
+Out of the negotiations at Arras, Philip of Burgundy rose triumphant
+with a seal set upon his personal importance.[19] His recognition of
+Charles VII. as lawful sovereign of France, and his reconciliation did
+not pass without signal gain to himself.
+
+The king declared his own hands unstained by the blood of John of
+Burgundy, agreed to punish all those designated by Philip as actually
+responsible for that treacherous murder, and pledged himself to erect
+a cross on the bridge at Montereau, the scene of the crime. Further,
+he relinquished various revenues in Burgundy, hitherto retained by the
+crown from the moment when the junior branch of the Valois had been
+invested with the duchy (1364); and he ceded the counties of Boulogne,
+Artois, and all the seigniories belonging to the French sovereign on
+both banks of the Somme. To this last cession, however, was appended
+the condition that the towns included in this clause could be redeemed
+at the king's pleasure, for the sum of four hundred thousand gold
+crowns. Further, Charles exempted Philip from acts of homage to
+himself, promised to demand no _aides_ from the duke's subjects
+in case of war, and to assist his cousin if he were attacked from
+England. Lastly, he renounced an alliance lately contracted with the
+emperor to Philip's disadvantage.[20]
+
+One clause in the treaty crowned the royal submissiveness towards the
+powerful vassal. It provided that in case of Charles's failure to
+observe all the stipulated conditions, his own subjects would be
+justified in taking arms against him at the duke's orders. A similar
+clause occurs in certain treaties between an earlier French king and
+his Flemish vassals, but always to the advantage of the suzerain, not
+to that of the lesser lords.
+
+The duke was left in a position infinitely superior to that of the
+king, whose realm was terribly exhausted by the long contest with
+England, a contest wherein one nation alone had felt the invader's
+foot. French prosperity had been nibbled off like green foliage before
+a swarm of locusts, and the whole north-eastern portion of France
+was in a sorry state of desolation by 1435. On the other hand, the
+territories covered by Burgundy as an overlord had greatly increased
+during the sixteen years that Philip had worn the title. An
+aggregation of duchies, counties, and lordships formed his domain,
+loosely hung together by reason of their several titles being vested
+in one person--titles which the bearer had inherited or assumed under
+various pretexts.
+
+Flanders and Artois, together with the duchy and county of Burgundy,
+came to him from his father, John the Fearless, in 1419. In 1421, he
+bought Namur. In 1430, he declared himself heir to his cousins in
+Brabant and Limbourg when Duke Anthony's second son followed his
+equally childless brother into a premature grave, and the claims were
+made good in spite of all opposition. Holland, Zealand, and Hainaut
+became his through the unwilling abdication of his other cousin,
+Jacqueline, in 1433. To save the life of her husband, Frank van
+Borselen, the last representative of the Bavarian House then
+formally resigned her titles, which she had already divested of all
+significance five years previously, when Philip of Burgundy had become
+her _ruward_, to relieve a "poor feminine person" of a weight of
+responsibility too heavy for her shoulders.[21]
+
+Divers items in the accounts show what Philip expended in having
+the titles of Holland, Zealand, and Hainaut added to his other
+designations. Also there were various places where his predecessor's
+name had to be effaced to make room for his. (Laborde, i., 345).]
+
+Antwerp and Mechlin were included in Brabant. Luxemburg was a later
+acquisition obtained through Elizabeth of Goerlitz.
+
+There were very shady bits in the chapters about Philip's entry into
+many of his possessions, but it is interesting to note how cleverly
+the best colour is given to his actions by Olivier de la Marche and
+other writers who enjoyed Burgundian patronage. Very gentle are the
+adjectives employed, and a nice cloak of legality is thrown over the
+naked facts as they are ushered into history. Contemporary criticism
+did occasionally make itself heard, especially from the emperor, who
+declared that the Netherland provinces must come to him as a lapsed
+imperial fief. For a time Philip denied that any links existed between
+his domain and the empire, but in 1449 he finally found it convenient
+to discuss the question with Frederic III. at Besancon; still he never
+came to the point of paying homage.
+
+All these territories made a goodly realm for a mere duke. But
+they were individual entities centred around one head with little
+interconnection.
+
+Philip thought that the one thing needed to bring his possessions into
+a national life, as coherent as that of France, was a unity of legal
+existence among the dissimilar parts, and the effort to attain this
+unity was the one thought dominating the career of his successor,
+whose pompous introduction to life naturally inspired him with a high
+idea of his own rank, and led him to dream of greater dignities for
+himself and his successor than a bundle of titles,--a splendid, vain,
+fatal dream as it proved.
+
+As a final cement to the new friendship between Burgundy and France,
+it was also agreed at Arras that the heir of the former should wed a
+daughter of Charles VII. When the Count of Charolais was five years
+old, the Seigneur of Crevecoeur,[22] "a wise and prudent gentleman"
+was despatched to the French court on divers missions, among which
+was the business of negotiating the projected alliance. A very joyous
+reception was accorded the envoy by the king and the queen, and his
+proposal was accepted in behalf of the second daughter, Catherine,
+easily substituted for an older sister, deceased between the first and
+second stages of negotiation.
+
+A year later, a formal betrothal took place at St Omer, whither
+the young bride was conducted, most honourably accompanied by the
+archbishops of Rheims and of Narbonne, by the counts of Vendome,
+Tonnerre, and Dunois, the young son of the Duke of Bourbon, named the
+Lord of Beaujeu, and various other distinguished nobles, besides a
+train of noble dames and demoiselles in special attendance on the
+princess, and an escort of three hundred horse.
+
+At the various cities where the party made halt they were graciously
+received, and all honour was paid to the ten-year-old Daughter of
+France. At Cambray, she was met by the duke's envoys and as she
+travelled on towards her destination, all the towns of Philip's
+obedience contributed their quota of welcome.
+
+At St. Omer, the duke was awaiting her coming. When her approach was
+announced he rode out in person to greet her, attended by a brilliant
+escort.
+
+[Illustration: A DUKE OF BURGUNDY AND THE POPE AT AVIGNON]
+
+Within the city, "melodious festivals" were ready to burst into tune;
+the betrothal was confirmed amid joyousness and the ceremony was
+followed by tourneys and jousts, all at the expense of the duke.
+
+What a series of pompous betrothals between infant parties the
+fifteenth and sixteenth centuries can show! Poor little puppets, in
+whose persons national interests were supposed to be centred, were
+made to lisp out their roles in international dramas whose final acts
+rarely were consistent with the promise of the prologue.
+
+Catherine did not live to become Duchess of Burgundy nor to temper the
+duel between her husband and her brother Louis. The remainder of
+her short existence was passed under the care of Duchess Isabella,
+sometimes in one city of the Netherlands, sometimes in another.
+
+La Marche[23] records one return of Philip to Brussels when his
+arrival was greeted by Charles of Burgundy, honourably accompanied
+by children of high birth about his age or less, some only eleven or
+twelve years old. There were with him Jehan de la Tremoille, Philip
+de Croy, Philip de Crevecoeur, Philip de Wavrin, and many others. All
+were mounted on little horses harnessed like that of their governor, a
+very honest and wise gentleman, named Messire Jehan, Seigneur et Ber
+d'Auxy. This gentleman was a fine man, well known, of good lineage,
+ready of speech and able to discuss matters of honour and of state.
+
+He was both hunter and falconer, skilled in all exercise and sport.
+
+ "Never [asserts La Marche] have I met a gentleman better adapted
+ to supervise the education of a young prince than he.... Among his
+ pupils were also Anthony, Bastard of Burgundy,[24] son of Philip,
+ and the Marquis Hugues de Rottelin. These lads were older than the
+ first mentioned."
+
+La Marche dilates on the pleasure the duke felt in this youthful band
+of horse, and then tells how, within Brussels,
+
+ "he was received by the magistrates and conducted to his palace,
+ where the Duchess of Burgundy awaited him holding by the hand
+ Madame Catherine of France, Countess of Charolais. She was about
+ twelve and seemed a lady grown, for she was good and wise, and
+ well conditioned for her age."
+
+At various state functions the Count and Countess of Charolais
+appeared together in public, and witnessed certain of the gorgeous
+and costly entertainments which were almost the daily food of the gay
+Burgundian court. One of these occasions was calculated to make a deep
+impression on the boy and to arouse his pride at the spectacle of a
+proud city wooing his father's favour, in deep humiliation.
+
+In 1436, an insurrection had occurred in Bruges, when the animosity of
+the burghers had caused the duchess to flee from their midst, holding
+her little son in her arms, alarmed for his personal safety. Philip
+suppressed the revolt, but, in his anger at its insolence, declared
+that never again would he set foot within the gates unless in company
+with his superior.
+
+[Illustration: PHILIP THE GOOD AS PATRON OF LETTERS
+
+THE YOUNG COUNT OF CHAROLAIS IS IN THE BACKGROUND WITH ONE OF PHILIP'S
+SONS FROM MINIATURE REPRODUCED IN BARANTE, "HIST. DES DUCS DE
+BOURGOGNE"]
+
+Among the many negotiations wherein Isabella played a prominent part
+as her husband's representative, were those concerning the liberation
+of the Duke of Orleans, who had remained in England, a prisoner, after
+the battle of Agincourt in 1415. The last advice given by Henry V.
+to his brothers was that they should make this captivity perpetual.
+Therefore, whenever overtures were made for his redemption, a strong
+party, headed by Humphrey of Gloucester, rejected them vehemently.
+
+In 1440, however, there was a turn in the tide of sentiment. Possibly
+the low state of the English exchequer made the duke's ransom more
+attractive than his person. At any rate, 120,000 golden crowns were
+accepted as his equivalent, and the exile of twenty-five years
+returned to France, having pledged himself never to bear arms against
+England.
+
+Isabella of Burgundy was at Calais to welcome him, and to escort him
+to St. Omer, where high revels were held in his honour and in that of
+his alliance with Marie of Cleves, Philip's niece.
+
+The week intervening between the betrothal and the nuptials was
+passed in a succession of banquets and tourneys, gorgeous in their
+elaboration. Moreover, St. Andrew's Day chancing to fall just then,
+the new Burgundian Order was convened and the Duke of Orleans was
+elected a Knight of the Golden Fleece, while in his turn he presented
+his cousin with the collar of his own Order of the Porcupine. Lord
+Cornwallis and other English gentlemen who had accompanied Orleans
+across the Channel participated in these gaieties, nor were they among
+the least favoured guests, adds Barante.
+
+Amity was triumphant, and there was a general feeling abroad that the
+returned exile was henceforth to be the ruling power in France. People
+began to look to him to act as the go-between in their behalf, to be
+their mediator with Charles VII., still little known at his best. Many
+towns turned towards him in hopes of finding a friend, and among them
+was Bruges. But it was not royal favours that Bruges sought. Her
+burghers felt great inconvenience from the breach with their sovereign
+duke. Anxious to be reinstated in his grace, they seized the
+opportunity of reminding Philip of his assertion, and they besought
+him to enter their gates in company with the Duke of Orleans, a
+prince of the blood, closer to the French sovereign than the Duke of
+Burgundy.
+
+After some demur, Philip consented to grant their petition. Possibly
+he was not loth to be persuaded. The deputies hastened back to Bruges
+to rejoice their fellow-citizens with the news, and to prepare a
+reception for their appeased sovereign, calculated to make him content
+with the late rebels.
+
+Before the grand cortege, composed of the two dukes, their consorts,
+and the dignitaries who had assisted in the feasts of marriage and of
+chivalry, reached the gates of Bruges, the citizens were ready with a
+touching spectacle of humility and repentance.[25]
+
+A league from the gates, the magistrates and burghers stood in the
+road awaiting the travellers from St. Omer. All were barefooted and
+bareheaded. Under the December sky they waited the approach of the
+stately procession. When the duke arrived, they all fell upon their
+knees and implored him to forgive the late troubles and to reinstate
+their city in his favour. Philip did not answer immediately--delay was
+always a feature of these episodes. Thereupon, the Duke of Orleans,
+both duchesses, and all the gentlemen joined their entreaties to the
+citizens' prayers. Again a pause, and then, as if generously yielding
+to pressure, Philip bade the burghers put on their shoes and their
+hats while he accepted at their hands the keys of all the gates. Then
+the long procession moved on towards Bruges. At the gate were the
+clergy, followed by the monks, nuns, and beguins of the various
+convents and foundations, bearing crosses, banners, reliquaries, and
+many precious ecclesiastical treasures. There, too, were the gilds
+and merchants, on horseback, with magnificent accoutrements freshly
+burnished to do honour to the welcome they offered their forgiving
+overlord.
+
+Throughout Bruges, at convenient places, platforms and stages
+were erected, whereon were enacted dramatic performances, given
+continuously, to provide amusement for the collected crowds. Sometimes
+the presentation carried significance beyond mere entertainment. Here
+a maid, garbed as a wood nymph, appeared leading a swan which wore the
+collar of the Golden Fleece and a porcupine. This last beast was to
+symbolise the Orleans device, _Near and Far_, as the creature was
+supposed to project his spines to a distance.
+
+One enthusiastic citizen covered his whole house with gold and the
+roof with silver leaves to betoken his satisfaction. Indeed, if we
+may believe the chroniclers, never in the memory of man had any city
+incurred so much expense to honour its lord. The duke permitted his
+heart to be touched by these proofs of devotion, and on the very
+evening of his arrival he evinced that his confidence was restored by
+sending the civic keys and a gracious message to the magistrates. At
+the news of this condescension the cries of "_Noel_" re-echoed afresh
+through the illuminated streets.
+
+Charles was not present at this entry, which took place on Saturday,
+December 11th, but Philip was so much entertained with the performance
+that he sent for his son, and on the following Saturday he and the
+Countess of Charolais came from Ghent to join the party. The Duke of
+Orleans and many nobles rode out of the city to meet the young couple,
+who were formally escorted to the palace by magistrates and citizens
+in a body. On the Sunday there were repetitions of some of the plays
+and every attention was offered by the Bruges burghers to their young
+guests. When Orleans departed with his bride on Tuesday, December
+14th, what wonder that the lady wept in sorrow at leaving these gay
+Burgundian doings!
+
+While Charles did not actually witness the humiliation of the
+citizens, the seven-year-old boy would, undoubtedly, have heard and
+known sufficient of the cause of the festivals to be fully aware that
+the citizens who had dared defy his father were glad to buy back his
+smiles at any cost to their pride and purse. He would have known, too,
+that merchants from Venice, Genoa, Florence, and elsewhere joined the
+Bruges burghers in the welcome to the mollified overlord. It was a
+spectacle of the relations between a city and the ducal father not to
+be easily forgotten by the son.
+
+
+[Footnote 1: The indefatigable Gachard has published an itinerary of
+Philip the Good, so far as he could make it. _(Collection des voyages
+des souverains des Pays Bas_, i., 71.) Unfortunately, owing to
+the destruction of papers, only a few years are complete. Between
+1428-1441, there is nothing. But the itinerary for 1441 and for other
+years shows how often the duke changed his residences. Sometimes he
+is accompanied by Madame de Bourgogne, sometimes by M. and Madame de
+Charolais.]
+
+[Footnote 2: It was also said that the woollen manufactures of
+Flanders were denoted by the emblem of the golden fleece.]
+
+[Footnote 3: Reiffenberg, _Histoire de l'Ordre de la Toison d'Or,_ p.
+xxi.]
+
+[Footnote 4: _ Hist. de I'Ordre,_ etc., p. i.]
+
+[Footnote 5: All the Burgundian embassies were not as patent to
+the public as were Isabella's. An item like the following from the
+accounts of 1448-49 whets the reader's curiosity:
+
+"To Jehan Lanternier, barber and varlet of the chamber, for delivering
+to a certain person for certain causes and for secret matters of which
+Monseigneur does not wish further declaration to be made, 53 pounds 17
+sous."
+
+(Laborde _Les Ducs de Bourgogne_, etc., "Preuves," i. xiii.)]
+
+[Footnote 6: "Vingt-quatre chevaliers gentilshommes de nom et d'armes
+et sans reproches nes et procrees en leal mariage" _(see_ description
+of the first list).--_Hist. de l'Ordre,_ p. xxi.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Jacquemin Dauxonne, a merchant of Lombardy living at
+Dijon, received twenty-two francs and a half for a rich cloth of black
+silk draped about the baptismal font. Why mourning was used on this
+joyful occasion does not appear. (Laborde, i., 321.)]
+
+[Footnote 8: Summary of a register containing the acts of the Order of
+the Golden Fleece quoted in _Histoire de l'Ordre,_ pp. 12, 13.]
+
+[Footnote 9: St. Remy, _Chronique_, ii., 284. St. Remy is usually
+called _Toison d'Or._]
+
+[Footnote 10: His full name was Charles Martin. One tower alone
+remains of the palace where he was born.]
+
+[Footnote 11: _Hist, de l'Ordre,_ p. 13.]
+
+[Footnote 12: Selden _(Titles of Honor_, p. 457), however, says he
+knows not by what authority this statement is made and that he knows
+nothing of it. Seven is the earliest age mentioned by Gautier for
+receiving knighthood.]
+
+[Footnote 13: Deschamps, _OEuvres Completes_, ii., 214.]
+
+[Footnote 14: The ancient quarrel between the old Holland parties of
+Hooks and Cods continually blazed out anew. On one notable occasion,
+to show her impartiality, the duchess appeared in public accompanied
+by the stadtholder, Lelaing, a partisan of the Hooks, and by Frank van
+Borselen, himself a Cod, the widower of Jacqueline, the late Countess
+of Holland.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Barante, _Histoire des Dues de Bourgogne_, vi., 2, note
+by Reiffenberg.]
+
+[Footnote 16: See _Catalogue des manuscrits des Ducs de Bourgogne,_
+"Resume historique," i., lxxix.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Barante, vi., 2, note.]
+
+[Footnote 18: Loomis, _Medieval Hellenism_.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Pirenne, _Histoire de Belgique_, ii., 231.]
+
+[Footnote 20: It was in June, 1434, that this alliance had been made.
+Sigismund claimed that Philip had no right in Brabant, Holland,
+Zealand, and Hainaut, which in his opinion were lapsed fiefs, of the
+empire.]
+
+[Footnote 21: Putnam, _A Medieval Princess_.
+
+[Footnote 22: Monstrelet, _La Chronique_, v., 344.]
+
+[Footnote 23: La Marche, _Memoires_, ii., 50.]
+
+[Footnote 24: Reiffenberg, _Essai sur les enfants naturels de Philippe
+de Bourgogne._]
+
+[Footnote 25: Meyer, _Commentarii sive Annales rerum Flandricarum, _
+p. 296.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+YOUTH
+
+1440-1453
+
+
+The heir of Burgundy was still in very tender years when he began to
+take official part in public affairs, sometimes associated with one
+parent, sometimes with the other.
+
+There was a practical advantage in bringing the boy to the fore by
+which the duke was glad to profit. With his own manifold interests, it
+was impossible for him to be present in his various capitals as often
+as was demanded by the usage of the diverse individual seigniories. It
+was politic, therefore, to magnify the representative capacity of his
+son and of his consort in order to obtain the grants and _aides_ which
+certain of his subjects declared could be given only when requested
+orally by their sovereign lord. Thus, in 1444, it was Count Charles
+and the duchess who appeared in Holland to ask an _aide_.[1] In the
+following year, Charles accompanied his father when Philip made one
+of his rare visits--there were only three between 1428 and 1466--to
+Holland and Zealand.
+
+[Illustration: A CASTLE IN BURGUNDY]
+
+Olivier de la Marche was among the attendants on this occasion, and he
+describes with great detail how rejoiced were the inhabitants to have
+their absentee count in their land.[2] Many matters could only be
+set aright by his authority. Among the complaints brought to him at
+Middelburg were accusations against a certain knight of high birth,
+Jehan de Dombourc. Philip ordered that the man be arrested at once and
+brought before him for trial. This was easier said than done. Warned
+of his danger, Dombourc, with four or five comrades, took refuge in
+the clock tower of the church of the Cordeliers, a sanctuary that
+could not be taken by storm.[2] He was provided with a good store of
+food, this audacious criminal, and prepared to stand a siege. There he
+remained three days, because, for the honour of the Church, they could
+not fire upon him.
+
+"And I remember [adds La Marche] seeing a nun come out and call to
+Jehan Dombourc, her brother, advising him to perish defending himself
+rather than to dishonour their lineage by falling into the hands of
+the executioner. Nevertheless, finally he was forced to surrender to
+his prince, and he was beheaded in the market-place at Middelburg,
+but, at the plea of his sister, the said nun, his body was delivered
+to her to be buried in consecrated ground."
+
+In this same visit Philip presided over the Zealand estates and the
+young count sat by his side, not as an idle spectator, but because
+usage required the presence of the heir as well as that of the Count
+of Zealand.
+
+When Charles was twelve he was present at an assembly of the Order of
+the Golden Fleece held in Ghent. It was the first occasion of the kind
+witnessed by La Marche, and very minute is his description of the
+lavish magnificence of the affair, undoubtedly intended to awe the
+citizens into complying with the requests of their Count of Flanders.
+
+Charles played a prominent part in all the functions, and assisted in
+the election of his tutor, Seigneur et Ber d'Auxy. Another candidate
+of that year was Frank van Borselen, Count of Ostrevant, widower of
+Jacqueline, late Countess of Holland.
+
+In 1446, the little Countess of Charolais died at Brussels.
+"Honourably as befitted a king's daughter" was she buried at Ste.
+Gudule.[4]
+
+ "Tireless in their devotion were the duke and duchess in her last
+ illness, and Charles VII. despatched two skilled doctors to her
+ aid but all efforts were vain.
+
+ "Much bemourned was the princess for she was virtuous. God have
+ pity on her soul"
+
+piously ejaculates La Marche.
+
+A little item[5] in the accounts suggests that a pleasant friendship
+had existed between the two young people:
+
+ "To Jehan de la Court, harper of Mme. the Countess of Charolais,
+ for a harp which she had bought from him and given to Ms. the
+ Count of Charolais for him to play and take his amusement, xii
+ francs."[6]
+
+It is easy to surmise that music was not, however, the young count's
+favourite amusement. In Philip's court, tournaments were still held
+and afforded a fascinating entertainment for a lad whose bent was
+undoubtedly towards a military career.
+
+One valiant actor in these tourneys where were revived the ancient
+traditions of knighthood, was Jacques de Lalaing, a chevalier with all
+the characteristics of times past, fighting for fame in the present.
+In his youth, this aspirant for reputation swore a vow to meet thirty
+knights in combat before he attained his thirtieth year. Dominated by
+a desire to fulfil his vow, Lalaing haunted the court of Burgundy,
+because the Netherlands were on the highroad between England and many
+points in Germany, Italy, and the East, and there he had the best
+chance of falling in with all the prowess that might be abroad. For
+stay-at-home prowess he cared naught. A delightful personage is
+Messire Jacques and a brave role does he play in the series of jousts,
+sporting gaily on the pages of the various Burgundian chroniclers,
+who recorded in their old age what they had seen in their youth. One
+description, however, of these encounters reads much like another and
+they need not be repeated.
+
+During his childhood Charles was a spectator only on the days of mimic
+battle. In his seventeenth year he was permitted to enter the lists
+as a regular combatant, a permission shared by his fellow pupils all
+eager to flesh their maiden spears. The duke arranged that his son
+should have a preliminary tilt a few days before the public affair in
+order to test his ability. All the courtiers--and apparently ladies
+were not excluded from the discussion on the matter--agreed that no
+better knight could be found for this purpose than Jacques de Lalaing,
+who, on his part, was highly honoured by being selected to gauge the
+untried capabilities of the prince.[7]
+
+In the park at Brussels with the duke and duchess as onlookers, the
+preliminary encounter took place. At the very first attack, Charles
+struck Messire Jacques on the shield and shattered his lance into many
+pieces. The duke was displeased because he thought that the knight
+had not exerted his full strength and was favouring his son. He
+accordingly sent word to Jacques that he must play in earnest and not
+hold his force in leash. Fresh lances were brought; again did
+the count withstand the attack so sturdily that both lances were
+shattered. This time the boy's mother was the dissatisfied one,
+thinking that the knight was too hard with his junior, but the duke
+only laughed.
+
+ "Thus differed the parents. The one desired him to prove his
+ manhood, the other was preoccupied with his safety. With these
+ two courses the trial ended amid rounds of applause for the
+ prince."[8]
+
+The actual tourney was held on the market-place in Brussels before a
+distinguished assembly. Count Charles was escorted into the arena by
+his cousin, the Count d'Estampes, and other nobles. Seigneur d'Auxy,
+his tutor, stood near to watch the maiden efforts of the prince and
+his mates. He had reason to be proud of Charles, both for his bearing
+and his skill. He gave and received excellent thrusts, broke more
+than ten lances, and did his duty so valiantly that in the evening he
+received the prize from two princesses, and "Montjoye" was cried
+by the heralds in his honour. From that time forth, the count was
+considered a puissant and rude jouster and gained great renown.
+
+ "And that is the reason why I commence my memoirs about him and
+ his deeds[9] [continues La Marche, on concluding his description
+ of the tournament], and I do not speak from hearsay and rumour.
+ As one who has been brought up with him from his youth in his
+ father's service and in his own, I will touch upon his education,
+ his morals, his character, and his habits from the moment when I
+ first saw him as appears above in my memoirs.
+
+ "As to his character, I will commence at the worst features. He
+ was hot, active, and impetuous: as a child he was very eager to
+ have his own way. Nevertheless, he had so much understanding and
+ good sense that he resisted his inclinations and in his youth no
+ one could be found sweeter or more courteous than he. He did not
+ take the name of God or the saints in vain, and held God in great
+ fear and reverence. He learned well and had a retentive memory. He
+ was fond of reading and of hearing read the stories of Lancelot
+ and Gawain, but to both he preferred the sea and boats. Falconry,
+ too, he loved and he hunted whenever he had leave. In archery he
+ early excelled his comrades and was good at other sports. Thus was
+ the count educated, trained, and taught, and thus did he devote
+ himself to good and excellent exercise."
+
+That the report of the lavishness and extravagance of the Burgundian
+court was no idle rumour, exaggerated by frequent repetitions, is
+attested to by every bit of contemporary evidence. Enthusiastic and
+loyal chroniclers dwell on the magnificence, and the arid details of
+bills paid show what it cost to attain the vaunted perfection, while
+the protests from taxpayers prove that this splendour did not grow
+like the lilies of the field.
+
+[Illustration: FRONTISPIECE OF AN ACCOUNT-BOOK XVTH CENTURY]
+
+Philip's treasury had many separate compartments. There were many
+quarters to which he could turn for his needed supplies, but there
+were times when his exchequer ran very threateningly low, and his
+financial stress led him to be very conciliatory towards the burghers
+with full purses.
+
+In 1445, Ghent had been honoured by the celebration of the feast of
+the Order of the Golden Fleece within her gates. Two years later,
+Philip appeared in person at a meeting of the _collace_, or municipal
+assembly, and delivered a harangue to the Ghentish magistrates and
+burghers, flattering them, moreover, by using their vernacular. The
+tenor of this speech was as follows[10]:
+
+ "My good and faithful friends, you know how I have been brought
+ up among you from my infancy. That is why I have always loved you
+ more than the inhabitants of all my other cities, and I have
+ proved this by acceding to all your requests. I believe then that
+ I am justified in hoping that you will not abandon me to-day when
+ I have need of your support. Doubtless you are not ignorant of the
+ condition of my father's treasury at the period of his death. The
+ majority of his possessions had been sold. His jewels were
+ in pawn. Nevertheless, the demands of a legitimate vengeance
+ compelled me to undertake a long and bloody war, during which the
+ defence of my fortresses and of my cities, and the pay of my
+ army have necessitated outlays so large that it is impossible to
+ estimate them. You know, too, that at the very moment when the war
+ on France was at its height, I was obliged, in order to assure the
+ protection of my country of Flanders, to take arms against the
+ English in Hainaut, in Zealand, and in Friesland, a proceeding
+ costing me more than 10,000 _saluts d'or,_ which I raised with
+ difficulty. Was I not equally obliged to proceed against Liege, in
+ behalf of my countship of Namur, which sprang from the bosom of
+ Flanders? It is not necessary to add to all these outlays those
+ which I assume daily for the cause of the Christians in Jerusalem,
+ and the maintenance of the Holy Sepulchre.
+
+ "It is true, however, that, yielding to the persuasions of the
+ pope and the Council, I have now consented to put an end to the
+ evils multiplied by war by forgetting my father's death, and by
+ reconciling myself with the king. Since the conclusion of this
+ treaty, I considered that while I had succeeded in preserving
+ to my subjects during the war the advantages of industry and of
+ peace, they had submitted to heavy burdens in taxes and in
+ voluntary contributions, and that it was my duty to re-establish
+ order and justice in the administration. But everything went on as
+ though the war had not ceased. All my frontiers have been menaced,
+ and I found myself obliged to make good my rights in Luxemburg, so
+ useful to the defence of my other lands, especially of Brabant and
+ Flanders.
+
+ "In this way, my expenses continued to increase; all my resources
+ are now exhausted, and the saddest part of it all is that the good
+ cities and communes of Flanders and especially the country folk
+ are at the very end of their sacrifices. With grief I see many of
+ my subjects unable to pay their taxes, and obliged to emigrate.
+ Nevertheless, my receipts are so scanty that I have little
+ advantage from them. Nor do I reap more from my hereditary lands,
+ for all are equally impoverished.
+
+ "A way must be found to ease the poor people, and at the same time
+ to protect Flanders from insult, Flanders for whose sake I would
+ risk my own person, although to arrive at this end, important
+ measures have become imperative."
+
+After this affectionate preamble, Philip finally states that, in order
+to raise the requisite revenues, no method seemed to him so good and
+so simple as a tax on salt, three sous on every measure for a term of
+twelve years. He promised to dispense with all other subsidies and to
+make his son swear to demand nothing further as long as the _gabelle_
+was imposed.
+
+ "Know [he added in conclusion] that even if you consent to it I
+ will renounce it if others prove of a different opinion, for I do
+ not desire that the communes of Flanders be more heavily weighted
+ than any other portion of my territory."
+
+The duke might have spared his trouble and his elaborate
+condescension. The answer to his conciliatory request was a flat
+refusal to consider the matter at all. Salt was a vital necessity to
+Flemish fisheries, and its cost could not be increased to the least
+degree without serious inconvenience. The Flemings were wroth at his
+imitating the worst custom of his French kinsmen.
+
+Philip departed from Ghent in great dudgeon. After a time he was
+persuaded that the indisposition of the town to meet his reasonable
+wishes was not due to the citizens at large, but to the machinations
+of a few unruly agitators among the magistrates. In 1449, therefore,
+he took a high-handed course of trying to direct the issue of the
+regular municipal elections, so as to ensure the choice of magistrates
+on whose obedience he could rely. The appearance of Burgundian troops
+in Ghent, before the election of mid-August, aroused the wrath of the
+community, who thought that their most cherished franchises were in
+jeopardy.
+
+This was the beginning of a bitter struggle between Ghent and Philip.
+The duke found it no light matter to coerce the independent burghers
+into remembering that they were simply part of the Burgundian state.
+"_Tantae molis erat liberam gentem in servitutem adigere_!" ejaculates
+Meyer in the midst of his chronicle of the details of fourteen months
+of active hostilities.[11] Matters were long in coming to an outbreak.
+Various points had been contended over, when Philip had endeavoured
+to change the seat of the great council, or to take divers measures
+tending to concentrate certain judicial or legislative functions for
+his own convenience, but in a manner prejudicial to the autonomy of
+Ghent. His centripetal policy was disliked, but when his policy went
+further, and he attempted to control purely civic offices, dislike
+grew into resentment and the Ghenters rose in open revolt.
+
+For a time, their opposition passed in Philip's estimation as mere
+insignificant unruliness. By 1452, however, the date of the tourney
+above described, it became evident that a vital issue was at stake.
+The Estates of Flanders endeavoured to mediate between overlord and
+town, but without success. Owing to Philip's interference in the
+elections, the results were declared void, and when a new election was
+appointed, the Burgundians accused the city of hastily augmenting its
+number of legal voters by over-facile naturalisation laws. The gilds,
+too, evinced a readiness to be very lenient in their scrutiny of
+candidates for admission to their cherished privileges, preferring,
+for the nonce, numbers to quality. Occupancy of furnished rooms was
+declared sufficient for enfranchisement, and there were cases where
+mere guests of a bourgeois were hastily recorded on the lists as
+full-fledged citizens.
+
+By these means the popular party waxed very strong numerically. The
+sheriffs found themselves quite unequal to holding the rampant spirit
+of democracy in check. The regular government was overthrown, and the
+demagogues succeeded in electing three captains _(hooftmans)_
+invested with arbitrary power for the time being. The decrees of
+the ex-sheriffs were suspended, and a mass of very radical measures
+promulgated and joyfully confirmed by the populace, assembled on the
+Friday market. It was to be the judgment of the town meeting that
+ruled, not deputed authority. One ordinance stipulated that at the
+sound of the bell every burgher must hasten to the market-place, to
+lend his voice to the deliberations.
+
+For a time various negotiations went on between Philip and envoys from
+Ghent. The latter took a high hand and insinuated in unmistakable
+terms that if the duke refused an accommodation with them, they would
+appeal to their suzerain, the King of France. No act of rebellion,
+overt or covert, exasperated Philip more than this suggestion. Charles
+VII. was only too ready to ignore those clauses in the treaty of
+Arras, releasing the duke from homage, and virtually acknowledging his
+complete independence in his French territories. The king accepted
+missives from his late vassal's city, without reprimanding the writers
+for their presumption in signing themselves "Seigneurs of Ghent."[12]
+His action, however, was confined to mild attempts at mediation.
+
+It was plain to the duke that his other towns would follow Ghent's
+resistance to his authority if there were hopes of her success.
+Therefore he threw aside all other interests for the time being, and
+exerted himself to levy a body of troops to crush Flemish pretensions.
+His counsellors advised him to sound the temper of other citizens and
+to ascertain whether their sympathies were with Ghent. Answers of
+feeble loyalty came back to him from the majority of the other towns.
+Undoubtedly they highly approved Ghent's efforts. They, too, could
+not afford to pay taxes fraught with danger to their commerce, nor to
+relinquish one jot of privileges dearly bought at successive crises
+throughout a long period of years. The only doubt in their minds was
+as to the ultimate success of the burghers to stem the course of
+Burgundian usurpation. Therefore, they first hedged, and then
+consented to aid the duke. This course was pursued by the Hollanders
+and the Zealanders, all alike short-sighted.
+
+The Ghenters succeeded in possessing themselves of the castle of
+Poucque by force, and of the village of Gaveren by stratagem, taking
+advantage in the latter case of the castellan's absence at church.
+
+When every part of his dominions had been canvassed for troops, and
+Philip was prepared for his first active campaign against Ghent, he
+was anxious to leave his heir under the protection of the duchess,
+conscious that the imminent contest would be bitter and deadly. A
+pretence was made that the young count's accoutrements were not ready,
+and that, therefore, he would have to remain in Brussels.
+
+ "But he whose ambitions waxed, hastened the completion of his
+ accoutrements, and swore by St. George, the greatest oath he ever
+ used, that he would rather go in his shirt than not accompany his
+ father to punish his impudent rebel subjects."[13]
+
+The approaching hostilities were watched by foreign merchants in dread
+of commercial disaster.
+
+ "On May 18th, the _nations_[14] of the merchants of Bruges
+ departed thence to go to Ghent to try to make peace between that
+ city and the Duke of Burgundy, and there were _nations_ of Spain,
+ Aragon, Portugal, and Scotland, besides the Venetians, Milanese,
+ Genoese, and Luccans."[15]
+
+But the men of Ghent were beyond the point where commercial arguments
+could stem their course. The very day that this company arrived in the
+city, the burghers sallied forth six or seven thousand strong, fully
+equipped for offensive warfare.
+
+Both the actual engagements and guerilla skirmishes that raged over
+a minute stretch of territory were characterised by an extraordinary
+ferocity. Around Oudenarde, which town Philip was determined to
+relieve, men were beheaded like sheep.
+
+In the first regular engagement in which Charles took part, he showed
+a brave front and learned the duties of a prince by rewarding others
+with the honour of knighthood. Among those slain in the course of the
+war, were Cornelius, Bastard of Burgundy, and the gallant Jacques
+de Lalaing. Philip grieved deeply over the death of the former, his
+favourite among his natural sons, and buried him with all honours in
+the Church of Ste-Gudule in Brussels. The title by which he was known,
+hardly a proud one it would seem, passed to his brother Anthony.
+Lalaing, too, was greatly mourned, thus prematurely cut down in his
+thirty-third year.
+
+There was so much fear lest the duke's sole legitimate heir might also
+perish in these conflicts where there was no mercy, that Charles was
+persuaded to go to visit his mother in the hope that she would keep
+him by her side. She made a feast in his honour, but, to the surprise
+of all, the duchess, who had wished to protect her son from the mild
+perils of a tourney, now encouraged him with brave words to return
+to fight in all earnest for his inheritance.[16] He himself was very
+indignant at the efforts to treat him as a child.
+
+The first truce and negotiations for peace, initiated in the summer of
+1452, were broken off because the conditions were unbearable to the
+Ghenters. Another year of warfare followed before the decisive battle
+of Gaveren, in July, 1453, forced them sadly to succumb. There was
+no other course open to them. Not only were they defeated but their
+numbers were decimated.[17] With full allowance for exaggeration, it
+is certain that the loss was very heavy. Terms scornfully rejected at
+an earlier date were, in 1453, accepted with every humiliating detail.
+More, the defeated rebels were bidden to be grateful that their kind
+sovereign had imposed nothing further to the conditions. As to abating
+the severity of the articles, he declared that he would not change an
+_a_ for a _b_.[18]
+
+The chief provisions were as follows: The deans of the gilds were
+deprived of participation in the election of sheriffs. The privileges
+of the naturalisation laws were considerably abridged. No sentence of
+banishment could be pronounced without the intervention of the duke's
+bailiff, whose authorisation, too, was required before the publication
+of edicts, ordinances, etc. The sheriffs were forbidden to place their
+names at the head of letters to the officers of the duke. The banners
+were to be delivered to the duke and placed under five locks, whose
+several keys should be deposited with as many different people,
+without whose consensus the banners could not be brought forth to lead
+the burghers to sedition. One gate was to be closed every Thursday in
+memory of the day when the citizens had marched through it to attack
+their liege lord, and another was to be barred up in perpetuity or
+at the pleasure of their sovereign. To reimburse the duke for his
+enforced outlay, a heavy indemnity was to be paid by the city.
+
+July 30th was the date appointed for the final act of submission, the
+_amende honorable_ of the unfortunate city. The scene was very similar
+to that played at Bruges in 1440. Two thousand citizens headed by the
+sheriffs, councillors, and captains of the burgher guard met the
+duke and his suite a league without the walls of Ghent. Bareheaded,
+barefooted, and divested of all their robes of office and of dignity,
+clad only in shirts and small clothes, these magistrates confessed
+that they had wronged their loving lord by unruly rebellion, and
+begged his pardon most humbly.
+
+The duke spent the night of July 29th at Gaveren, prepared to march
+out in the morning with his whole army in handsome array. Philip was
+magnificently apparelled, but he rode the same horse which he had used
+on the day of battle, with the various wounds received on that day
+ostentatiously plastered over to make a dramatic show of what the
+injured sovereign had suffered at the hands of his disloyal subjects.
+
+The civic procession was headed by the Abbot of St. Bavon and the
+Prior of the Carthusians. The burghers who followed the half-clad
+officials were fully dressed but they, too, were barefoot and
+ungirdled. All prostrated themselves in the dust and cried, "Mercy on
+the town of Ghent." While they were thus prostrate, the town spokesman
+of the council made an elaborate speech in French, assuring the
+duke that if, out of his benign grace. he would take his loving and
+repentant subjects again into his favour, they would never again give
+him cause for reproach.
+
+ "At the conclusion of this harangue, the duke and the Count of
+ Charolais, there present, pardoned the petitioners for their evil
+ deeds. The men of Ghent re-entered their town more happy and
+ rejoiced than can be expressed, and the duke departed for Lille,
+ having disbanded his army, that every one might return to their
+ several homes." [19]
+
+The joy experienced by the conquered, here described by La Marche, as
+he looked back at the event from the calm retirement of his old age,
+was not visible to all eye-witnesses. The progress of this war was
+watched eagerly from other parts of Philip's dominion. His army was
+full of men from both the Burgundies, who sent frequent reports to
+their own homes. Some passages from one of these reports by an unknown
+war correspondent run as follows:
+
+ "As to news from here, Monday after St. Magdalen's Day,
+ Monseigneur the duke got the better of the Ghenters near Gaveren
+ between ten and eleven o'clock. They attacked him near his
+ quarters.... The duke risked his own person in advance of his
+ company in the very worst of the slaughter, which lasted from the
+ said place up to Ghent, a distance of about two leagues. The slain
+ number three or four thousand, more or less, and those drowned in
+ the river of Quaux about two hundred.... This Tuesday, the date of
+ writing, the army departs from their quarters to advance on Ghent
+ to demand the conditions lately offered them, and the bearer of
+ this letter will tell you what is the result. M. the duke and
+ his army marched up to Ghent and I have seen the bearing of the
+ citizens. They are very bitter and despondent. M. the marshall has
+ been parleying. I hear that matters have been settled. I hear that
+ the Ghenters' loss is thirteen to fourteen thousand men. I
+ cannot write more for I have no time owing to the haste of the
+ messenger."
+
+This was written July 23d. There is another despatch of July 31st,
+giving the last news, which was "very joyous." The public apology had
+just been enacted--
+
+ "and afterwards, in token of being conquered and as a confession
+ that my said seigneur was victorious, those of Ghent have
+ delivered up all their banners to the number of eighty. And on
+ this day my said lord has created seven or eight knights and
+ heralds in honour of his triumph, which is inestimable."[20]
+
+The duke's victory was certainly "inestimable" in its value to him,
+yet, in spite of the rigour enforced on this defeated people, they
+were not as crushed as they might have been had they submitted in
+1445. Philip was clever enough to be more lenient than appeared at
+first. Ancient privileges were confirmed in a special compact, and the
+duke swore to maintain all former concessions in their entirety except
+in the points above specified. Liberty of person was guaranteed, and
+it was expressly stipulated that if the bailiff refused to sustain the
+sheriffs in their exercise of justice, or tried to arrogate to himself
+more than his due authority, he should forfeit his office. Lastly, and
+more important than all, the duke made no attempt to revive the demand
+for the _gabelle_--salt was left free and untaxed. As a matter of
+fact, too, the duke was not exigeant in the fulfilment of every item
+of the treaty and, two years later, he increased certain privileges.
+He had cut the lion's claws but he had no desire to pit his strength
+again with Flemish communes. He had taught the audacious rebels a
+lesson and that sufficed him.[21]
+
+
+[Footnote 1: Blok, _Eene Hollandsche stad onder de Bourg.
+Oostenrijksche Heerschappij,_ p. 84.]
+
+[Footnote 2: La Marche, ii., 79, etc.]
+
+[Footnote 3: See also _Chronijcke van Nederlant,_ p. 76, and
+_Vlaamsche Kronijk,_ p. 203. Ed. C. Piot.]
+
+[Footnote 4: D'Escouchy, _Chronique_, i., 110.]
+
+[Footnote 5: The items of the funeral expenses can be found in
+Laborde, i., 380. There were 600 masses at two sous apiece.]
+
+[Footnote 6: In that same year, 1440, in which this gift is recorded,
+there is another item showing how Charles took his amusement not only
+on the harp but in planning some of the elaborate surprises regularly
+introduced between courses in the banquets. "To Barthelmy the painter,
+for making the cover of a pasty for the Count of Charolais to present
+to Monseigneur on the night of St. Martin in the previous year, v
+francs" (Laborde, i., 381).]
+
+[Footnote 7: La Marche, ii., 214.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Gachard puts this tournament in Lent, 1452. Charles's
+outfit cost 360 livres.]
+
+[Footnote 9: La Marche, i., ch. 21.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Kervyn, _Histoire de Flandre_, iv. Kervyn quotes from
+the _Dagboek des gentsche collatie_, M. Schayes.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Meyer, xvi., 303.]
+
+[Footnote 12: They were charged with using this phrase. Gachard says
+that they placed at the top of their letter their titles of
+sheriffs and deans, as princes and lords take the title of their
+seignories.--(La Marche, ii., 221. _See also_ d'Escouchy, ii., 25.)]
+
+[Footnote 13: La Marche, ii., 230.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Associations of merchants in foreign cities.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Chastellain, _OEuvres_, ii., 221.]
+
+[Footnote 16: La Marche, ii., 312. Chastellain, ii., 278. See also
+_Chronique d'Adrian de Budt_, p. 242, etc.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Meyer, p. 313. La Marche, ii., 313. Lavisse, _Histoire
+de France_, accepts 13,000 as the number slain. Chastellain (ii., 375)
+puts the number at 22-30,000, including those drowned by the duke's
+order. Du Clercq lets a certain sympathy for the rebellious people
+escape his pen. Chastellain and La Marche treat the antagonism to
+taxes as unreasonable.]
+
+[Footnote 18: Chastellain, ii., 387.]
+
+[Footnote 19: La Marche, ii., 331. The Chastellain MS. is lacking for
+this event.]
+
+[Footnote 20: _Revue des societes savantes des departements_, 7me.
+serie, 6, p. 209.
+
+These two reports were enclosed with brief notes dated July 31 and
+August 8, 1453, from the ducal attorney at Amont to the magistrates
+of Baume. The former was one of the highest officials in the
+Franche-Comte. The reporter might have been one of his secretaries.
+The two notes with their unsigned enclosures were discovered (1881)in
+the archives of the town of Baume-les-Dames.]
+
+[Footnote 21: Kervyn, _Histoire de Flandre_, iv., 494.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+THE FEAST OF THE PHEASANT
+
+1454
+
+
+After the fatigues of this contest with Ghent, followed a period of
+relaxation for the Burgundian nobles at Lille, where a notable
+round of gay festivities was enjoyed by the court. Adolph of Cleves
+inaugurated the series with an entertainment where, among other
+things, he delighted his friends by a representation of the tale of
+the miraculous swan,[1] famous in the annals of his house for bringing
+the opportune knight down the Rhine to wed the forlorn heiress.
+
+When his satisfied guests took their leave, Adolph placed a chaplet on
+the head of one of the gentlemen, thus designating him to devise a new
+amusement for the company; and under the invitation lurked a tacit
+challenge to make the coming occasion more brilliant than the first.
+Again and again was this process repeated. Entertainment followed
+entertainment, all a mixture of repasts and vaudeville shows in whose
+preparation the successive hosts vied with each other to attain
+perfection.
+
+The hard times, the stress of ready money, so eloquently painted when
+the merchants were implored to take pity on their poverty-stricken
+lord, were cast into utter oblivion. It was harvest tide for skilled
+craftsmen and artisans. Any one blessed with a clever or fantastic
+idea easily found a market for the product of his brain. He could see
+his poetic or quaint conception presented to an applauding public with
+a wealth of paraphernalia that a modern stage manager would not
+scorn. How much the nobles spent can only be inferred from the ducal
+accounts, which are eloquent with information about the creators of
+all this mimic pomp. About six sous a day was the wage earned by a
+painter, while the plumbers received eight. These latter were called
+upon to coax pliable lead into all sorts of shapes, often more
+grotesque than graceful.
+
+One fete followed another from the early autumn of 1453 to February,
+1454, when "The Feast of the Pheasant," as the ducal entertainment was
+called, crowned the series with an elaborate magnificence that has
+never been surpassed.
+
+Undoubtedly Philip possessed a genius for dramatic effect and it is
+more than possible that he instigated the progressive banquets for the
+express purpose of leading up to the occasion with which he intended
+to dazzle Europe.[2]
+
+[Illustration: COUNT OF ST. POL AND HIS JESTER]
+
+For the duke's thoughts were now turned from civic revolts to a great
+international movement which he hoped to see set in motion. Almost
+coincident with the capitulation of Ghent to Philip's will had been
+the capitulation of Constantinople to the Turks. The event long
+dreaded by pope and Christendom had happened at last (May 29, 1453).
+Again and again was the necessity for a united opposition to the
+inroads of the dangerous infidels urged by Rome. On the eve of St.
+Martin, 1453, a legate arrived in Lille bringing an official letter
+from the pope, setting forth the dire stress of the Christian Church,
+and imploring the mightiest duke of the Occident to be her saviour,
+and to assume the leadership of a crusade in her behalf against the
+encroaching Turk.[2]
+
+Philip was ready to give heed to the prayer. Whatever the exact
+sequence of his plans in relation to the court revels, the result was
+that his own banquet was utilised as a proper occasion for blazoning
+forth to the world with a flourish of trumpets his august intention of
+dislodging the invader from the ancient capital of the Eastern empire.
+
+The superintendence of the arrangements for this all-eclipsing fete
+was entrusted, as La Marche relates,
+
+ "to Messire Jehan, Seigneur de Lannoy, Knight of the Golden
+ Fleece, and a skilful ingenious gentleman, and to one Squire Jehan
+ Boudault, a notable and discreet man. And the duke honoured me so
+ far that he desired me to be consulted. Several councils were held
+ for the matter to which the chancellor and the first chamberlain
+ were invited. The latter had just returned from the war in
+ Luxemburg already described.
+
+ "These council meetings were very important and very private, and
+ after discussion it was decided what ceremonies and mysteries were
+ to be presented. The duke desired that I should personate the
+ character of Holy Church of which he wished to make use at this
+ assembly."
+
+As in many half amateur affairs the preparations took more time than
+was expected. At the first date set, all was not in readiness and the
+performance was postponed until February 17th. This entailed serious
+loss upon the provision merchants and they received compensation for
+the spoiled birds and other perishable edibles.[4]
+
+The gala-day opened with a tournament at which Adolph of Cleves again
+sported as Knight of the Swan to the applause of the onlookers. After
+the jousting, the guests adjourned to the banqueting hall, where fancy
+had indeed, run riot, to make ready for their admiring eyes and their
+sagacious palates. _Entremets_ is the term applied to the elaborate
+set pieces and side-shows provided to entertain the feasters between
+courses, and these were on an unprecedented scale.
+
+Three tables stood prepared respectively for the duke and his suite,
+for the Count of Charolais, his cousins, and their comrades, and for
+the knights and ladies. The first table was decorated with marvellous
+constructions, among which was a cruciform church whose mimic clock
+tower was capacious enough to hold a whole chorus of singers. The
+enormous pie in which twenty-eight musicians were discovered when the
+crust was cut may have been the original of that pasty whose opening
+revealed four-and-twenty blackbirds in a similar plight. Wild animals
+wandered gravely at a machinist's will through deep forests, but in
+the midst of the counterfeit brutes there was at least one live lion,
+for Gilles le Cat[5] received twenty shillings from the duke for the
+chain and locks he made to hold the savage beast fast "on the day of
+the said banquet."
+
+Again there was an anchored ship, manned with a full crew and rigged
+completely. "I hardly think," observes La Marche, "that the greatest
+ship in the world has a greater number of ropes and sails."
+
+Before the guests seated themselves they wandered around the hall
+and inspected the decorations one by one. Nor was their admiration
+exhausted when they turned to the discussion of the toothsome dainties
+provided for their delectation.
+
+During the progress of the banquet, the story of Jason was enacted.
+Time there certainly was for the play. La Marche estimated forty-eight
+dishes to every course, though he qualifies his statement by the
+admission that his memory might be inexact. These dishes were wheeled
+over the tables in little chariots before each person in turn.
+
+"Such were the mundane marvels that graced the fete," is the
+conclusion of La Marche's[6] exhaustive enumeration of the
+masterpieces from artists' workshops and ducal kitchen.
+
+ "I will leave them now to record a pity moving _entremets_ which
+ seemed to be more special than the others. Through the portal
+ whence the previous actors had made their entrance, came a giant
+ larger without artifice than any I had ever seen, clad in a long
+ green silk robe, a turban on his head like a Saracen in Granada.
+ His left hand held a great, old-fashioned two-bladed axe, his
+ right hand led an elephant covered with silk. On its back was a
+ castle wherein sat a lady looking like a nun, wearing a mantle of
+ black cloth and a white head-dress like a recluse.[7]
+
+ "Once within the hall and in sight of the noble company, like one
+ who had work before her, she said to the giant, her conductor:
+
+ "'Giant, prithee let me stay
+ For I spy a noble throng
+ To whom I wish to speak.'
+
+ "At these words her guide conducted his charge before the ducal
+ table and there she made a piteous appeal to all assembled to come
+ to rescue her, Holy Church, fallen into the hands of unbelieving
+ miscreants. As soon as she ceased speaking a body of officers
+ entered the hall, Toison d'Or, king-at-arms, bringing up the rear.
+ This last carried a live pheasant ornamented with a rich collar of
+ gold studded with jewels. Toison d'Or was followed by two maidens,
+ Mademoiselle Yolande, bastard daughter of the duke, and Isabelle
+ of Neufchatel, escorted by two gentlemen of the Order. They all
+ proceeded to the host. After greetings, Toison d'Or then said:
+
+ "'High and puissant prince and my redoubtable lord, here are
+ ladies who recommend themselves very humbly to you because it is,
+ and has been, the custom at great feasts and noble assemblies to
+ present to the lords and nobles a peacock or some other noble bird
+ whereon useful and valid vows may be made. I am sent hither with
+ these two demoiselles to present to you this noble pheasant,
+ praying you to remember them.'
+
+ "When these words were said, Monseigneur the duke, who knew for
+ what purpose he had given the banquet, looked at the personified
+ Church, and then, as though in pity for her stress, drew from his
+ bosom a document containing his vow to succour Christianity, as
+ will appear later. The Church manifested her joy, and seeing that
+ my said seigneur had given his vow to Toison d'Or, she again burst
+ forth forth into rhyme:
+
+ "'God be praised and highly served
+ By thee, my son, the foremost peer in France.
+ Thy sumptuous bearing have I close observed
+ Until it seemed thou wert reserved
+ To bring me my deliverance.
+ Near and far I seek alliance
+ And pray to God to grant thee grace
+ To work His pleasure in thy place.
+
+ "'0 every prince and noble, man and knight,
+ Ye see your master pledged to worthy deed.
+ Abandon ease, abjure delight,
+ Lift up your hand, each in his right,
+ Offer God the savings from thy greed.
+ I take my leave, imploring each, indeed,
+ To risk his life for Christian gain,
+ To serve his God and 'suage my pain.'
+
+ "At this the giant led off the elephant and departed by the same
+ way in which he had entered.
+
+ "When I had seen this _entremets_, that is, the Church and a
+ castle on the back of such a strange beast, I pondered as to
+ whether I could understand what it meant and could not make it out
+ otherwise except that she had brought this beast, rare among us,
+ in sign that she toiled and laboured in great adversity in the
+ region of Constantinople, whose trials we know, and the castle in
+ which she was signified Faith. Moreover, because this lady was
+ conducted by this mighty giant, armed, I inferred that she wished
+ to denote her dread of the Turkish arms which had chased her away
+ and sought her destruction.
+
+ "As soon as this play was played out, the noble gentlemen, moved
+ by pity and compassion, hastened to make vows, each in his own
+ fashion."
+
+ The vow of the Count of Charolais was as follows: "I swear to God
+ my creator, and to His glorious mother, to the ladies and to the
+ pheasant, that, if my very redoubtable lord and father embark on
+ this holy journey, and if it be his pleasure that I accompany him,
+ I will go and will serve him as well as I can and know how to do."
+
+Other vows were less simple: all kinds of fantastic conditions being
+appended according to individual fancy. One gentleman decided never to
+go to bed on a Saturday until his pledge were accomplished. Another
+that he would eat nothing on Fridays that had ever lived until he
+had had an opportunity of meeting the enemy hand to hand, and of
+attacking, at peril of his life, the banner of the Grand Turk.
+
+Philip Pot vowed never to sit at table on a Tuesday and to wear no
+protection on his right arm. This last the duke refused to permit.
+Hugues de Longueval vowed that when he had once turned his face to the
+East he would abstain from wine until he had plunged his sword in an
+infidel's blood, and that he would devote two years to the crusade
+even if he had to remain all alone, provided Constantinople were not
+recovered. Louis de Chevelast swore that no covering should protect
+his head until he had come to within four leagues of the infidels,
+and that he would fight a Turk on foot with nothing on his arm but a
+glove. There was the same emulation in the vows as in the banquets and
+many of the self-imposed penalties were as bizarre as the side-shows.
+
+There were so many chevaliers eager to bind themselves to the
+enterprise that the prolonged ceremony threatened to become tedious.
+The duke, therefore, declared that the morrow would be equally valid
+as the day.[8]
+
+The Count of St. Pol was the only knight present who made his going
+dependent on the consent of the King of France, a condition very
+displeasing to his liege lord of Burgundy.]
+
+ "To abridge my tale [continues La Marche], the banquet was
+ finished and the cloth removed and every one began to walk
+ around the room. To me it seemed like a dream, for, of all the
+ decorations, soon nothing remained but the crystal fountain.
+ When there was no further spectacle to distract me, then my
+ understanding began to work and various considerations touching
+ this business came into my mind. First, I pondered upon the
+ outrageous excess and great expense incurred in a brief space by
+ these banquets, for this fashion of progressive entertainments,
+ with the hosts designated by chaplets, had lasted a long time. All
+ had tried to outshine their predecessors, and all, especially my
+ said lord, had spent so much that I considered the whole thing
+ outrageous and without any justification for the expense, except
+ as regarded the _entremets_ of the Church and the vows. Even that
+ seemed to me too lightly treated for an important enterprise.
+
+ "Meditating thus I found myself by chance near a gentleman,
+ councillor and chamberlain, who was in my lord's confidence and
+ with whom I had some acquaintance. To him I imparted my thoughts
+ in the course of a friendly chat and his comment was as follows:
+
+ "'My friend, I know positively that these chaplet entertainments
+ would never have occurred except by the secret desire of the duke
+ to lead up to this very banquet where he hoped to achieve a holy
+ purpose and to resist the enemies of our faith. It is three years
+ now since the distress of our Church was presented to the Knights
+ of the Golden Fleece at Mons. My lord there dedicated his person
+ and his wealth to her service. Since then occurred the rebellion
+ of Ghent, which entailed upon him a loss of time and money. Thanks
+ be to God, he has attained there a good and honourable peace, as
+ every one knows. Now it has chanced that, during this very period,
+ the Turks have encroached on Christianity still further in their
+ capture of Constantinople. The need of succour is very pressing
+ and all that you have witnessed to-day is proof that the good duke
+ is intent on the weal of Christendom.'"
+
+During the progress of this conversation, a new company was ushered
+into the hall, preceded by musicians. Here came _Grace Dieu_, clad
+as a nun followed by twelve knights dressed in grey and black velvet
+ornamented with jewels. Not alone did they come. Each gentleman
+escorted a dame wearing a coat of satin cramoisy over a fur-edged
+round skirt _a la Portuguaise. Grace Dieu_ declared in rhyme that God
+had heard the pious resolution of Duke Philip of Burgundy. He had
+forthwith sent her with her twelve attendants to promise him a happy
+termination to his enterprise. Her ladies, Faith, Charity, Justice,
+Reason, Prudence, and their sisters, were then presented to him.
+_Grace Dieu_ departs alone and no sooner has she disappeared than
+Philip's new attributes begin to dance to add to the good cheer. Among
+the knights was Charles and one of his half-brothers; among the ladies
+was Margaret, Bastard of Burgundy, and the others were all of high
+birth. Not until two o'clock did the revels finally cease.
+
+It must be noted that La Marche's reflections upon the extravagance of
+the entertainment occur also in Escouchy's memoirs. Probably both
+drew their moralising from another author. It is stated by several
+reputable chroniclers that Olivier de la Marche himself represented
+the Church. That he merely wrote her lines is far more probable.
+Female performers certainly appeared freely in these as in other
+masques, and there was no reason for putting a handsome youth in this
+role of the captive Church. In mentioning the plans that La Marche
+claims to have heard discussed in the council meeting, he says plainly
+that he was to play the role of Holy Church, but as he makes no
+further allusion to the fact, it may be dismissed as one of his
+careless statements.
+
+This pompous announcement of big plans was the prelude to nothing! Yet
+it was by no means a farce when enacted. Philip fully intended to
+make this crusade the crowning event of his life, and his proceedings
+immediately after the great fete were all to further that end. To
+obtain allies abroad, to raise money at home, and to ensure a peaceful
+succession for his son in case of his own death in the East--such were
+the cares demanding the duke's attention.
+
+The twenty-year-old Count of Charolais was entrusted with the regency
+for the term of his father's sojourn abroad in quest of allies, and
+he hastened to Holland to assume the reins of government, but he was
+speedily recalled to Lille to submit once more to paternal authority
+before being left to his own devices and to maternal bias.
+
+For the ducal pair disagreed seriously on the subject of their son's
+second marriage. Isabella wished that a bride should be sought in
+England, and this wish was apparently echoed by Charles himself. The
+important topic was discussed with more or less freedom among the
+young courtiers, until the drift of the conversations, whose burden
+was wholly adverse to his own fixed purpose, came to Philip's ears,
+together with the information that one of his own children was among
+those who incited the count to independent desires about his future
+wife. Very stern was the duke in his reprimand to the two young men.
+He acknowledged that force of circumstances had once led him into
+friendly bonds with the foes of his own France, but never had he been
+"English at heart." Charles must accept his father's decision on pain
+of disinheritance. "As for this bastard," Philip added, turning to the
+other son, destitute of status in the eyes of the law, "if I find that
+he counsels you to oppose my will, I will have him tied up in a sack
+and thrown into the sea."[9]
+
+The bride selected for the heir was Isabella of Bourbon, daughter
+of the duke's sister, and the betrothal was hastily made. Even the
+approval of the bride's parents was dispensed with. This passed the
+more easily as the young lady herself was conveniently present in the
+Burgundian court under the guardianship of her aunt, the duchess,
+who had superintended her education. A papal dispensation was more
+necessary than paternal consent, but that, too, was waived as far as
+the betrothal was concerned. To that extent was Philip obeyed. Then
+Charles returned to Holland and his father proceeded to Germany to
+obtain imperial co-operation in his Eastern enterprise.
+
+The duke's departure from Lille was made very privately at five
+o'clock in the morning. He was off before his courtiers were aware of
+his last preparations. That was a surprise, but not the only one in
+store for those left behind. In order to save every penny for his
+journey, Philip ordered radical retrenchment in his household
+expenses. The luxurious repasts served to his retainers were abolished
+and all alike found themselves forced to restrict their appetites to
+the dainties they could purchase with the table allowance accorded
+them. "The court's leg is broken," said Michel, the rhetorician.[10]
+
+In his own outlay there was no stinting; the duke's progress was
+pompous and stately as was his wont. As he traversed Switzerland,
+Berne, Zurich, and Constance asked and obtained permission to show
+their friendship with ceremonious receptions. Loud were the cries of
+"_Vive Bourgogne_." Equally hospitable were the German cities. Game,
+wine, fodder, were offered for the traveller's use at every stage, as
+he and his suite rode to the imperial diet.
+
+At Ratisbon, disappointment greeted him. The emperor whom he had come
+so far to see in person failed to appear. Unwilling to accede to the
+plan of co-operation, afraid to give an open refusal, Frederic
+simply avoided hearing the request. Essentially lazy, he shrank from
+committing himself to a difficult enterprise, nor was his ambition
+tempted by possible glory. It had cost no pang to refuse the crown
+of Bohemia and Hungary. But even had he been personally ambitious
+he might still have been slow to lend his adherence to the duke's
+project, in the not unnatural dread lest the flashing renown of the
+greatest duke of the Occident might throw a poor emperor as ally
+into the shade. The very warmth of Philip's reception in Germany had
+chilled Frederic. From a retreat in Austria, he sent his secretary,
+AEneas Sylvius, to represent him at Ratisbon, a substitution far from
+pleasing to the visitor.
+
+There were other defections, too, from the diet. None of those present
+was in a position to aid Philip in furthering his schemes. The matter
+was brought forward and laid on the table to be discussed at the next
+diet, appointed to meet in November at Frankfort. But Philip would
+not wait for that. Germany did not agree with him. He was not well.
+Rumours there were of various kinds about his reasons for returning
+home. They do not seem to require much explanation, however. He had
+not been met half way in Germany and was highly displeased at the
+failure. Declining all further entertainment proffered by the cities,
+he travelled back to Besancon by way of Stuttgart and Basel. In the
+early autumn he was at Dijon.
+
+During this summer, negotiations about Charles's marriage had
+continued. The Duke of Bourbon was inclined to chaffer about the dowry
+demanded by Philip. One of the estates asked for was Chinon, and it
+was urged that it, a male fief, was not capable of alienation. Philip
+was not inclined to accept this reason as final and the negotiations
+hung fire, much to the distress of the Duchess of Bourbon, who feared
+a breach between her husband and brother. Naive are the phrases in one
+of her letters as quoted by Chastellain[11]:
+
+ "MY VERY DEAR SEIGNEUR AND BROTHER,
+
+ "I have heard all Boudault's message from you ... To be brief,
+ Monseigneur is content and ready to accede the points that you
+ demand. It seems to me that you ought to give him easy terms and
+ that you ought to put aside any grudge you may cherish against
+ him. Monseigneur, since I consider the thing as done, I beg you to
+ celebrate the nuptials as soon as possible although not without me
+ as you have promised me."[12]
+
+The king, too, was interested in the matter, and wrote as follows to
+Duke Philip:
+
+ "DEAR AND MUCH LOVED BROTHER:
+
+ "Some time ago my cousin of Bourbon informed me of the
+ negotiations for the marriage of my cousin of Charolais, your son,
+ to my cousin Isabella of Bourbon, his daughter, which marriage
+ has been deferred, as he writes me, because he does not wish to
+ alienate to his daughter the seignory of Chateau-Chinon. It is not
+ possible for him to do this on account of the marriage agreement
+ of our daughter Jeanne and my cousin of Clermont, his son, wherein
+ it was stipulated that Chateau-Chinon should go to them and their
+ heirs. Moreover, it cannot descend in the female line, and in
+ default of heirs male it must return to the crown as a true
+ appanage of France.
+
+ "Lest, peradventure, you may doubt the truth of this, and imagine
+ that the point is urged by our cousin of Bourbon simply as an
+ excuse for not ceding the estate, we assure you that it is true,
+ and was considered in arranging the alliance of our daughter so
+ that it is beyond the power of our cousin of Bourbon to make any
+ alienation or transfer of the territory at the marriage of his
+ daughter. We never would have permitted the marriage of our
+ daughter without this express settlement. With this consideration
+ it seems to me that you ought not to block the marriage in
+ question, especially as my cousin says he is offering you an
+ equivalent. He cannot do more as we have charged our councillor,
+ the bailiff of Berry, to explain to you in full. So pray do not
+ postpone the marriage for the above cause or for any cause, if
+ by the permission of the Church and of our Holy Father it can be
+ lawfully completed.
+
+ "Given at Romorantin, Oct. 17.
+
+ "CHARLES.[13]
+
+ CHALIGAUT."
+
+
+As the marriage was an event of importance, and the circumstances
+are simple historic facts, it is strange that there should be any
+uncertainty regarding the details of its solemnisation. But there is a
+certain vagueness about the narratives. One version is so amusing that
+it deserves a slight consideration.[14] The chronicler relates how
+Charles VII. felt some uneasiness at the delay in the negotiations.
+Conscious of the sentiments of the Duchess of Burgundy, he feared
+lest her well-known sympathies for England might prevail in the final
+decision.
+
+When Philip had returned to Dijon, the bailiff of Berry came as the
+king's special envoy to discuss some aspects of the subject with him.
+The mission was gladly undertaken as the messenger had never seen
+Philip nor his court and he was pleased at the chance of meeting a
+personage whose fame rang through Europe. Very graciously was he
+received by the duke, who read the king's letters attentively and
+replied to the envoy's messages in general terms of courteous
+recognition, without making his own intention manifest. The bailiff
+waited for an answer, finding, in the meanwhile, that his days passed
+very agreeably.
+
+As a matter of fact, before his arrival at Dijon Philip Pot had set
+out for the Netherlands, bearing the duke's orders to his son to
+celebrate his nuptials without further delay. The duke did not intend
+to be influenced by any one. It was his will that his son should
+accept the bride selected and that was all sufficient. The reason why
+the duke detained the king's messenger was that he "awaited news from
+Messire Philip de Pot, whom he had sent in all speed to his son to
+hasten the wedding."[15] The said gentleman found the count at Lille
+with the duchess, his mother, and he was so diligent in the discharge
+of his mission that he made all the arrangements himself and saw the
+wedding rites solemnised immediately. The bridegroom did not even know
+of the plan until the night preceding the important day. Then Philip
+Pot rode back to Dijon.
+
+When the duke was assured that the alliance was irrevocably sealed
+he was quite ready to answer the king's messenger, whom he at once
+invited to an audience. In a casual fashion Philip remarked:
+
+"Now bailiff, the king sent you hither about a matter which I am
+humbly grateful for his interest in. You know my opinion. I had no
+desire to dissemble. Here is a gentleman fresh from Flanders; ask him
+his news and note his reply."
+
+"What tidings, Monsieur, do you bring us?
+
+Prithee impart it" said the bailiff to the chevalier. And the
+gentleman, laughing, replied: "By my faith, Monsieur bailiff, the
+greatest news that I know is that Monseigneur de Charolais is
+married!"
+
+"Married! to whom?"
+
+"To whom?" responded the chevalier, "why, to his first cousin,
+Monseigneur's niece."
+
+Merry was the duke over the Frenchman's blank amazement. Again the
+latter had to be reassured of the truth of the statement. Philip Pot
+told him that it was so true that the wedded pair had spent the night
+together according to their lawful right.
+
+The bailiff did not know which way to turn. "So he acted out his
+two roles. Returning thanks to the duke in the king's name with all
+formality, he then joined in the general laugh over the unsuspected
+trick. He was a man of the world and knew how to take advantage of
+sense and of folly."
+
+It was on the morrow of this hasty tying of the wedding knot that the
+Countess of Charolais sent a messenger to announce the fact to her
+parents. They seem to have been perfectly satisfied, made no further
+objection to any point, and the mooted territory of Chinon made part
+of the dower in spite of the reasons urged against it.
+
+As to the bailiff, when he made his adieux at Dijon, Philip presented
+him with a round dozen stirrup cups, each worth three silver marks,
+and he went home a surprised and delighted man.
+
+ "About this time [says Alienor de Poictiers] Monsieur de Charolais
+ married Mademoiselle de Bourbon and he married her on the eve of
+ All Saints[16] at Lille, and there was no festival because Duke
+ Philip was then in Germany. Eight days after the nuptials the
+ duchess gave a splendid banquet where were all the ladies of
+ Lille, but they were seated all together, as is usually done at
+ an ordinary banquet, without mesdames holding state as would have
+ been proper for such an occasion."
+
+It is evident from all the stories that Charles protested against his
+father's orders as much as he dared and then obeyed simply because he
+could not help himself.
+
+Yet, strange to say, the unwilling bridegroom proved a faithful
+husband in a court where marital fidelity was a rare trait.
+
+Philip's plans for the international union against the Turk were less
+easily completed than those for the union of his son and his niece. In
+November, the diet met at Frankfort; the expedition was discussed and
+some resolutions were passed, but nothing further was achieved.
+
+Charles VII. would not even promise co-operation on paper. He had
+gradually extended his own domain in French-speaking territory and had
+dislodged the English from every stronghold except Guisnes and Calais.
+Under him France was regaining her prestige. Charles had much to lose,
+therefore, in joining the undertaking urged by Philip and he was
+wholly unwilling to risk it. From him Philip obtained only expressions
+of general interest in the repulse of the Turks, and more definite
+suggestions of the dangers that would menace Western Europe if all her
+natural defenders carried their arms and their fortunes to the East.
+
+When the anniversary of the great fete came round not a vow was yet
+fulfilled!
+
+
+[Footnote 1: A performance repeated in our modern Lohengrin.]
+
+[Footnote 2: The chroniclers are not at one on this point.]
+
+[Footnote 3: DuClercq, _Memoires_, ii., 159.]
+
+[Footnote 4: This banquet at Lille was the subject of several
+descriptions by spectators or at least contemporary authors.
+
+The Royal Library at the Hague possesses a manuscript copied from an
+older one which contains the order of proceedings together with the
+text of all vows. There is a minute description in Mathieu d'Escouchy,
+who claims to have been present, and in a manuscript coming from
+Baluze, whose anonymous author might also have been an eye-witness. Of
+the various versions, that of La Marche seems to be the most original.
+One record shows that "a clerk living at Dijon, called Dion du Cret,
+received, in 1455, a sum of five francs and a half for having, at the
+order of the accountants, copied and written in parchment the history
+of the banquet of my said seigneur, held at Lille, February 17, 1453,
+containing fifty-six leaves of parchment" (La Marche, ii., 340 note).
+It is possible that all the authors refreshed their memory with this
+account, which seems to have been merely a copy.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Laborde, i., 127.]
+
+[Footnote 6: II., 361.]
+
+[Footnote 7: The text says in the Burgundian or recluse fashion.
+_Beguine_ is probably the right reading.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Mathieu d'Escouchy (ii., 222) gives all the vows as
+though made then, and differs in many unessential points from La
+Marche's account.
+
+[Footnote 9: Du Clerq, ii., 203.]
+
+[Footnote 10:'"Michel dit que le gigot de la cour etait rompu."--La
+Marche, i., ch. xiv.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Chastellain, iii., 20, note.]
+
+[Footnote 12: "Toute fois que ce ne soit pas sans moy."]
+
+[Footnote 13: The original, signed, is in the _Archives de la
+Cote-d'Or,_ B. 200. _See_ Du Fresne de Beaucourt, _Histoire de Charles
+VII_., v. 470.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Chastellain, iii., 23, etc.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Chastellain, iii., 24]
+
+
+[Footnote 16: The chroniclers differ as to this date. Chastellain
+(iii., 25) says the first Sunday in Lent. D'Escouchy (ii., 270, ch.
+cxxii) the night of St. Martin. Alienor de Poictiers, Hallowe'en _(Les
+Honneurs de la Cour_, p. 187). The last was one of Isabella's ladies
+in waiting.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+BURGUNDY AND FRANCE
+
+1455-1456.
+
+
+The duke's journey failed in accomplishing its object, but it proved
+an important factor in the development of the character of Charles of
+Burgundy. The opportunity to administer the government in his father's
+absence changed him from a youth to a man, and the manner of man he
+was, was plain to see.
+
+His character was built on singularly simple lines. Vigorous of
+body, intense of purpose, inclined to melancholy, he was profoundly
+convinced of his own importance as heir to the greatest duke in
+Christendom, as future successor to an uncrowned potentate, who could
+afford to treat lightly the authority of both king and emperor whose
+nominal vassal he was.
+
+The Ghent episode, too, undoubtedly had an immense effect in enhancing
+the count's belief in his father's power, in causing him to forget
+that the communes of Flanders did not owe their existence to their
+overlord. As yet, Charles of Burgundy had not met a single check to
+his self-esteem, to his family pride. As a governor, he probably
+exercised his brief authority with the rigour of one new to the helm.
+
+ "And the Count of Charolais bore himself so well and so virtuously
+ in the task, that nothing deteriorated under his hand, and when
+ the good duke returned from his journey, he found his lands as
+ intact as before."
+
+Such, is La Marche's testimony.[1] Intact undoubtedly, but possibly
+the satisfaction was not quite perfect. Du Clercq[2] declares that
+Count Charles acquitted himself honourably of his charge and made
+himself respected as a magistrate. Above all, he insisted that justice
+should be dealt out to all alike. The only danger in his methods was
+that he acted on impulse without sufficiently informing himself of the
+matter in hand, or hearing both sides of a controversy. As a result,
+his decisions were not always impartial and the father was preferred
+to the strenuous and impetuous son. "Not that Philip was often
+inclined to recognise other law than his own will, but he was more
+tranquil, more gentle than his son, and more guided by reason," adds
+a later author.[2] There was an evident dread as to what might be the
+outcome of the count's untrained, youthful ardour.
+
+The duke's chief measures after his return in February, 1455, seemed
+hardly calculated to arouse any great personal devotion to himself or
+a profound trust that his first consideration was for the advantage of
+his Netherland subjects. His thoughts were still turned to the East,
+and his main interest in the individual countships was as sources of
+supply for his Holy War. Considerable sums flowed into his exchequer
+that were never used for their destined purpose, but the duke cannot
+be justly accused of actual bad faith in amassing them. His intention
+to make the Eastern campaign remained firm for some years.
+
+[Illustration: STATUE OF CHARLES THE BOLD AT INNSBRUCK]
+
+In another matter, his despotic exercise of personal authority, far
+without the pale of his jurisdiction inherited or acquired, shows no
+shadow of excuse.
+
+In the bishropic of Utrecht the ecclesiastical head was also lay
+lord. Here the counts of Holland possessed no voice. They were near
+neighbours, that was all. Philip ardently desired to be more in this
+tiny independent state in the midst of territories acknowledging his
+sway.
+
+In 1455, the see of Utrecht became vacant and Philip was most anxious
+to have it filled by his son David, whom he had already made Bishop of
+Therouanne by somewhat questionable methods. The Duke of Guelders
+also had a neighbourly interest in Utrecht and he, too, had a pet
+candidate, Stephen of Bavaria, whose election he urged. The chapter
+resolutely ignored the wishes of both dukes and the canons were almost
+unanimous in their choice of Gijsbrecht of Brederode.[4]
+
+A very few votes were cast for Stephen of Bavaria, but not a single
+one for David of Burgundy.
+
+Brederode was already archdeacon of the cathedral and an eminently
+worthy choice, both for his attainments and for his character. He was
+proclaimed in the cathedral, installed in the palace, and confirmed,
+as regarded his temporal power, by the emperor.
+
+Philip, however, refused to accept the returns, although not a single
+suffrage had been cast by the qualified electors for his son. He
+despatched the Bishop of Arras to Rome to petition the new pope,
+Calixtus III., to refuse to ratify the late election and to confer
+the see upon David, out of hand. Philip's tender conscience found
+Gijsbrecht ineligible to an episcopal office because he had
+participated in the war against Ghent, certainly a weak plea in an age
+of militant bishops!
+
+The pope was afraid to offend the one man in Europe upon whose
+immediate aid he counted in the Turkish campaign. He accepted the gift
+of four thousand ducats offered by Gijsbrecht's envoys, the customary
+gift in asking papal confirmation for a bishop-elect, but secretly
+he delivered to Philip's ambassador letters patent creating David of
+Burgundy Bishop of Utrecht.[5]
+
+The Burgundian La Marche states euphemistically that David was elected
+to the see, and the Deventer people would not obey him, therefore
+Philip had to levy an army and come in person to support the new
+bishop.[6] Du Clercq puts a different colour on the story and
+d'Escouchy[7] implies that the whole trouble arose from party strife
+which had to be quelled in the interests of law and order.
+
+Apart from any question of insult to the Utrechters by imposing upon
+them a spiritual director of acknowledged base birth, the right of
+choice lay with them and the emperor had confirmed their choice as far
+as the lay office was concerned. While the issue was undecided, the
+Estates of Utrecht appointed Gijsbrecht guardian and defender of the
+see to assure him a legal status pending the papal ratification. The
+people were prepared to support their candidate with arms, a game that
+Philip did not refuse, and the force of thirty thousand men with which
+he invaded the bishopric proved the stronger argument of the two and
+able to carry David of Burgundy to the episcopal throne, upon which he
+was seated in his father's presence, October 16, 1455.
+
+Some of Philip's allies reaped certain advantages from the situation.
+Alkmaar and Kennemerland redeemed certain forfeited privileges by
+means of their contributions to the duke's army. The city of Utrecht
+preferred a compromise to the risk of war. The bishop-elect,
+Gijsbrecht, consented to withdraw his claim, being permitted to retain
+the humbler office of provost of Utrecht and an annuity of four
+thousand guilders out of the episcopal revenues.
+
+Deventer was the only place which was obstinate enough to persist in
+her rebellion and Philip was engaged in bringing her citizens to terms
+by a siege when news was brought to him that a visitor had arrived at
+Brussels under circumstances which imperatively demanded his personal
+attention.
+
+In the twenty years that had elapsed since the Treaty of Arras, there
+had been great changes in France in the character both of the realm
+and of the ruler. Little by little the latter had proved himself to
+be a very different person from the inert king of Bourges.[8] Old at
+twenty, Charles VII. seemed young and vigorous at forty. Bad advisers
+were replaced by others better chosen and his administration gradually
+became effective. Fortune favoured him in depriving England of the
+Duke of Bedford (1435), the one man who might have maintained English
+prestige abroad and peace at home during the youth of Henry VI. It was
+at a time of civil dissensions in England, that Charles VII. succeeded
+in assuming the offensive on the Continent and in wresting Normandy
+and Guienne from the late invader.
+
+But this territorial advantage was not all. Distinct progress had been
+made towards a national existence in France. The establishment of
+the nucleus of a regular army was an immense aid in curbing the
+depredations of the "_ecorcheurs_," the devastating, marauding
+bands which had harassed the provinces. There was new activity in
+agriculture and industry and commerce.[9] The revival of letters and
+art, never completely stifled, proved the real vitality of France in
+spite of the depression of the Hundred Years' War. Royal justice was
+reorganised, public finance was better administered. By 1456, misery
+had not, indeed, disappeared, but it was less dominant.
+
+The years of growing union between king and his kingdom were, however,
+years of discord between Charles and his son. The dauphin Louis had
+not enjoyed the pampered, petted life of his Burgundian cousin. Very
+poor and forlorn was his father at the time of the birth of his heir
+(1423).[10] There was nothing in the treasury to pay the chaplain who
+baptised the child or the woman who nourished him. The latter received
+no pension as was usual but a modest gratuity of fifteen pounds.
+The first allowance settled on the heir to his unconsecrated royal
+father's uncertain fortunes was ten crowns a month. Every feature of
+his infancy was a marked contrast to the early life of the Count of
+Charolais.
+
+From his seventeenth year Louis was in active opposition to the
+king, heading organised rebellion against him in the war called
+the _Praguerie_. Finally, Charles VII. entrusted to his charge the
+administration of Dauphine, thus practically banishing him honourably
+from the court where he was, evidently, a disturbing element. The only
+restrictions placed upon him in his provincial government were such
+as were necessary to preserve the ultimate authority of the crown. To
+these restrictions, however, Louis paid not the slightest heed. He
+assumed all the airs of an independent sovereign. He made wars and
+treaties with his neighbours and at last proceeded to arrange his own
+marriage.
+
+At this time Louis was already a widower, having been married at the
+age of thirteen to Margaret of Scotland, who led a mournful existence
+at the French court, where she felt herself a desolate alien. Her
+death at the age of twenty was possibly due to slander. "Fie upon
+life," she said on her deathbed, when urged to rouse herself to resist
+the languor into which she was sinking. "Talk to me no more of it."
+
+Her husband cared less for her life than did Margaret herself. He took
+no interest in the inquiry set on foot to ascertain the truth of the
+charges against the princess, and was more than ready to turn to a new
+alliance. At the date of his widowerhood he was in Dauphine and his
+own choice for a wife was Charlotte, daughter of the Duke of Savoy.
+After negotiations in his own behalf he informed his father of his
+matrimonial project. It did not meet the views of Charles VII., who
+ordered his son to abandon the idea immediately.
+
+A messenger was despatched post haste to Chambery to stop the
+dauphin's nuptials.[11] The duke evaded an interview and the envoy was
+forced to deliver his letter to the chancellor of Savoy. On the morrow
+of his arrival, he was taken to church, where the wedding ceremony was
+performed (March 10, 1451), but his seat was in such a remote place
+that he could barely catch a glimpse of the bridal procession, though
+he saw that Louis was clad in crimson velvet trimmed with ermine. Two
+days later the envoy carried a pleasant letter to the king, expressing
+regrets on the part of the Duke of Savoy that the alliance was made
+before the paternal prohibition arrived.
+
+Nine years were spent by Louis in Dauphine. He introduced many
+administrative and judicial reforms, excellent in themselves but not
+popular. There were various protests and when he dared to impose taxes
+without the consent of the Estates, an appeal was made to the king
+begging him to check his son in his illegal assumptions. Charles
+summoned his son to his presence. Instead of obeying this order in
+person, Louis sent envoys who were dismissed by his father with a curt
+response: "Let my son return to his duty and he shall be treated as a
+son. As to his fears, security to his person is pledged by my word,
+which my foes have never refused to accept."[12]
+
+Louis showed himself less compliant than his father's foes. As Charles
+approached Dauphine, and made his preparations to enforce obedience,
+Louis appealed to the mediation of the pope, of the Duke of Burgundy,
+and of the King of Castile, beside sending offerings to all the chief
+shrines in Christendom, imploring aid against parental wrath. Then
+his thoughts took a less peaceful turn. He called the nobles of his
+principality to arms and bade the fortified towns prepare for siege,
+while he loftily declared that he would not trouble his father to seek
+him. He would meet him at Lyons.
+
+Meanwhile, the Count of Dammartin was directed by the king to take
+military possession of Dauphine and to put the dauphin under arrest.
+As he was _en route_ to fulfil these orders, the count heard that
+a day had been set by Louis for a great hunt. That an excellent
+opportunity might be afforded for securing his quarry in the course
+of the chase, was the immediate thought of the king's lieutenant. So
+there might have been had not the wily hunter received timely warning
+of the project for making _him_ the game.
+
+At the hour appointed for the meet, the dauphin's suite rode to the
+rendezvous, but the prince turned his horse in the opposite direction
+and galloped away at full speed, attended by a few trusty followers.
+He hardly stopped even to take breath until he was out of his father's
+domain, and made no pause until he reached St. Claude, a small town
+in the Franche-Comte, where he threw himself on the kindness of the
+Prince of Orange.
+
+How gossip about this strange departure of the French heir fluttered
+here and there! Du Clercq[13] tells the story with some variation from
+the above outline, laying more stress on the popular appeal to the
+king for relief from Louis's transgressions as governor of Dauphine,
+and enlarging on the accusation that Louis was responsible for the
+death of _La belle Agnes_, "the first lady of the land possessing the
+king's perfect love." He adds that the dauphin was further displeased
+because the niece of this same Agnes, the Demoiselle de Villeclerc,
+was kept at court after her aunt's death. Wherever the king went he
+was followed by this lady, accompanied by a train of beauties. It was
+this conduct of his father that had forced the son to absent himself
+from court life for twelve years and more, during which time he
+received no allowance as was his rightful due, and thus he had been
+obliged to make his own requisitions from his seigniory.
+
+There were other reports that the king was quite ready to accord his
+son his full state; others, again, that Charles drove Louis into exile
+from mere dislike and intended to make his second son his heir and
+successor. At this point Du Clercq's manuscript is broken off abruptly
+and the remainder of his conjectures are lost to posterity. Where the
+text begins again, the author dismisses all this contradictory hearsay
+and says in his own character as veracious chronicler, "I concern
+myself only with what actually occurred. The dauphin gave a feast
+in the forest and then departed secretly to avoid being arrested by
+Dammartin."
+
+This flight was the not unnatural termination of a long series of
+misunderstandings between a father whose private conduct was not above
+criticism, and a son, clever, unscrupulous, destitute of respect for
+any person or thing except for the superstitious side of his religion.
+
+Charles VII. was a curious instance of a man whose mental development
+occurred during the later years of his life. When his son was under
+his personal influence his character was not one to instil filial
+deference, and Louis certainly cherished neither respect nor affection
+for the father whose inert years he remembered vividly.
+
+Whether, indeed, the dauphin had any part in Agnes Sorel's death which
+gave him especial reason to dread the king's anger, is uncertain, but
+of his action there is no doubt. To St. Claude he travelled as rapidly
+as his steed could go, and from that spot on Burgundian soil he
+despatched the following exemplary letter to his father:
+
+ "MY VERY REDOUBTABLE LORD:
+
+ "To your good grace I recommend myself as humbly as I can. Be
+ pleased to know, my very redoubtable lord, that because, as you
+ know, my uncle of Burgundy intends shortly to go on a crusade
+ against the Turk in defence of the Catholic Faith and because my
+ desire is to go, your good pleasure permitting, considering that
+ our Holy Father the Pope bade me so to do, and that I am standard
+ bearer of the Church, and that I took the oath by your command, I
+ am now on my way to join my uncle to learn his plans so that I can
+ take steps for the defence of the Catholic Faith.
+
+ "Also, I wish to implore him to find means of reinstating me in
+ your good grace, which is something that I desire most in the
+ world. My very redoubtable lord, I pray God to give you good life
+ and long.
+
+ "Written at St. Claude the last day of August.
+
+ "Your very humble and obedient son,
+
+ "LOYS."[14]
+
+
+This letter hardly succeeded in carrying conviction to the king.
+He characterised the projected expedition to Turkey as a farce, a
+pretence, and a frivolous excuse.[15] Probably, too, he did not
+contradict his courtiers when they declared that the project had
+been in the wind a long time, and that the Duke of Burgundy would
+be prouder than ever to have the heir to France dependent on his
+protection.
+
+The epistle despatched, Louis continued his journey under the escort
+of the Seigneur de Blaumont, Marshal of Burgundy, at the head of
+thirty horse. Their pace was rapid to elude the pursuit of Tristan
+l'Hermite. The prince needed no spurs to make him flee. Even if his
+father did not intend to have him drowned in a sack his immediate
+liberty was certainly in jeopardy. "In truth this thing was a
+marvellous business. The Prince of Orange and the Marshal of Burgundy
+were the two men whom the dauphin hated more than any one else,
+but necessity, which knows no law, overcame the distaste of the
+dauphin."[16]
+
+Louvain was the next place where Louis felt safe enough to rest. Here
+he wrote to the Duke of Burgundy to announce his arrival within his
+territory. The letter found Philip in camp before Deventer. It is
+evident that he was entirely taken by surprise, and was prepared to be
+very cautious in his correspondence with the French king. He assured
+him that he was willing to receive and honour Louis as his suzerain's
+heir, but he implored that suzerain not to blame him, the duke, for
+that heir's flight to his protection.
+
+His envoy, Perrenet, was charged with many reassuring messages in
+addition to the epistle. Before he reached the French court, his
+news was no novelty. Rumour had preceded him. The messenger was very
+eloquent in his assurances to the king that Philip was wholly innocent
+in the affair and a good peer and true. Perrenet
+
+ "stayed at the French court until Epiphany and I do not know what
+ they discussed, but during that time news came that the king had
+ garrisoned Compiegne, Lyons, and places where his lands touched
+ the duke's territories. When the envoy returned to the duke, he
+ published a manifesto ordering all who could bear arms to be in
+ readiness."[17]
+
+Philip sent messages of welcome to Louis with apologies for his
+own inevitable absence, and the visitor was profuse in his return
+assurances to his uncle that he understood the delay and would not
+disturb his business for the world. "I have leisure enough to wait and
+it does not weary me. I am safe in a pleasant land and in a fine town
+which I have long wished to see." He showed his courtesy when the
+Count d'Etampes, Philip's nephew-in-law, presented his suite, by
+pronouncing each individual name and assuring its bearer that he had
+heard about him.[18]
+
+The count was commissioned to conduct the dauphin to Brussels and we
+have the story of an eye-witness of his reception by the ladies of the
+ducal family:
+
+ "I saw the King of France, father of the present King Charles,
+ chased away by his father Charles for some difference of which
+ they say that the fair Agnes was the cause, and on account of
+ which he took refuge with Duke Philip, for he had no means of
+ subsistence.[19]
+
+ "The said King Louis, being dauphin, came to Brussels accompanied
+ by about ten cavaliers and by the Marshal of Burgundy. At this
+ time Duke Philip was at Utrecht in war and there was no one to
+ receive the visitor but Madame the Duchess Isabella and Madame
+ de Charolais, her daughter-in-law, pregnant with Madame Mary of
+ Burgundy, since then Duchess of Austria.
+
+ "Monsieur the dauphin arrived at Brussels, where were the ladies,
+ at eight o'clock in the evening, about St. Martin's Day.[20] When
+ the ladies heard that he was in the city they hastened down to the
+ courtyard to await him. As soon as he saw them he dismounted and
+ saluted Madame the Duchess and Mme. de Charolais and Mme. de
+ Ravestein. All kneeled and then he kissed the other ladies of the
+ court."
+
+Alienor goes on to describe how a whole quarter of an hour was
+consumed by a friendly altercation between Isabella and her guest as
+to the exact way in which they should enter the door, the dauphin
+resolute in his refusal to take precedence and Isabella equally
+resolute not even to walk by the side of the future king. "Monsieur,
+it seems to me you desire to make me a laughing stock, for you wish
+me to do what befits me not." To this the dauphin replied that it was
+incumbent upon him to pay honour for there was none in the realm of
+France so poor as he, and that he would not have known whither to flee
+if not to his uncle Philip and to her.
+
+Louis prevailed in his argument, and hostess and guest finally
+proceeded hand in hand to the chamber prepared for the latter and
+Isabella then took leave on bended knee.
+
+When the duke returned to Brussels this contention as to the proper
+etiquette was renewed. Isabella tried to retain the dauphin in his own
+apartment so that the duke should greet him there as befitted their
+relative rank. She was greatly chagrined, therefore, when Louis
+rushed down to the courtyard on hearing the signs of arrival. This
+punctilious hostess actually held the prince back by his coat to
+prevent his advancing towards the duke.
+
+Throughout the visit the minor points of etiquette were observed with
+the utmost care. Both duchess and countess refrained from employing
+their train-bearers when they entered the dauphin's presence. When he
+insisted that his hostess should walk by his side, she managed her own
+train if possible. If she accepted any aid from her gentlemen she was
+very careful to keep her hand upon the dress, so that technically she
+was still her own train-bearer. Then, too, when the duchess ate in the
+dauphin's presence, there was no cover to her dish and nothing was
+tasted in her behalf.
+
+The Duke of Burgundy had to supply Louis with every requisite, but he,
+too, never forgot for a moment that this dependent visitor was future
+monarch of France. Without doors as within, every minor detail of
+etiquette was observed. The duke never so far forgot himself in the
+ardour of the chase as to permit his horse's head to advance beyond
+the tail of the prince's steed.
+
+In February, 1457, on St. Valentine's Eve, Mary of Burgundy was born.
+Our observant court lady describes in detail the ceremonial observed
+in the chamber of the Countess of Charolais and at the baptism.
+Brussels rang with joyful bells and blazed with torches, four hundred
+supplied by the city ahd two hundred by the young father. Each torch
+weighed four or five pounds.
+
+The Count of Charolais was his own messenger to announce the birth of
+his daughter to the dauphin and to ask him to stand god-father. Joyful
+was Louis to accept the invitation and to bestow his mother's name on
+the baby-girl. Ste. Gudule was so far from the palace that the Church
+of the Caudenberg was selected for the ceremony and richly adorned
+with Holland linen, velvet, and cloth of gold. The duchess carried her
+grandchild to the font,--a font draped with cramoisy velvet.
+
+ "Monsieur the dauphin stood on the right and I heard it said that
+ there was no one on the left because there was none his equal. On
+ that day, the duchess wore a round skirt _a la Portuguaise_, edged
+ with fur. There was no train of cloth nor of silk, so I cannot
+ state who carried it,"
+
+sagely remarks Alienor with incontrovertible logic.
+
+Later events made later chroniclers less enthusiastic about the honour
+paid to Mademoiselle[21] Mary by the dauphin. In a manuscript of La
+Marche's _Memoires_ at The Hague, the words "Lord! what a god-father!"
+appear in the margin of the page describing the baptism.[22] But in
+these early days of his five years' sojourn, Louis seems to have been
+a pleasant person and to have posed as the ruined poor relation,
+entirely free from pride at his high birth and delighted to repay
+hospitality by his general complaisance.
+
+Charles VII. received all the reports with somewhat cynical amusement.
+He had no great trust in his son. "Louis is fickle and changeable and
+I do not doubt that he will return here before long. I am not at all
+pleased with those who influence him," are his words as quoted by
+d'Escouchy.[23]
+
+[Illustration: LOUIS XI FROM THE ENGRAVING BY A. BOILLY, AFTER THE
+DRAWING BY J. BOILLY]
+
+Undoubtedly, though, the king was much surprised at his son's action.
+He had rather expected him to take refuge somewhere but he never
+thought that the Duke of Burgundy would be his protector--a strange
+choice to his mind. "My cousin of Burgundy nourishes a fox who will
+eat his chickens" is reported as another comment of this impartial
+father.[24] Like many a phrase, possibly the fruit of later harvests,
+this is an excellent epitome of the situation.
+
+
+[Footnote 1: I.,ch. xxxi.]
+
+[Footnote 2:II.,204.]
+
+[Footnote 3: Barante, vi.,50.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Some of the canons wrote their reasons after their
+recorded vote: "Because Duke Philip had made the candidate member
+of his council of Holland, Zealand, and Friesland, in which office
+Gijsbrecht had acquitted himself well." "Because all the Sticht nobles
+were his relations," etc.--(Wagenaar, _Vaderlandsche Historie,_ iv.,
+50.)]
+
+[Footnote 5: Du Clercq, ii., 210.]
+
+[Footnote 6: _Memoires_, i., ch. xxxiii.]
+
+[Footnote 7: II., 315.]
+
+[Footnote 8: See Lavisse, iv^{ii}., 317.]
+
+[Footnote 9: For the effects of operations on a large scale see
+_Jacques Coeur and Charles VII_., by Pierre Clemart.]
+
+[Footnote 10: _Duclos_, "Hist. de Louis XI.," _OEuvres Completes_ v.,
+8.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Duclos, iii., 78.]
+
+[Footnote 12: See Lavisse, iv^{ii}., 292.]
+
+[Footnote 13: II.,223.]
+
+[Footnote 14: _Lettres de Louis XI_., i., 77.
+
+According to the editor, Vaesen, the original of this letter shows
+that _September 2nd_ was written first and erased.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Chastellain, iii., 185.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Du Clercq, ii., 228.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Chastellain iii., 197.]
+
+[Footnote 18: See _Sejour de Louis XI. aux Pays-Bas;_ Reiffenberg:
+Nouveaux mem. de l'Acad. Royale, 1829.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Alienor de Poictiers, _Les Honneurs de la Cour_, ii.,
+208. It was early in October.]
+
+[Footnote 20: This date, November 11th, does not agree with the
+others.]
+
+[Footnote 21: "At that time they did not say Madame, for Monsieur was
+not the son of a sovereign."--La Marche, ii., 410, note.]
+
+[Footnote 22: La Marche, ii., 410: "Dieu quel parrain!"]
+
+[Footnote 23: II., 343.]
+
+[Footnote 24: Chastellain, iii., 185; Lavisse iv^{ii}., 299.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+THE COUNT AND THE DAUPHIN
+
+1456-1461
+
+
+The picture of the Burgundian court rejoicing in happy unison over the
+advent of an heiress to carry on the Burgundian traditions, with the
+dauphin participating in the family joy, shows the tranquil side of
+the first months of the long visit. Before Mary's birth, however, an
+incident had occurred, betraying the fact that the dauphin and Charles
+VII. were not the only father and son between whom relations were
+strained, and that a moment had arrived when the attitude of the Count
+of Charolais to the duke was no longer characterised by unquestioning
+filial obedience.
+
+Charles was on his way to Nuremberg[1] to fulfil a mission with
+certain German princes when the dauphin alighted in Brabant, like "a
+bird of ill omen," as he designated himself on one occasion. The count
+did not return to Brussels until January 12, 1457. Thus he took no
+part in the hearty welcome accorded to the visitor. It is more than
+possible that the heir of Burgundy was not wholly pleased with the
+state of affairs placidly existing by mid-winter.
+
+Instead of resuming the first position which he had enjoyed during his
+brief regency, or the honoured second that had been his after Philip
+came back, Charles was now relegated to a third place. Further,
+without having been consulted as to the policy, he found that he
+was forced into following his father's lead in treating a penniless
+refugee like an invited guest, whose visit was an honour and a joy. It
+is more than probable that Charles was already feeling somewhat hurt
+at the duke's warmth towards Louis when a serious breach occurred
+between father and son about another matter.
+
+It chanced that a chamberlain's post fell vacant in his own household,
+and the count assumed that the appointment of a successor was
+something that lay wholly within his jurisdiction. When the duke
+interfered in a peremptory fashion and insisted that the appointment
+should be made at his instance, the son refused to accept his
+authority, especially as his father's nominee was Philip de Croy, one
+of a family already over-dominant in the Burgundian court. At least,
+that was Charles's opinion. Therefore, when he obeyed his father's
+commands to bring his _ordonnance_, or household list, to the duke's
+oratory, he unhesitatingly carried the document which contained the
+name of Antoine Raulin, Sire d'Emeries, in place of Philip de Croy.
+
+The duke was very angry at this apparent contempt for his expressed
+wishes. Indignantly he threw the lists into the fire with the words,
+"Now look to your _ordonnances_ for you will need new ones[2]."
+
+There was evidently a succession of violent scenes in which the
+duchess tried to stand between her husband and son. But Philip was
+beside himself with wrath and refused to listen to a word from her or
+from the dauphin, who also endeavoured to mediate[2].
+
+Finally, the irate duke lost all control of himself, ordered a horse,
+and rode out alone into the forest of Soignies. When he became calmer
+it was dark and he found himself far from the beaten tracks, in the
+midst of underbrush through which he could not ride. He dismounted and
+wandered on foot for hours in the January night until smoke guided him
+to a charcoal burner, who conducted him to the more friendly shelter
+of a forester's hut. In the morning he made his way to Genappe.
+
+Meantime, in the palace, consternation reigned. Search parties seeking
+their sovereign were out all night. No one, however, was in such a
+state of dismay as the dauphin, who declared that he would be counted
+at fault when family dissensions followed so soon on his arrival.
+Delighted he was, therefore, to act as mediator between father and
+son after the duke was in a sufficiently pacified state to listen to
+reason. Charles betook himself to Dendermonde for a time until the
+duke was ready to see him[4]. His young wife made the most of her
+expectations to soften her father-in-law's resentment, and between
+her entreaties and those of the guest, proud to show his tact and his
+gratitude, the quarrel was at last smoothed over.
+
+There was one marked difference between this family dispute and the
+breach between the French king and the dauphin. In the latter case no
+feeling was involved. In the former, the son was really deeply wounded
+by what he deemed lack of parental affection for his interests. At the
+same time he was shocked by the bitter words and was, for the moment,
+so filled with contrition that he was eager to make any concession
+agreeable to the duke. He dismissed two of his servants[5], suspected
+by his father of fomenting trouble between them, and he showed himself
+in general very willing to placate paternal displeasure.
+
+Reconciliation between duke and duchess was more difficult. Isabella
+resented Philip's reproaches for her sympathy with Charles. She said
+she had stepped between the two men because she had feared lest the
+duke might injure his son in his wrath[6]. This was in answer to the
+Marshal of Burgundy when he was telling her of Philip's displeasure.
+She concluded her dignified defence with an expression of her utter
+loneliness. Stranger in a strange land she had no one belonging to her
+but her son.
+
+She was certainly present at the baptism of her grandchild, but
+shortly afterwards she retired to a convent of the Grey Sisters,
+founded by herself, and rarely returned to the world or took part in
+its ceremonies during the remainder of her life.
+
+The quarrel, too, left its scar upon Charles. It is not probable that
+he had much personal liking for the guest upon whom his father heaped
+courtesies and solicitous care. On one occasion, when the two young
+men were hunting they were separated by chance. When Charles returned
+alone to the palace, the duke was full of reproaches at his son's
+careless desertion of the guest in his charge. Again the court was
+organised into search parties and there was no rest until the dauphin
+was discovered some leagues from Brussels[7]. Here, also, it is an
+easy presumption that the Count of Charolais was a trifle sulky over
+his father's preoccupation in regard to the prince.
+
+The transient character of the dauphin's sojourn in his cousin's
+domains soon changed. In the summer of 1457, when news came that
+Dauphine had submitted to Charles VII., when the successive embassies
+despatched by Philip to the king had all proved fruitless in their
+conciliatory efforts, Philip proceeded to make more permanent
+arrangements for the fugitive's comfort.
+
+ "Now, Monseigneur, since the king has been pleased to deprive you
+ of Dauphine ... you are to-day lord and prince without land. But,
+ nevertheless, you shall not be without a country, for all that I
+ have is yours and I place it within your hand without reserving
+ aught except my life and that of my wife. Pray take heart. If God
+ does not abandon me I will never abandon you[8]."
+
+The duke made good his words by giving his guest the estate of
+Genappe, of which Louis took possession at the end of July. Then as a
+further step to make things pleasant for the exile, Philip sent for
+Charlotte of Savoy who had remained under her father's care ever since
+the formal marriage in 1451. She was now eighteen.
+
+It was an agreeable spot, this estate at Genappe. Louis's favourite
+amusement of the chase was easy of access. "The court is at present
+at Louvain," wrote a courtier[9] on July 1st, "and Monseigneur the
+Dauphin likes it very much, for there is good hunting and falconry and
+a great number of rabbits within and without the city." With killing
+of every kind at his service, what greater solace could a homeless
+prince expect?
+
+From Louvain to Genappe is no great distance, and the sum of 1200
+livres, furnished by Philip for the dauphin's journey to his new
+abode, seemed a large provision. The pension then settled on him was
+36,000 livres, and when the dauphiness arrived 1000 livres a month
+were provided for her private purse[10].
+
+Pleasant was existence in this chateau. There was no dearth of company
+to throng around the prince in exile, and the dauphin allowed no
+prejudice of mere likes and dislikes, no consideration of duty towards
+his host to hamper him in making useful friends. A word here and
+a word there, aptly thrown in at a time when Philip's anger had
+exasperated, when Charles had failed to conciliate, were very potent
+in intimating to many a Burgundian servant that there might come a
+time when a new king across the border might better appreciate their
+real value than their present or future sovereign.
+
+Hunting was a favourite amusement, but the dauphin did not confine his
+invitations to sportsmen. The easy accessibility of the little court
+attracted men of science and of letters as well as others capable of
+making the time pass agreeably. When there was nothing else on foot,
+it is said that the company amused themselves by telling stories,
+each in turn, and out of their tales grew the collection of the _Cent
+Nouvelles Nouvelles_[11], named in imitation of Boccaccio's _Cento
+Novelle_.
+
+The first printed edition of this collection was issued in Paris, in
+1486, by Antoine Verard, who thus admonishes the gentle reader: "Note
+that whenever _Monseigneur_ is referred to, Monseigneur the Dauphin
+must be understood, who has since succeeded to the crown and is King
+Louis. Then he was in the land of the Duke of Burgundy." Another
+editor asserts that _Monseigneur_ is evidently the Duke of Burgundy
+and not Louis, and later authorities decide that Anthony de la Sale
+wrote the whole collection in imitation of Boccaccio, and that the
+names of the narrators were as imaginative or rather as editorial as
+the rest of the volume.
+
+If this be true, it maybe inferred that the author would have given an
+appearance of verisimilitude to his fiction by mentioning the actual
+habitues of the dauphin's court. The name of the Count of Charolais
+does not appear at all. The duke tells three or more stories according
+to the interpretation given to _Monseigneur_. With three exceptions
+the tales are very coarse, nor does their wit atone for their
+licentiousness. Possibly Charles held himself aloof from the kind of
+talk they suggest. All reports make him rigid in standards of morality
+not observed by his fellows. That he had little to do with the court
+is certain, whatever his reason.
+
+Louis did not confine himself to the estate assigned him. There were
+various court visits to the Flemish towns where he was afforded
+excellent opportunities for seeing the wealth of the burghers and
+their status in the world of commerce.
+
+Ghent was very anxious to have the duke bring his guest within her
+gates and give her an opportunity of displaying her regret for the
+past unpleasantness. "In his goodness," Philip at last yielded to
+their entreaties to make them a visit himself, but he decided not to
+take the prince or the count with him.[12] He was either afraid for
+their safety or else he did not care to bring a future French king
+into relation with citizens who might find it convenient to remember
+his suzerainty in order to ignore the wishes of their sovereign
+duke.[13]
+
+Eastertide, 1458, was finally appointed for this state visit of
+reconciliation. The duke took the precaution to send scouts ahead to
+ascertain that the late rebels were sincere in their contrition, and
+that there was no danger of anarchist agitations. The report was
+brought back that all was calm and that joyful preparations were
+making to show appreciation of Philip's kindness.
+
+On April 22d, the duke slept at l'Ecluse, and on the 23d he was gaily
+escorted into the city by knights and gentlemen summoned from Holland,
+Hainaut, and Flanders, "but neither clerks nor priests were in his
+train." As a further assurance to him of their peaceful intention,
+the citizens actually lifted the city gates off their hinges so as to
+leave open exits.
+
+Once within the walls, the duke found the whole community, who had
+shown intelligent and sturdy determination not to endure arbitrary
+tyranny, ready to weave themselves into a frenzy of biblical and
+classical parable whose one purpose was to prove how evil had been
+their ways. A pompous procession sang _Te Deum_ as the duke rode in,
+and the first "mystery" that met his eyes within the gates was a
+wonderful representation of Abraham sacrificing Isaac, while the
+legend "All that the Lord commanded we will do," was meant not to
+refer to the Hebrew's fidelity to Jehovah, but to the Ghenters'
+perfect submission to Philip. A young girl stood ready to greet him
+with the words of Solomon, "I have found one my soul loves."[14]
+
+All the legends were in Latin. _Inveni quem diligit anima mea._]
+
+Farther on there were various emblems all designed to compare
+Philip now to Caesar, now to Pompey, now to Nebuchadnezzar. The most
+humiliating spectacle was that of a man dressed in a lion's skin,
+thus personifying the Lion of Flanders, leading Philip's horse by the
+bridle. "_Vive Bourgogne_ is now our cry," was symbolised in every
+vehicle which the rhetoricians could invent.
+
+Not altogether explicable is this extreme self-abnegation. Civic
+prosperity must have returned in four years or there would have been
+no money for the outlay. Apparently, Philip's countenance was worth
+more to them than their pride.
+
+The birth and death of two children at Genappe gave the duke new
+reasons for showering ostentatious favours on his guest, and furnished
+the dauphin with suitable occasion for addressing his own father, who
+answered him in kind.
+
+The following is one of the fair-phrased epistles[l5]:
+
+ _The King to the Dauphin_, 1459.
+ "VERY DEAR AND MUCH LOVED SON:
+
+ "We have received the letters that you wrote us making mention
+ that on July 27 our dear and much loved daughter, the dauphiness,
+ was delivered of a fine boy, for which we have been and are very
+ joyous, and it seems to me that the more God our Creator grants
+ you favour, by so much the more you ought to praise and thank
+ Him and refrain from angering Him, and in all things fulfil His
+ commandments.
+
+ "Given at Compiegne, Aug.7th.
+
+ "CHARLES.
+
+
+During these five years, Charles was more or less aloof from the
+courts of his father and of their guest. He spent part of the time in
+Holland and part at Le Quesnoy with his young wife. The Count of St.
+Pol was one of his intimate friends, and a friend who managed to
+make many insinuations about the duke's treatment of his son and
+infatuation about the Croys whom Charles hated with increasing
+fervency.
+
+There is a story that Charles went from Le Quesnoy to his father's
+court to demand a formal audience from the duke in order to lodge his
+protest against the Croys. Evidently relations were strained when such
+a degree of ceremony was needed between father and son.
+
+Gerard Ourre was commissioned to set forth the count's grievances, and
+he was in the midst of his carefully prepared statement when the duke
+interrupted him with the curt observation: "Have a care to say nothing
+but the truth and understand, it will be necessary to prove every
+assertion." The orator was discomfited, stammered on for a few
+moments, and then excused himself from completing his harangue.
+There were only a few nobles present and all were surprised at this
+embarrassment, as Gerard passed for a clever man. Then, seeing that
+his deputy was too much frightened to proceed, Charles took up the
+thread of his discourse. In a firm voice he continued the list of
+accusations against the Croys, only to be cut short in his turn.
+Peremptory was the duke in his command to his son to be silent and
+never again to refer to the subject. Then, turning to Croy, Philip
+added "see to it that my son is satisfied with you," and withdrew from
+the audience chamber.
+
+Croy addressed Charles and endeavoured to be conciliatory. "When you
+have repaired the ill you have wrought I will remember the good you
+have done," was the count's only reply. He took leave of his father
+with an outward show of love and respect and returned to his wife at
+Le Quesnoy, escorted, indeed, by Croy out of the gates of Brussels,
+but with no better understanding between them.
+
+St. Pol found good ground to work on. He inflamed the count's
+discontent and his distrust of the duke's favourite until Charles
+despatched him to Bourges on a confidential mission to ascertain what
+Charles VII. would do for the heir of Burgundy should he decide to
+take refuge in the French court.[16]
+
+At the first interview "I was not present," states the unknown
+reporter, but on succeeding occasions this man heard for himself that
+the king was ready to show hospitality to the Count of Charolais who
+"has no ill intentions against his father. All he wants to do is to
+separate him from the people who govern him badly."
+
+The conferences were held in the lodgings of Odet d'Aydie. Among those
+present was Dammartin and the matter was discussed in its various
+aspects. Jehan Bureau and the anonymous witness were charged with
+drawing up a report of the discussion. When this was presented to the
+king it did not seem to him good. He doubted the good faith of the
+count's message. He had been assured that it was all a fiction
+especially designed by the Sieur de Burgundy.
+
+Certain general promises were made in spite of this royal distrust,
+quite natural under the circumstances. If he decided to espouse the
+cause of Henry VI., the Count of Charolais should be given a command.
+It was evident that the count was by no means ready to go to all
+lengths, for St. Pol states in one of his conferences with the "late
+king" that Charles of Burgundy had assured him that for two realms
+such as his he would not do a deed of villainy.
+
+Nothing came of this talk. It would have been a singular state of
+affairs had the heirs of France and Burgundy thus changed places in
+their fathers' courts. Spying and counterspying there were between
+the courts to a great extent and rumours in number. A certain Italian
+writes to the Duke of Milan as follows, on March 23, 1461, after he
+had been at Genappe and at Brussels:[17]
+
+ "M. de Croy has given me clearly to understand that the
+ reconciliation of the dauphin with the King of France would not be
+ with the approval of the Duke of Burgundy. Nevertheless the prince
+ laments that since he received the dauphin into his states,
+ and treated him as his future sovereign, he has incurred the
+ implacable hatred of the king added to his ancient grievances. On
+ the other hand, the affairs of England, on whose issue depends war
+ or peace for the duke, being still in suspense, it did not seem to
+ him honest to make advances to the king at this moment.
+
+ "M. de Croy thinks that the dauphin does not seem to have carried
+ into this affair the circumspection and reflection befitting a
+ prince of his quality. He has maintained towards the duke the
+ most complete silence on the affair of Genoa, and the proposition
+ concerning Italy. Croy does not think there is anything in it,
+ but if the thing were so it ought not to be secret. He does not
+ believe that peace will be made between the dauphin and his
+ father, and mentioned that his brother was on the embassy from
+ duke to king, in order, I suppose, to probe the matter to the
+ bottom.
+
+ "The dauphin it seems has been out of humour with the Duke of
+ Burgundy on account of the luke-warmness shown for his interests
+ by the ambassador sent by this prince to the Duke of Savoy.
+
+ "The silent agreement which reigns between the dauphin and Monsg.
+ de Charolais is one of the causes which has chilled this great
+ love between the dauphin and the duke which existed at the
+ beginning.
+
+ "Moreover, the dauphin having spent largely, especially in
+ almsgiving without considering his purse finds himself very hard
+ pressed. He has only two thousand ducats a month from the Duke of
+ Burgundy and that seems to force him into peace with the king. The
+ duke expects nothing during the king's lifetime.
+
+ "Everything makes me want to wait here for the arrival of news
+ from England. It is expected daily, good or bad the last play must
+ be made. The duke fears a descent on Calais, and for this reason
+ is going to a town called St. Omer. Under pretext of celebrating
+ there the fete of the Toison d'Or he has ordered all his escort to
+ be armed."
+
+[Illustration: PHILIP THE GOOD AND CHARLES THE BOLD. FROM A
+CONTEMPORARY SKETCH IN MS.]
+
+For a long time before his final illness the death of Charles VII. was
+anticipated. When it came it was a dolorous end.[18] At Genappe, the
+dauphin had been making his preparations for the wished-for event in
+many ways, all in exact opposition to his father's policy. In Italy
+and in Spain he sided with the opponents of Charles VII. In England,
+his sympathies were all for the House of York because his father was
+favourable to Henry of Lancaster and Margaret of Anjou. He learned
+with satisfaction of the success of Edward IV., and was more than
+willing to see him invade France. With certain princes of Germany he
+entertained relations shrouded in mystery, while his father's own
+agents disclosed secrets to him from time to time.
+
+In his exile he kept reminding official bodies at Paris that he was
+heir to the throne. As dauphin he claimed the right to give orders to
+the _parlement_ at Grenoble. There is no actual proof that he had a
+hand in the conspiracies which troubled the last year of his father's
+reign, but it is certain that he managed to win to himself a party
+within the royal circle.
+
+Certain councillors, fearful of their own fate, did not hesitate to
+suggest that Louis should be disinherited and his brother Charles put
+in his stead, but this Charles VII. would not accept. He kept hoping
+for Louis's submission. The latter, however, had no idea of this. He
+was sure that his father would not live to grow old. A trouble in his
+leg threatened to be cancerous. In July, there was a growth in his
+mouth. He died July 22nd, convinced that his son had poisoned him.
+
+After July 17th constant bulletins from the king's bedside came to
+Louis. Genappe was too far and the anxious son moved to Avesnes
+in order to receive his messages more speedily. Our chronicler
+Chastellain[19] begins his story of Louis's accession as follows:
+
+ "Since I am not English but French, I who am neither Spanish nor
+ Italian but French, I have written of two Frenchmen, the one king,
+ the other duke. I have written of their works and their quarrels
+ and of the favour and glories which God has given them in their
+ time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Kings die, reigns vanish but virtue alone and meritorious works
+ serve man on his bier and gain him eternal glory. O you Frenchmen,
+ see the cause and the end in my labours!"
+
+The guest who had displayed so much humility and thankfulness when he
+arrived, who had deprecated honours to his high birth and desired to
+offer all the courtesies, departed from the residence so generously
+given him for five years in a very cavalier manner.
+
+ "Now the king left the duke's territories without having taken
+ leave nor said adieu to the Countess of Charolais,[20] although he
+ was in her neighbourhood, and he left behind him the queen, his
+ wife. The said queen had neither hackneys nor vehicles with which
+ to follow her husband. Therefore, the king ordered her to borrow
+ the hackneys of the countess and chariots, too. Heartily did the
+ countess accede to this request in spite of the fact that the
+ thing seemed to her rather strange that a noble king, and one who
+ had received so much honour and service from the House of Burgundy
+ and had promised to recognise it when the hour came, should thus
+ depart thence without saying a word. However, in spite of all, the
+ countess would gladly have given the queen the hackneys as a gift
+ if they had been asked, and she sent them to her by one of her
+ equerries named Corneille de la Barre, together with chariots and
+ waggons. And thus the queen left the country just as her husband
+ had done without saying a word either to the duke or the countess,
+ and Corneille went with her on foot to bring back the hackneys
+ when the queen had arrived at the place of her desire."
+
+Philip had difficulty in persuading his quondam guest to show outward
+respect to his father's memory. The duke clad himself and his suite
+in deep mourning before setting out to join Louis at Avesnes, whither
+representatives from the University of Paris and from all parts of the
+realm had flocked to greet their new sovereign.
+
+It was a great concourse that marched from Avesnes as escort to the
+uncrowned king. Philip was magnificent in his appointments as he
+entered Rheims, and behind him came his son,
+
+ "the Count of Charolais who, equally with his noble company of
+ knights and squires, attracted hearts and eyes in admiration of
+ his rich array wherein cloth of gold and jewelry, velvet and
+ embroidery were lavishly displayed. And the count had ten pages
+ and twenty-six archers, and this whole company numbered three
+ hundred horse."[21]
+
+This was a Thursday after dinner. Louis had waited at St. Thierry. On
+the actual day of the coronation, preliminaries absorbed so much time
+that the long cavalcade did not enter Rheims until seven o'clock. The
+king passed his night in a very pious and prayerful manner, taking no
+repose until 5 A.M. While his suite were occupied at their toilets he
+slipped off alone to church.
+
+Finally all was ready for the grand ceremony. Very magnificent were
+the duke's robes and ermine when, as chief among the peers, he
+escorted his late guest to be consecrated king, and very devout and
+simple was Louis. After the consecration, the king and his friends
+listened to an address from the Bishop of Tournay, in which he
+described in Latin the dauphin's sojourn in the Netherlands.
+
+The Duke of Burgundy was the hero of the occasion. He felt that all
+future power was in his hands and that Louis XI. could never do enough
+to repay him for his wonderful hospitality. And for a time Louis was
+quite ready to foster this belief. When they entered Paris, the peer
+so far outshone the sovereign that there was general astonishment.[22]
+Moreover, whatever the latter did have was a gift. The very plate used
+on the royal table was a ducal present.[23]
+
+Louis took great pains to preserve an attitude of grateful humility.
+When he met the _parlement_ of Paris, he asked the duke's advice about
+its reformation. It was to Philip that all the petitioners flocked.
+But Louis was conscious, too, that there would be a morrow in
+Burgundy, and he took care to be friendly with the count even while he
+was flattering the duke. For this purpose he found Guillaume de Biche
+a very useful go-between.[24] This was one of the retainers dismissed
+in 1457 by Charles at his father's request. He had then passed into
+Louis's service. This man quickly insinuated himself into the king's
+graces, was admitted to his chamber at all hours, and walked arm in
+arm with the returned exile through Paris.
+
+The Burgundian exile had learned the mysteries of the city well in
+his four years' residence. Louis found him an amusing companion and
+skilfully managed to flatter the count by his favour towards the man
+whom he had liked.
+
+For six weeks Philip remained in the capital and astonished the
+Parisians with the fetes he offered. Equally astonished were they
+with their new monarch. Louis was thirty-eight and not attractive in
+person. His eyes were piercing but his visage was made plain by a
+disproportionate nose. His legs were thin and misshapen, his gait
+uncertain. He dressed very simply, wearing an old pilgrim's hat,
+ornamented by a leaden saint. As he rode into Abbeville in company
+with Philip, the simple folk who had never seen the king were greatly
+amazed at his appearance and said quite loud, "Benedicite! Is that a
+king of France, the greatest king in the world? All together his horse
+and dress are not worth twenty francs."[25]
+
+From the beginning of his reign, Louis XI. never lived very long in
+any one place. He did not like the Louvre as a dwelling and had
+the palace of the Tournelles arranged for him. Touraine became by
+preference his residence, where he lived alternately at Amboise and
+in his new chateau at Plessis-les-Tours. But his sojourns were always
+brief. He wanted to know everything, and he wandered everywhere to
+see France and to seek knowledge. His letters, his accounts, the
+chroniclers, the despatches of the Italian ambassador, show him on a
+perpetual journey.
+
+He would set out at break of day with five or six intimates dressed in
+grey cloth like pilgrims; archers and baggage followed at a distance.
+He would forbid any one to follow him, and often ordered the gates of
+the city he had left to be closed, or a bridge to be broken behind
+him. Ambassadors ordered to see him without fail, sometimes had to
+cross France to obtain an interview, at least if their object was
+something in which he was not much interested. Then he would often
+grant them an audience in some miserable little peasant hut.
+
+In the cities where he stopped he would lodge with a burgomaster or
+some functionary. To avoid harangues and receptions he would often
+arrive unannounced through a little alley. If forced to accept an
+_entree_ he stipulated that it should not be marked with magnificence.
+There never was a prince who so disliked ceremonies, balls, banquets,
+and tourneys. At his court young people were bored to death. He never
+ordered festivals except for some visitor; his pleasures were those
+of a simple private gentleman. He liked to dine out of his palace.
+Cagnola relates with surprise that he had seen the king dine after
+mass in a tavern on the market-place at Tours. He invited small nobles
+and bourgeois to dine with him. He was intimate, too, with bourgeois
+women, and indulged in gross pleasantries, speaking to and of women
+without reserve, sparing neither sister, mother, nor queen.
+
+Yet it was a sombre court. "Farewell dames, citizens, demoiselles,
+feasts, dances, jousts, and tournaments; farewell fair and gracious
+maids, mundane pleasures, joys, and games," says Martial d'Auvergne.
+Pompous magnificence may have reminded Louis unpleasantly of his visit
+to Burgundy.
+
+
+[Footnote 1: He had departed with Adolph de la Marck on November
+19th.--_Archives du Nord_. See Du Fresne de Beaucourt, vi., 113. No
+mention of this seems to appear elsewhere.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Chastellain (iii., 233) says that he heard the story from
+the clerk of the chapel, sole witness of this family quarrel. The duke
+was so angry that it was hideous to see him.]
+
+[Footnote 3: La Marche, ii., 418; Du Clercq, ii., 237; Chastellain,
+iii., 230, etc. In the last the narrative is more elaborate. The
+author dwells much on the danger to the young countess in her delicate
+state of health.]
+
+[Footnote 4: "Thus there was much coming and going: and it was ordered
+by Monseigneur le Dauphin that Monseigneur de Ravestein and the
+king-at-arms of the Toison d'Or should go to Dendermonde to learn the
+wishes of the Count of Charolais and his intentions, of which I am
+entitled to speak for I was despatched several times to Brussels in
+behalf of my said Seigneur of Charolais, to ask the advice of the
+Chancellor Raulin as to the best method of conducting the present
+affair"--(La Marche, ii., 419.)]
+
+[Footnote 5: La Marche, ii., 420. One of these, Guillaume Biche, went
+to France and La Marche says that he himself often went to him to
+obtain valuable information.]
+
+[Footnote 6: La Marche, ii., 418.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Du Clercq, ii., 239.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Chastellain, iii., 308.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Du Fresne de Beaucourt, vi., 123. Thierry de Vebry to the
+Count de Vaudemart.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Du Fresne de Beaucourt, vi., 123.]
+
+[Footnote 11: _Les Cent Nouvelles Nouvelles_, ed. A.J.V. Le Roux. The
+stories are, as a rule, only retold tales.]
+
+[Footnote 12: "The spectacle was not witnessed by Count Charolais
+nor by Louis the Dauphin, nor by the Lord of Croy, whom for certain
+reasons he was unwilling to take with him." (Meyer, P.322.)]
+
+[Footnote 13: Kervyn, _Hist. de Flandre_, v., 23. At this time Philip
+was ignoring a peremptory summons to appear before the Parliament of
+Paris.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Meyer, p. 321.
+
+[Footnote 15: Du Fresne de Beaucourt, vi., 267.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Report of an eye-witness. (Duclos, v., 195.)]
+
+[Footnote 17: Du Fresne de Beaucourt. vi., 326.]
+
+[Footnote 18: Lavisse, iv^{ii}, 321.]
+
+[Footnote 19: IV., 21.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Chastellain, iv., 45.]
+
+[Footnote 21: Chastellain was not present, but he says of Philip's
+suite (iv., 47): "From what I have been told and what I have seen in
+writing, it was a wonderful thing and its like had never been seen in
+this kingdom."]
+
+[Footnote 22: "And I, myself, assert this for I was there and saw all
+the nobles" (Chastellain, iv., 52).]
+
+[Footnote 23: When return presents were distributed to the nobles
+Philip received a lion, Charles a pelican.]
+
+[Footnote 24: Chastellain, iv., 115.]
+
+[Footnote 25: Lavisse, iv^{ii}, 325.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+THE WAR OF PUBLIC WEAL
+
+1464-1465
+
+
+The era of good feeling between Louis XI. and his Burgundian kinsmen
+was of short duration, and no wonder. The rich rewards confidently
+expected as fitting recompense for five years' kindness more than
+cousinly, towards a penniless refugee were not forthcoming.
+
+The king was lavish in fine words, and not chary in certain
+ostentatious recognition towards his late host, but the fairly
+munificent pension, together with the charge of Normandy settled upon
+the Count of Charolais, proved only a periodical reminder of promises
+as regularly unfulfilled on each recurring quarter day, while the post
+of confidential adviser to the inexperienced monarch, which Philip had
+intended to occupy, remained empty.
+
+Louis put perfect trust in no one but turned now to one counsellor,
+now to another, and used such fragments of advice as pleased his whim
+and paid no further heed to the giver.
+
+Not long after Louis's coronation there occurred that change in
+Philip's bodily constitution that comes to all active men sooner or
+later. His health began to give way, his energies relaxed, and matters
+that had been of paramount importance throughout his career were
+allowed to slip into the background of his desires. In the famous
+treaty of 1435, no article was rated at greater importance than that
+which placed the towns on the Somme in Philip's hands, subject to a
+redemption of two hundred thousand gold crowns. Whether Charles VII.
+had actually pledged himself that the mortgage should hold at least
+during Philip's life does not seem assured, but that any sum would be
+insufficient to induce the duke to release them unless his intellect
+were somewhat deadened, is clear.
+
+In 1462, when he recovered from a sharp attack, possibly the result
+of his indulgence in the pleasures of the table during the prolonged
+festivities at Paris, he did not regain his previous vigour. This was
+the time, by the way, when opportunity was afforded his courtiers to
+prove that devotion to their seigneur outweighed personal vanity. When
+his head was shaved by order of the court physician, more than five
+hundred nobles sacrificed their own locks so that their becoming curls
+might not remind their chief of his own bald head. The sacrifice was
+not always voluntary, adds an informant.[1] Philip forced compliance
+with this new fashion upon all who seemed reluctant to be
+unnecessarily shorn of what beauty was theirs by nature's gift. This
+servility may have consoled Philip for the deprivation of his hair. In
+his depressed condition any solace was acceptable.
+
+It was just when the duke was in this enfeebled state that Louis,
+through the mediation of the Croys, pushed forward his proposition to
+redeem the towns and Philip agreed, possibly relying upon the chance
+that it would be no easy matter for the French king to wring the
+required sum from his impoverished land. Philip's assent was, however,
+promptly clinched by a cash payment of half the amount[2]; the
+remainder followed.
+
+Amiens, Abbeville, and the other towns, valuable bulwarks for the
+Netherland provinces, fine nurseries for the human material requisite
+for Burgundian armies, rich tax payers as they were, all tumbled into
+the outstretched hands of the duke's wily rival.
+
+The transaction was hurried through and completed before a rumour of
+its progress came to the ear of the interested heir. Charles was in
+Holland sulking and indignant. He had expected good results from his
+tender devotion during his father's acute illness, a devotion shared
+by Isabella of Portugal who hastened to her husband's bedside from her
+convent seclusion when Philip was in need of her ministrations. But,
+in his convalescence, Philip renewed his friendship for the Croys
+whom Charles continued to distrust with bitterness that varied in its
+intensity, but which never vanished from his consciousness. The young
+man felt misjudged, misused, and ever suspicious that personal danger
+to himself lurked in the air of his father's court.
+
+The various rumours of plots against his life may not all have been
+baseless. At last, one of own cousins, the Count of Nevers, was
+accused of having recourse to diabolic means of doing away with the
+duke's legitimate heir.[2] Three little waxen images were found in his
+house, and it was alleged that he practised various magic arts withal
+in order to win the favour of the duke and of the French king, and
+still worse to cause Charles to waste away with a mysterious sickness.
+The accusations were sufficient to make Nevers resign all his offices
+in his kinsman's court and retire, post-haste, to France. Had he been
+wholly innocent he would have demanded trial at the hands of his peers
+of the Golden Fleece as behooved one of the order. But he withdrew
+undefended, and left his tattered reputation fluttering raggedly in
+the breeze of gossip.
+
+Charles stayed in Holland aloof from the ducal court until a fresh
+incident drove him thither to give vent to his indignation. Only three
+days had Philip de Commines been page to Duke Philip, then resident at
+Lille, when an embassy headed by Morvilliers, Chancellor of France,
+was given audience in the presence of the Burgundian court, including
+the Count of Charolais. The future historian,[4] then nineteen years
+old, was keenly alive to all that passed on that November fifth, 1464.
+Morvilliers used very bitter terms in his assertion that Charles had
+illegally stopped a little French ship of war and arrested a certain
+bastard of Rubempre on the false charge that his errand in Holland,
+where the incident occurred, was to seize and carry off Charles
+himself. Moreover, one knight of Burgundy, Sir Olivier de La Marche
+had caused this tale to be bruited everywhere,
+
+ "especially at Bruges whither strangers of all nations resort.
+ This had hurt Louis deeply, and he now demanded through his
+ chancellor that Duke Philip should send this same Sir Olivier de
+ La Marche prisoner to Paris, there to be punished as the case
+ required. Whereupon, Duke Philip answered that the said Sir
+ Olivier was steward of his house, born in the County of Burgundy
+ and in no respect subject to the Crown of France."
+
+Philip added that if his servant had wrought ill to the king's honour
+he, the duke, would see to his punishment. As to the bastard of
+Rubempre, true it was that he had been apprehended in Holland,[5] but
+there was adequate ground for his arrest as his behaviour had been
+strange, at least so thought the Count of Charolais. Philip added that
+if his son were suspicious
+
+ "he took it not of him for he was never so, but of his mother
+ who had been the most jealous lady that ever lived. But
+ notwithstanding" [quoth he] "that myself never were supicious, yet
+ if I had been in my son's place at the same time that this bastard
+ of Rubempre haunted those coasts I would surely have caused him to
+ be apprehended as my son did."
+
+In conclusion, Philip promised to deliver up Rubempre to the king were
+his innocence satisfactorily proven.
+
+Morvilliers then resumed his discourse, enlarging upon the treacherous
+designs of Francis, Duke of Brittany, with whom Charles had lately
+sworn brotherhood at the very moment when he was the honoured guest
+of King Louis at Tours. During this discussion the Count of Charolais
+became very restive. Finally he could no longer endure Morvilliers's
+indirect slurs, and
+
+ "made offer eftsoon to answer, being marvellously out of patience
+ to hear such reproachful speeches used of his friend and
+ confederate. But Morvilliers cut him off, saying: 'My Lord of
+ Charolais, I am not come of ambassage to you, but to my Lord your
+ father.' The said earl besought his father divers times to give
+ him leave to answer, who in the end said unto him: 'I have
+ answered for thee as methinketh the father should answer for the
+ son, notwithstanding if thou have so great desire to speak bethink
+ thyself to-day and to-morrow speak and spare not.'"
+
+Then Morvilliers to his former speech added that he could not imagine
+what had moved the earl to enter into the league with the Duke of
+Brittany unless it were because of a pension the king had once given
+him together with the government of Normandy and afterwards taken from
+him.
+
+In regard to Rubempre, Commines adds to his story Charles's own
+statement given on the morrow:
+
+"Notwithstanding, I think nothing was ever proved against him, though
+I confess the presumption to have been great. Five years after I
+myself saw him delivered out of prison." This from Commines. La Marche
+is less detailed in his record[6] of the Rubempre incident:
+
+ "The bastard was put in prison and the Count of Charolais sent me
+ to Hesdin to the duke to inform him of the arrest and its cause.
+ The good duke heard my report kindly like a wise prince. In truth
+ he at once suspected that the craft of the King of France lurked
+ at the bottom of the affair. Shortly afterwards the duke left
+ Hesdin and returned to his own land, which did not please the King
+ of France who despatched thither a great embassy with the Count
+ d'Eu at the head. Demands were made that I should be delivered to
+ him to be punished as he would, because he claimed that I had been
+ the cause of the arrest of the bastard of Rubempre and also of the
+ duke's departure from Hesdin without saying adieu to the King of
+ France, but the good duke, moderate in all his actions, replied
+ that I was his subject and his servitor, and that if the king or
+ any one else had a grievance against me he would investigate it.
+ The matter was finally smoothed over [adds La Marche], and Louis
+ evinced a readiness to conciliate his offended cousin."
+
+In spite of La Marche, the matter proved to be one not easily disposed
+of by soft phrases flung into the breach. Charles obeyed his father
+and prepared in advance his defence to the chancellor. When he had
+finished his own statement about Rubempre, he proceeded to the point
+of his friendship with the Duke of Brittany, declaring that it was
+right and proper and that if King Louis knew what was to the advantage
+of the French sovereign, he would be glad to see his nobles welded
+together as a bulwark to his throne. As to his pension, he had never
+received but one quarter, nine thousand francs. He had made no suit
+for the remainder nor for the government of Normandy. So long as he
+enjoyed the favour and good will of his father he had no need to crave
+favour of any man.
+
+"I think verily had it not been for the reverence he bore to his said
+father who was there present" continues the observant page, "and to
+whom he addressed his speech that he would have used much bitterer
+terms. In the end, Duke Philip very wisely and humbly besought the
+king not lightly to conceive an evil opinion of him or his son but to
+continue his favour towards them. Then the banquet was brought in and
+the ambassadors took their leave. As they passed out Charles stood
+apart from his father and said to the archbishop of Narbonne, who
+brought up the rear of the little company:
+
+"'Recommend me very humbly to the good grace of the king. Tell him he
+has had me scolded here by the chancellor but that he shall repent it
+before a year is past.'" His message was duly delivered and to this
+incident Commines attributes momentous results.
+
+Exasperated at the nonchalant manner in which Louis's ambassadors
+treated him, indignant at the injury to his heritage by the redemption
+of the towns on the Somme, and further, already alienated from his
+royal cousin through the long series of petty occasions where the
+different natures of the two young men clashed, in this year 1464,
+Charles was certainly more than ready to enter into an open contest
+with the French monarch. It was not long before the opportunity came
+for him to do so with a certain eclat.
+
+In the early years of his own freedom, before he learned wisdom, Louis
+XI. had planted many seeds of enmity which brought forth a plentiful
+crop, and the fruit was an open conspiracy among the nobles of the
+land.
+
+One of the causes of loosening feudal ties was the gradual growth of
+the body of standing troops instituted in 1439 by Charles VII. These,
+in the regular pay of the crown, gave the king a guarantee of support
+without the aid of his nobles. By the date of Louis's accession,
+certain ducal houses besides that of Burgundy had grown very
+independent within their own boundaries: Orleans, Anjou, Bourbon, not
+to speak of Brittany.[7] Now the efforts to curtail the prerogatives
+of these petty sovereigns, begun by Charles VII., were steady and
+persistent in the new reign. They had no longer the power of coining
+money, of levying troops, or of imposing taxes, while the judicial
+authority of the crown had been extended little by little over France.
+Then their privileges were further attacked by Louis's restrictions of
+the chase.
+
+It was the accumulation of these invasions of local authority, added
+to a real disbelief in the king's ability, that led to a formation of
+a league among the nobles, designed to check the centralisation policy
+of the monarch, a League of Public Weal to form a bulwark against the
+tyrannical encroachments of their liege lord.
+
+Not to follow the steps of the growth of this coalition, it is
+sufficient for the thread of this narrative to say that it comprised
+all the great French nobles, the princes of the blood as well as
+others. Men whom Louis had flattered as well as those whom he had
+slighted alike fell from his standards, distrustful of his ability to
+withstand organised opposition, and they threw in their lot with the
+protestors so as not to miss their share of the spoil.
+
+The Count of Charolais, as already mentioned, was in a mood when
+his ears were eagerly open to overtures from Louis's critics. The
+redemption of the towns on the Somme he was unable to prevent, but the
+affair left him very sore. Shortly after its completion, the count
+did, indeed, succeed in depriving the Croys of their ascendency over
+the Duke of Burgundy, but when that long desired victory was attained,
+the towns had one and all accepted their transfer and were under
+French sovereignty. When the count joined the league, the hope of
+ultimate restoration was undoubtedly prominent among the motives for
+his own course of action, though his intimacy with the chief leader of
+the revolt, the Duke of Brittany, might easily have led to the same
+result.
+
+Towards Francis of Brittany, Louis XI. had been especially wanting in
+tact during the first months of his reign. The king treated him as a
+vassal of France, while the duke held that he and his forbears owed
+simple homage to the crown, not dependence. Therefore, in order to
+resist being subordinated, the Duke of Brittany resolved not to leave
+his estates except in a suitable manner. His messages to the king
+were sent in all ceremony, he rendered proper homage, declared his
+readiness to serve him as a kinsman and as a vassal for certain
+territories, but demanded freedom to exercise his hereditary rights
+and to enjoy his hereditary dignities.[8]
+
+"Rude and strange" were the terms employed by the king in response to
+these statements, and then he proceeded to encroach still farther on
+the duke's seigniorial rights by attempts to dispose of the hands of
+Breton heiresses in unequal marriages, and to arrogate to himself
+other rights--all sufficient provocation to justify Francis of
+Brittany in becoming one of the chiefs in the league. Very delightful
+is Chastellain's colloquy with himself[9] as to the difficulty of
+maintaining perfect impartiality in discussing the cause of this
+Franco-Burgundian war, but unfortunately the result of his patient
+efforts is lost.
+
+Olivier de La Marche and Philip de Commines, however, were both
+present in the Burgundian army and their stories are preserved. La
+Marche had reason to remember the first actual engagement between the
+royal and invading forces at Montl'hery, "because on that day I was
+made knight." He does not say, as does Commines, that this battle was
+against the king's desire. Louis had hoped to avoid any use of arms
+and to coerce his rebellious nobles into quiescence by other methods.
+Not that they characterised themselves as rebellious, far from it.
+Clear and definite was their statement that in their obligation
+
+ "to give order to the estate, the police and the government of the
+ kingdom, the princes of the blood as chief supports of the crown,
+ by whose advice and not by that of others, the business of the
+ king and of the state ought to be directed, are ready to risk
+ their persons and their property, and in this laudable endeavour
+ all virtuous citizens ought to aid."[10]
+
+Thus wrote Charles to the citizens of Amiens, and the words were
+typical of similar appeals made in every quarter of the realm by the
+various feudal chiefs to their respective subjects. In truth this war,
+ostentatiously called that of the Public Weal, was but a struggle on
+the part of the great nobles for local sovereignty. The weal demanded
+was home rule for the feudal chiefs. The War of Public Weal was a
+fierce protest against monarchical authority, against concentration. A
+king indeed, but a king in leading strings was the ideal of the peers.
+
+Thus matters stood in June, 1465. Louis almost alone, deserted by his
+brother the Duke of Berry, and his nobles banded together in apparent
+unity, hedged in by their pompous and self-righteous assertions that
+all their thoughts were for the poor oppressed people whose burdens
+needed lightening. Of all the great vassals, Gaston de Foix was the
+single one loyal to the king.
+
+The part of the great duke fell entirely to the share of the Count of
+Charolais. A small force was levied for him within the Netherlands,
+and he started for Paris where he hoped to meet contingents from the
+two Burgundies and his brother peers of France with their own troops.
+His men were good individually but they had not been trained to act as
+one, and there was no coherence between the different companies.
+
+July, 1465, found Charles at St. Denis, the appointed rendezvous. He
+was first in the field. While he awaited his allies, his little army
+became restive at the situation in which they found themselves, fifty
+leagues from Burgundian territory with no stronghold as their base. It
+was urged again and again upon the count that his first consideration
+ought to be his men's safety. His allies had failed him. He should
+retreat. "I have crossed the Oise and the Marne and I will cross the
+Seine if I have but a single page to follow me," was the leader's firm
+reply to these demands.
+
+The leaguers were slow to keep their pledges, and Charles decided that
+it was his mission to prevent Louis from entering his capital, to
+which he was advancing with great rapidity from the south. To carry
+out this purpose Charles disregarded all protests, crossed the Seine
+at St. Cloud, and made his way to the little village of Longjumeau,
+whither he was preceded by the Count of St. Pol, commanding one
+division of the Burgundian army. Montl'hery was a village still
+farther to the south, and here it was that La Marche and other
+gentlemen were knighted. This ceremony was evidently part of the
+count's endeavour to encourage his followers--all unwilling to risk an
+engagement before the arrival of the allies.
+
+To the king it was of infinite advantage that no delay should occur.
+Nevertheless, it was Charles who opened active hostilities on July
+15th, with soldiers who had not broken their fast that day. Armed
+since early dawn, wearied by a forced march with a July sun beating
+down upon their heads, their movements hampered by standing wheat and
+rye, the men were at a tremendous disadvantage when they were led to
+the attack. It was a hot assault. No quarter was given, many fled.
+At length, Louis found himself abandoned by all save his body-guard.
+Pressed against the hill that bounded the grain fields, the king at
+last retreated up its slope into a castle on its summit.
+
+Charles rode impetuously after the retreating royalists. Separated
+from his men, he fell among the royal guard at the gate of the castle.
+There was a vehement assault resisted as vehemently by his meagre
+escort. Several fell and Charles himself received a sword wound on his
+neck where his armour had slipped. Recognised by the French, he might
+have been taken or slain in his resistance, when the Bastard of
+Burgundy rode in and rescued him. Very desperate seemed the count's
+condition. When night fell, no one knew where lay the advantage. The
+fugitives spread rumours that the king was dead and that Charles was
+in possession, others carried the reverse statements as they rode
+headlong to the nearest safety. It was a rout on both sides with no
+credit to either leader. But in the darkness of the night, the king
+managed to slip out of his retreat and march quietly towards the
+greater security of Paris.
+
+It was a very shadowy victory that Charles proudly claimed. All
+through the night of July 15th, the Burgundians were discussing
+whether to flee or to risk further fighting against the odds all
+recognised. Daybreak found the council in session when a peasant
+brought tidings that the foe had departed. The fires in sight only
+covered their retreat. To be sure that same foe had taken Burgundian
+baggage with them to Paris. But what of that? The Burgundians held the
+battlefield and they made the best of it.
+
+On July 16th, Louis supped with the military governor of Paris and
+"moved the company, nobles and ladies, to sympathetic tears by his
+touching description of the perils he had met and escaped." Charles,
+meanwhile, effected a junction with his belated allies, Francis of
+Brittany and Charles of France, the Duke of Berry, at Etampes. Thither
+too, came the dukes of Bourbon and of Lorraine, but none of these
+leaguers could claim any share in the battle of Montl'hery.
+
+[Illustration: BATTLE OF MONTL'HERY, JULY 16, 1465 (COMINES, ED.
+LENGLET DU FRESNOY, 1.)]
+
+While these peers perfected their plans to force their chief into
+redressing the wrongs of the poor people, the king was showing a very
+pleasant side of his character to the Parisian citizens. In response
+to a petition that he should take advice on the conduct of his
+administration, he declared his perfect willingness to add to his
+council six burgesses, six members of _parlement_, and the same number
+from the university. Besides this concession, he relieved the weight
+of the imposts and hastened to restore certain financial franchises to
+the Church, to the university, and to various individuals. Three weeks
+were consumed in establishing friendly relations in this all important
+city, and then the king departed for Normandy to levy troops and to
+collect provisions for a siege.[11] There was need for this last for
+the allies had moved up to the immediate vicinity of Paris.
+
+Before the king's return to his capital on August 28th, a formidable
+array was encamped at Charenton and its neighbourhood. More
+formidable, however, they were in numbers than in strength. Like all
+confederated bodies there was inherent weakness, for there was no
+leader whom all would be willing to obey. The Duke of Berry, heir
+presumptive to the throne, was the only one among the peers whose
+birth might have commanded the needful authority, but he had not
+sufficient personal character to assert his position. So the
+confederates remained a loose aggregation of small armies. The longer
+they remained in camp the weaker they grew, the more disintegrated.
+A pitched battle might have been a great advantage to these gallant
+defenders of the Public Weal of France and that was the last desire of
+their antagonist.
+
+Many skirmishes took place between the Parisians and the leaguers, but
+no engagement. Once, indeed, there were hurried preparations on the
+part of the Burgundians to repulse an attack, of whose imminence they
+were warned by a page before break of day, one misty morning. Yes,
+there was no doubt. The pickets could see the erect spears and furled
+banners of the enemy all ready to advance upon the unwary camp. Quick
+were the preparations. There were no laggards. The Duke of Calabria
+was more quickly armed than even the Count of Charolais. He came to a
+spot where a number of Burgundians, the count's own household stood,
+by the standard. Among them was Commines[l2] and he heard the duke
+say: "We now have our desire, for the king is issued forth with his
+whole force and marches towards us as our scouts report. Wherefore let
+us determine to play the men. So soon as they be out of the town we
+will enter and measure with the long ell." By these words he meant
+that the soldiers would speedily have a chance to use their pikes as
+yard sticks to measure out their share of the booty. False prophet
+was the duke that time! When the daylight grew stronger, the upright
+spears and furled banners of the advancing foe proved to be a mass of
+thistles looming large in the magnifying morning mist! The princes
+took their disappointment philosophically, enjoyed early mass, and
+then had their breakfast.
+
+The young Commines is surprised that Paris and her environs were rich
+enough to feed so many men. Gradually the aspect of affairs changed.
+Negotiating back and forth became more frequent. The disintegration of
+the allies became more and more evident. Louis XI. bided his time and
+then took the extraordinary resolution to go in person to the camp at
+Charenton to visit his cousin of Burgundy. With a very few attendants,
+practically unguarded, he went down the Seine. His coming had been
+heralded and the Count of Charolais stood ready to receive him, with
+the Count of St. Pol at his side. "Brother, do you pledge me safety?"
+(for the count's first wife was sister of Louis) to which the count
+responded: "Yes, as one brother to another."[13]
+
+Nothing could have been more genial than was the king. He assured
+Charles that he loved a man who kept his word beyond anything.
+
+Veracity was his passion. Charles had kept the promise he had sent by
+the archbishop of Narbonne, and now he knew in very truth that he was
+a gentleman and true to the blood of France. Further, he disavowed the
+insolence of his chancellor towards Charles, and repeated that his
+cousin had been justified in resenting it. "You have kept your promise
+and that long before the day."[14]
+
+Then in a friendly promenade, Louis gave an opportunity to Charles and
+St. Pol to state, informally, the terms on which they would withdraw
+from their hostile footing, and count the weal restored to the
+oppressed public whose sorrows had moved them to a confederation.
+
+Distasteful as was every item to Louis, he accepted the requisition of
+those who felt that they were in a position to dictate, and after a
+little more parleying at later dates, the treaty of Conflans was duly
+arranged. It was none too soon for the allies. They could hardly have
+held together many days longer in the midst of the jealousies rife in
+their camps.
+
+The king paused at nothing. To his brother he gave Normandy, to
+Charles of Burgundy the towns on the Somme with guarantee of
+possession for his lifetime, while the Count of St. Pol was made
+Constable of France.
+
+[Illustration: LOUIS XI. WITH THE PRINCES AND SEIGNEURS OF THE WAR
+OF PUBLIC WEAL TAKEN FROM CONTEMPORANEOUS MINIATURE IN ABBEY OF ST.
+GERMAIN DES PRES (COMINES-LENGLET, II., FRONTISPIECE)]
+
+Boulogne and Guienne, too, were ceded to Charles, lesser places and
+pensions to the other confederates. The contest ended with complete
+victory for the allies who were left with the proud consciousness
+that they had set a definite limit to royal pretensions, at least, on
+paper.
+
+After the treaty was signed, the king showed no resentment at his
+defeat but urged his cousin to amuse himself a while in Paris before
+returning home. Charles was rash, but he had not the temerity to trust
+himself so far. Pleading a promise to his father to enter no city gate
+until on paternal soil, he declined the invitation and soon returned
+to the Netherlands, where his own household had suffered change.
+During his absence, the Countess of Charolais had died and been buried
+at Antwerp. Charles is repeatedly lauded for his perfect faithfulness
+to his wife, but her death seems to have made singularly little ripple
+on the surface of his life. The chroniclers touch on the event very
+casually, laying more stress on the opportunity it gave Louis XI.
+to offer his daughter Anne as her successor, than on the event
+itself.[15]
+
+
+[Footnote 1: La Marche, ii., 227. Peter von Hagenbach was the
+chamberlain to enforce this.]
+
+[Footnote 2: The receipt for this half payment was signed October
+8, 1462. (Comines, _Memoires_, Lenglet du Fresnoy edition, ii.,
+392-403.)]
+
+[Footnote 3: Du Clercq, iii., 236; Comines-Lenglet, ii., 393.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Commines, _Memoires_ I., ch. i. In the above passages
+Dannett's translation is followed for the racy English.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Commines says at The Hague; Meyer makes it Gorcum.]
+
+[Footnote 6: III., 3.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Lavisse iv^{ii}., 336.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Chastellain, v., i, etc.]
+
+[Footnote 9: V., II.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Letter of the Count of Charolais to the citizens of
+Amiens. (_Collection de Documents inedits sur l'histoire de France_.)
+"Melanges," ii., 317. In this collection taken from MS. in the Bibl.
+Nat. there are many letters private and public about these events.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Since its recovery from the English, there had been no
+duke in Normandy. It was thus the one province open to the king.]
+
+[Footnote 12: I., ch. xi. His vivacious story of the siege should be
+read in detail.]
+
+[Footnote 13: I., ch. xii.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Commines, I., ch. xii.]
+
+[Footnote 15: La Marche, iii., p. 27.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+LIEGE AND ITS FATE
+
+1465-1467
+
+
+"When we have finished here we shall make a fine beginning against
+those villains the Liegeois." Thus wrote the count's secretary on
+October 18th.[1] Charles had no desire to rest on the laurels won
+before Paris. To another city he now turned his attention, to Liege
+which owed nothing whatsoever to Burgundy.
+
+Before the days when the buried treasures of the soil filled the
+air with smoke, the valley where Liege lies was a lovely spot.[2]
+Tradition tells how, in the sixth century, Monulphe, Bishop of
+Tongres, as he made a progress through his diocese was attracted by
+the beauties of the site where a few hovels then clustered near the
+Meuse. After looking down from the heights to the river's banks for
+a brief space, the bishop turned to his followers and said, as if
+uttering a prophecy:
+
+"Here is a place created by God for the salvation of many faithful
+souls. One day a prosperous city shall flourish here. Here I will
+build a chapel." Dedicated to Cosmo and Damian, the promised chapel
+became a shrine which attracted many pilgrims who returned to their
+various homes with glowing tales of the beautiful and fertile valley.
+Little by little others came who did not leave, and by the seventh
+century when Bishop Lambert sat in the see of Tongres, Liege was a
+small town.
+
+An active and loving shepherd was this Lambert. He gave himself no
+rest but travelled continually from one church to another in his
+diocese to look after the needs of his flock. He was a fearless
+prelate, too, and his words of well-deserved rebuke to the Frankish
+Pepin for a lawless deed excited the wrath of a certain noble,
+accessory to the act. Trouble ensued and Lambert was slain as he knelt
+before the altar in Monulphe's chapel at Liege. Absorbed in prayer
+the pious man did not hear the servants' calls, "Holy Lambert, Holy
+Lambert come to our aid," words that later became a war-cry when the
+bishop was exalted into the patron saint of the town.
+
+Not until the thirteenth century, however, when the episcopal see was
+finally established at Liege, was Lambert's successor virtual lay
+overlord of the region as well as Bishop of Liege. Monulphe's little
+chapel had given way to a mighty church dedicated to the canonised
+Bishop Lambert. The ecclesiastical state became almost autonomous, the
+episcopal authority being restricted without the walls only by the
+distant emperor and still more distant pope. Within the walls, the
+same authority had by no means a perfectly free hand. There were
+certain features in the constitution of Liege which differentiated it
+from its sister towns in the Netherlands.
+
+Municipal affairs were conducted in a singularly democratic manner.
+There was no distinction between the greater and lesser gilds, and,
+within these organisations, the franchise was given to the most
+ignorant apprentice had he only fulfilled the simple condition of
+attaining his fifteenth year. Moreover, the naturalisation laws were
+very easy. Newcomers were speedily transformed into citizens and
+enjoyed eligibility to office as well as the franchise. The tenure of
+office being for one year only, there was opportunity for frequent
+participation in public affairs, an opportunity not neglected by the
+community.[2]
+
+The bishop was, of course, not one of the civic officers chosen by
+this liberal franchise. He was elected by the chapter of St. Lambert,
+subject to papal and imperial ratification for the two spheres of his
+jurisdiction. But in the exercise of his function there were many
+restrictions to his free administration, which papal and imperial
+sanction together were unable to remove.
+
+A bishop-prince of Liege could make no change in the laws without the
+consent of the estates, and he could administer justice only by means
+of the regular tribunals. Every edict had to be countersigned. When
+there was an issue between overlord and people, the question was
+submitted to the _schepens_ or superior judges who, before they gave
+their opinion, consulted the various charters which had been granted
+from time to time, and which were not allowed to become dead letters.
+A permanent committee of the three orders supervised the executive and
+the administration of the laws. These "twenty-two" received an appeal
+from the meanest citizen, and the Liege proverb "In his own home the
+poor man is king," was very near the possible truth.
+
+Yet the wheels of government were by no means perfect in their
+running. Many were the conflicts between the different members of the
+state, and broils, with the character of civil war in miniature, were
+of frequent occurrence. The submergence of the aristocratic element,
+the nobles, destroyed a natural balance of power between the
+bishop-prince and the people. The commons exerted power beyond their
+intelligence. Annual elections, party contests headed by rival
+demagogues kept the capital, and, to a lesser extent, the smaller
+towns of the little state in continuous commotion[4].
+
+The ecclesiastical origin of the community was evident at all points
+of daily life. The cathedral of St. Lambert was the pride of the city.
+Its chapter, consisting of sixty canons, took the place held by the
+aristocratic element in the other towns.
+
+In the cathedral, the holy standard of St. Lambert was suspended. At
+the outbreak of war this was taken down and carried to the door by the
+clergy in solemn procession. There it was unfurled and delivered to
+the commander of the civic militia mounted on a snow-white steed. When
+he received the precious charge he swore to defend it with his life.
+
+One object of popular veneration was this standard, another was the
+_perron_, an emblem of the civic organisation. This was a pillar of
+gilded bronze, its top representing a pineapple surmounted by a cross.
+This stood on a pedestal in the centre of the square where was the
+_violet_ or city hall. In front of the perron were proclaimed all the
+ordinances issued by the magistrates, or the decrees adopted by the
+people in general assembly. On these occasions the tocsin was rung,
+the deans of the gilds would hasten out with their banners and plant
+them near the perron as rallying points for the various gild members
+who poured out from forge, work-shop, and factory until the square was
+filled.
+
+There were two powerful weapons whereby the bishop-prince might
+enforce his will in opposition to that of his subjects did the latter
+become too obstreperous. He could suspend the court of the _schepens_,
+and he could pronounce an interdict of the Church which caused the
+cessation of all priestly functions. When this interdict was in
+action, civil suits between burghers could be adjudged by the
+municipal magistrates, but no criminals could be arrested or tried.
+The elementary principles of an organised society were thrown into
+confusion. Still worse confusion resulted from the bishop's last
+resort as prince of the Church. An interdict caused the church bells
+to be silent, the church doors to be closed. The celebration of the
+rites of baptism, of marriage, of burial ceased.[5] The fear of such
+cessation was potent in its restraint, unless the populace were too
+far enraged to be moved by any consideration.
+
+While the Burgundian dukes extended their sway over one portion of
+Netherland territory after another, this little dominion maintained
+its complete independence of them. The fact that its princes were
+elective protected it from lapsing through heritage to the duke who
+had been so neatly proven heir to his divers childless kinsfolk. It
+was a rich little vineyard without his pale.
+
+They were clever people those Liegeois. Their Walloon language is
+a species of French with many peculiarities showing Frankish
+admixture.[6] The race was probably a mixed one too, but its acquired
+characteristics made a very different person from a Hollander, a
+Frisian, or a Fleming, though there was a certain resemblance to the
+latter.
+
+In 1465, not yet exploited were the wonderful resources of coal and
+minerals which now glow above and below the furnace fires until, from
+a distance, Liege looks like a very Inferno. But the people were
+industrious and energetic in their crafts. It was a country of skilled
+workmen. The city of Liege is accredited with one hundred thousand
+inhabitants at this epoch, and the numbers reported slain in
+the various battles in which the town was involved run into the
+thousands.[7]
+
+In 1456, Philip of Burgundy, encouraged by his success in the diocese
+of Utrecht, obtained a certain ascendency over the affairs of Liege by
+interfering in the election of a bishop. There was no natural vacancy
+at the moment. John of Heinsberg was the incumbent, a very pleasant
+prelate with conciliatory ways. He loved amusement and gay society,
+pleasures more easily obtainable in Philip's court than in his own,
+and his agreeable host found means of persuading him to resign all the
+cares of his see. Then the enterprising duke proceeded to place his
+own nephew, Louis of Bourbon, upon the vacant episcopal throne.
+
+This nephew was an eighteen-year-old student at the University of
+Louvain, destitute of a single qualification for the office proposed.
+Nevertheless, all difficulties, technical and general were ignored,
+and a papal dispensation enabled the candidate even to dispense with
+the formality of taking orders. Attired in scarlet with a feathered
+Burgundian cap on his head, Louis made his entry into his future
+capital and was duly enthroned as bishop-prince in spite of his
+manifest unfitness for the place.
+
+Nor did he prove a pleasant surprise to his people, better than the
+promise of his youth, as some reckless princes have done. On the
+contrary, ignorant, sensuous, extortionate, he was soon at drawn
+swords with his subjects. After a time he withdrew to Huy where he
+indulged in gross pleasures while he attempted to check the rebellious
+citizens of his capital by trying some of the measures of coercion
+used by his predecessors as a last resort.
+
+Liege was lashed into a state of fury. Matters dragged on for a long
+time. The people appealed to Cologne, to the papal legate, to the
+pope, and to the "pope better informed," but no redress was given.
+Philip continued to protect the bishop, and none dared put themselves
+in opposition to him. Finally, the people turned to Louis XI. for aid.
+Their appeal was heard and the king's agent arrived in the city
+just as one of the bishop's interdicts was about to be enforced,
+an interdict, too, endorsed by a papal bull, threatening the usual
+anathema if the provisions were not obeyed.
+
+It was the moment for a demagogue and one appeared in the person of
+Raes de la Riviere, lord of Heers. On July 5, 1465, there was to be
+unbroken silence in all sacred edifices. Heers and his followers
+proclaimed that every priest who refused to chant should be thrown
+into the river. Mass was said under those unpeaceful and unspiritual
+conditions, and the presence of the French envoys gave new heart to
+the bishop's opponents. A treaty was signed between the Liegeois
+and Louis; wherein mutual pledges were made that no peace should be
+concluded with Burgundy in which both parties were not included. It
+was a solemn pledge but it did not hamper Louis when he signed the
+treaty of Conflans whose articles contained not a single reference to
+the Liegeois.
+
+Meanwhile, it chanced that the first report of the battle of
+Montl'hery reaching Liege gave the victory to Louis, a report that
+spurred on the Liegeois to carry their acts of open hostility to their
+neighbour, still farther afield. The other towns of the Church state
+were infected by an anti-Burgundian sentiment. In Dinant this feeling
+was high, and there was, moreover, a manifestation of special
+animosity against the Count of Charolais. A rabble marched out of the
+city to the walls of Bouvignes, a town of Namur, loyal to Burgundy,
+carrying a stuffed figure with a cow-bell round its neck. Certain
+well-known emblems of Burgundy on a tattered mantle showed that this
+represented Charles of Burgundy. With rude words the crowd declared
+that they were going to hang the effigy as his master, the King of
+France, had already hanged Count Charles in reality. Further, they
+said that he was no count at all, but the son of their old bishop,
+Heinsberg. They went so far as to suspend the effigy on a gallows and
+then riddled it with arrows and left it dangling like a scarecrow in
+sight of the citizens of Bouvignes.[8]
+
+The actual contents of the treaty made at Conflans did not reach Liege
+until messages from Louis had assured them that he had been mindful of
+their interests in making his own terms, assurances, however, coupled
+with advice to make peace with their good friend the duke. But there
+speedily came later information that the only mention of Liege in the
+new treaty was an apology that Louis had ever made friends in that
+city!
+
+The rebels lost heart at once. Without the king, they had no
+confidence in their own efforts. Envoys were despatched to Philip who
+refused to answer their humble requests for pardon until his son could
+decide what punishment the principality deserved. Nor was much delay
+to be anticipated before an answer would be forthcoming. Charles
+hastened to Liege direct from Paris, not pausing even to greet his
+father. By the third week of January, he was encamped between St.
+Trond and Tongres, where a fresh deputation from Liege found him.
+These envoys, between eighty and a hundred, were well armed chiefly
+because they feared attacks from their anti-peace fellow-citizens.[9]
+
+They found Charles flushed by his recent achievement of bringing King
+Louis to his way of thinking. His army, too, was a stronger body than
+when it left the Netherlands. The troops were more skilled from
+their experience and elated at what they counted their success; more
+capable, too, of acting as one body under the guidance of a resolute
+leader, now inclined to despise councils with free discussion. The
+count's quick temper had gained him weight but it had made him feared.
+The slightest breach of discipline brought a thunder-cloud on his
+face. If we may believe one authority,[10] he himself was often so
+lacking in discipline that he would strike an officer with a baton,
+and once at least, he killed a soldier with his own hand.
+
+His audience with the envoys resulted in a treaty, of which certain
+articles were so harsh that the messengers were insulted when the
+report was made in Liege. Only eleven out of thirty-two gilds voted to
+accept all the articles. A certain noble on pleasant terms with the
+count offered to carry the unpopular document back to him to ask for a
+modification of the harsh terms.
+
+By this time the weather was severe. Charles's troops were in need of
+repose, and it seemed prudent to avoid hostility if possible. Charles
+revoked the objectionable clauses in consideration of an increase of
+the war indemnity. With this change the treaty was accepted, and a
+Piteous Peace it was indeed for the proud folk of Liege. Instead
+of owing allegiance to emperor and to pope alone as free imperial
+citizens, they agreed to recognise the Burgundian dukes as hereditary
+protectors of Liege.
+
+When it was desired, Burgundian troops could march freely across the
+territory. Burgundian coins were declared valid at Burgundian values.
+No Liege fortresses were to menace Burgundian marches, and unqualified
+obedience was pledged to the new overlords. The same terms were
+conceded to all the rebel towns alike except to Dinant. The story of
+the personal insult to himself and his mother had reached the count's
+ears and he was not inclined to ignore the circumstance. His further
+action was, however, deferred.
+
+January 24, 1466, is the final date of the treaty[11] and, after its
+conclusion, Charles ordered a review of his forces, a review that
+almost culminated in a pitched battle between army and citizens of St.
+Trond, and then on January 31st, the count returned to Brussels where
+there was a great display of Burgundian etiquette before the duke
+embraced his victorious son.
+
+Piteous as was the peace for Liege and the province at large, still
+more piteous was the lot of Dinant which alone was excluded from the
+participation in the treaty. Her fate remained uncertain for months.
+Other affairs occupied the Count of Charolais until late in the summer
+of 1466. Time had quickly proven that Louis, well freed from the
+allies pressing up to the gates of Paris, was in very different temper
+from Louis ill at ease under their strenuous demands. Not only had
+he withdrawn his promises in regard to the duchy conferred on his
+brother, but he had begun taking other measures, ostensibly to prepare
+against a possible English invasion, which alarmed his cousin of
+Burgundy for the undisturbed possession of his recently recovered
+towns on the Somme.
+
+Excited by the rumours of Louis's purposes, Charles despatched the
+following letter from Namur:[12]
+
+ "MONSEIGNEUR:
+
+ "I recommend myself very humbly to your good grace and beg to
+ inform you, Monseigneur, that recently I have been advised of
+ something very surprising to me, Moreover, I am now put beyond
+ doubt considering the source of my information. It is with much
+ regret that I communicate it to you when I remember all the good
+ words you have given to me this year, orally and in writing.
+ Monseigneur, it is evident that there has been some agreement
+ between your people and the English, and that the matter has been
+ so well worked that you have consented, as I have heard, to yield
+ them the land of Caux, Rouen, and the connecting villages, and to
+ aid them in withholding Abbeville and the county of Ponthieu, and
+ further, to cement with them certain alliances against me and my
+ country in making them large offers greatly to my prejudice and,
+ in order to complete the whole, they are to come to Dieppe.
+
+ "Monseigneur, you may dispose of your own as you wish: but,
+ Monseigneur, in regard to what concerns me, it seems to me that
+ you would do better to leave my property in my hand than to be the
+ instrument of putting it into the hands of the English or of any
+ foreign nation. For this reason I entreat you, Monseigneur, that
+ if such overtures or greater ones have been opened by your people
+ that you will not commit yourself to them in any manner but will
+ insist on their cessation, and that you will do this in a way that
+ I may always have cause to remain your very humble servant as I
+ desire to do with all my heart. Above all, write to me your good
+ pleasure, and I implore you, Monseigneur, if there be any service
+ that I can render you, I am the one who would wish to employ all
+ that God has given me [to do it]. Written at Namur, August 16th.
+
+ "Your very humble and obedient subject,
+
+ "CHARLES."
+
+Then the count proceeded to Dinant to inflict the punishment that the
+culprits had, to his mind, too long escaped.
+
+Commines calls this a strong and rich town, superior even to
+Liege.[13] A comparison of the two sites shows, however, that this
+statement could hardly have been true at any time. Dinant lies in a
+narrow space between the Meuse and high land. A lofty rock at one
+end of the town dominating the river is crowned by a fortress most
+picturesque in appearance. It is difficult to estimate how many
+inhabitants there actually were in the place in 1466, but there is
+no doubt as to their energy and character. As mentioned before, the
+artisans had acquired a high degree of skill in their specialty, and
+their brass work was renowned far and wide. Pots and pans and other
+utensils were known as _Dinanderies_.
+
+The traffic in them was so important that Dinant had had her own
+commercial relations with England for a long period. Her merchants
+enjoyed the same privileges in London as the members of the Hanseatic
+League, and an English company was held in high respect at Dinant.[14]
+The brass-founders' gild ranked at Dinant as the drapers at Louvain,
+and the weavers at Ghent. As a "great gild they formed a middle class
+between the lower gilds and the _bourgeois_," the merchants and richer
+folk.[15] In municipal matters each of these three classes had a
+separate vote.
+
+As it happened, Dinant had not been very ready to open hostilities
+against the House of Burgundy though she was equally critical of Louis
+of Bourbon in his episcopal misrule. It was undoubtedly her rivalry
+with Bouvignes of Namur that brought her into the strife. That
+neighbour had taunted her rival to exasperation, and the fact that
+it was safe under the Duke of Burgundy and backed by him as Count of
+Namur, had brought a Burgundian element into the local contest.
+
+The incidents of the insult to Charles and the aspersion on his
+mother's reputation undoubtedly were due to an irresponsible rabble
+rather than to any action that could properly be attributed to the
+leading men. Further, it really seems probable that the weight
+attached to the insulting act never occurred to the respectable
+burghers until they heard of it from others, so insignificant were the
+participants in it.
+
+As soon as it was realised that serious consequences might result
+from reckless folly, the authorities were quite ready to separate
+themselves from the event, and to arrest the culprits as common
+malefactors. Once, indeed, the prisoners were temporarily rescued by
+their friends, and it seemed to Burgundian sympathisers a suspicious
+circumstance that this happened just at a moment when there was
+renewed hope for help from Louis XI. When convinced that such hopes
+were vain, the magistrates became seriously alarmed and ready to go
+to any lengths to avert Burgundian vengeance. Finally the following
+letter was despatched to the Duke of Burgundy:[16]
+
+ "The poor, humble and obedient servants and subjects of the most
+ reverend father in God, Louis of Bourbon, Bishop of Liege; and
+ your petty neighbours and borderers, the burgomaster's council and
+ folk of Dinant, humbly declare that it has come to their knowledge
+ that the wrath of your grace has been aroused against the town on
+ account of certain ill words spoken by some of the inhabitants
+ thereof, in contempt of your honourable person. The city is as
+ displeased about these words as it is possible to be, and far from
+ wishing to excuse the culprits has arrested as many as could be
+ found and now holds them in durance awaiting any punishment your
+ _grace_ may decree. As heartily and as lovingly as possible do
+ your petitioners beseech your grace to permit your anger to be
+ appeased, holding the people of Dinant exonerated, and resting
+ satisfied with the punishment of the guilty, inasmuch as the
+ people are bitterly grieved on account of the insults and have, as
+ before stated, arrested the culprits."
+
+With further apologies for any failure of duty towards the Duke of
+Burgundy, the petitioners humbly begged to be granted the same terms
+that Liege and the other towns had received. March 31st is the date
+of this humble document. Months of doubt followed before the terrible
+experience of August proved the futility of their pleas, to which the
+ducal family refused to listen, so deep was their sense of personal
+aggrievement. Long as it was since the duchess had taken part in
+public affairs, she, too, had a word to say here. And she, too, was
+implacable against the town where any citizen had dared accuse her of
+infidelity to her husband and to the Church whose interests were more
+to her than anything in the world except her son.[17]
+
+The petition was as unheeded as were all the representations of the
+would-be mediators. Again Dinant turned in desperation to Louis XI.
+and with assurances that after God his royal majesty was their only
+hope, besought him from mere charity and pity to persuade his cousin
+of Burgundy to forgive them. Apparently Louis took no notice of this
+appeal. Dinant's last hope was that her fellow-communes of Liege would
+refuse to ratify the treaty unless she, too, were included. The sole
+concession, obtained by their envoys to Charles in the winter, had
+been a short truce afterwards extended to May, 1466.
+
+During that summer the critical position of the little town was well
+known. Some sympathisers offered aid but it was aid that there was
+possible danger in accepting. Many of the outlaws from Liege, who had
+been expressly excluded from the terms of the peace, had joined the
+ranks of a certain free lance company called "The Companions of the
+Green Tent," as their only shelter was the interlaced branches of the
+forest. To Dinant came this band to aid in her defence.[18] At one
+time it seemed as though a peaceful accommodation might be reached but
+it fell through. Not yet were the citizens ready to surrender their
+charters--"Franchises,--to the rescue," was a frequent cry and no
+treaty was made.
+
+Philip, long inactive, resolved to assist at the reduction of this
+place in person. Too feeble to ride, he was carried to the Meuse in a
+litter, and arrived at Namur on August 14th. Then attended by a small
+escort only, he proceeded to Bouvignes, a splendid vantage point
+whence he could command a view of the scene of his son's intended
+operations. As the crisis became imminent there were a few further
+efforts to effect a reconciliation. When these failed, the town
+prepared to meet the worst.[19] Stories gravely related by Du
+Clercq[20] represent the people of Dinant goaded to actual fury of
+resistance.
+
+By August 7th, the Burgundian troops made their appearance, winding
+down to the river. Conspicuous among the standards--and nobles from
+all Philip's dominions were in evidence--was the banner of the Count
+of Charolais, displaying St. George slaying the dragon.
+
+On Tuesday, August 19th, Dinant was invested and the siege began.
+Within the walls the most turbulent element had gained complete
+control of affairs. All thought of prudence was thrown to the winds.
+From the walls they hurled words at the foe:
+
+"Is your old doll of a duke tired of life that you have brought him
+here to perish?[21] Your Count Charlotel is a green sprout. Bid him
+go fight the King of France at Montl'hery. If he waits for the noble
+Louis or the Liegeois he will have to take to his heels," etc.
+
+It was a heavy siege and the town was riddled with cannon-balls but
+there was no assault. By the sixth day the magistrates determined
+to send their keys to the Count of Charolais and beg for mercy. The
+captain of the great gild of coppersmiths, Jean de Guerin, tried to
+encourage the faint-hearted to protest openly against this procedure.
+Seizing the city colours he declared: "I will trust to no humane
+sentiment. I am ready to carry this flag to the breach and to live or
+die with you. If you surrender, I will quit the town before the foe
+enter it." It was too late, the capitulation was made.
+
+When the keys were brought to Charles he remembered that he was not
+yet duke and ordered them presented to his father in his stead, and to
+his half-brother Anthony was entrusted the task of formally accepting
+the surrender.
+
+It was late in the evening when the Bastard of Burgundy marched in. At
+first he held the incoming troops well under control, but the stores
+of wine were easy to reach, and by the morning there were wild scenes
+of disorder. When Charles arrived, however, on the morrow, Tuesday,
+just a week after the beginning of the siege, lawlessness was checked
+with a strong hand. Any ill treatment of women was peculiarly
+repugnant to him, and he did not hesitate to execute the sternest
+justice upon offenders.[22]
+
+[Illustration: ANTHONY OF BURGUNDY AFTER HANS MEMLING. DRESDEN
+GALLERY]
+
+His entry into the fallen town was made with all the wonted Burgundian
+pomp. Nothing in the proceedings occurred in a headlong or passionate
+manner. A council of war was held and the proceedings decided upon.
+The cruelty that was exercised was used in deliberate punishment,
+not in savage lawlessness. The personal insults to his mother and to
+himself rankled in the count's mind. As one author remarks[23] with
+undoubted reason, it is not likely that any of those responsible for
+the insult were among those punished. After the siege, "pitiable it
+was to see, for the innocent suffered and the guilty escaped."
+
+Certain rich citizens bought their lives with large sums, others _were
+sold as slaves,_[24] or were hanged or beheaded, or were thrown into
+the Meuse.[25] In the monasteries, life was conceded to the inmates
+but that was all. All their property was confiscated. The Count of St.
+Pol, now Constable of France, tried to intercede for the citizens with
+Philip who remained at Bouvignes, but to no result. It might have been
+chance or it might have been intentional that at last flames completed
+the work of destruction. The abode of Adolph of Cleves, at the corner
+of Notre Dame, was found to be on fire at about one o'clock in the
+morning of Thursday, August 28th.
+
+That Charles was responsible for this conflagration Du Clercq thinks
+is incredible.[26] He would certainly have saved all ecclesiastical
+property which was almost completely consumed. Indeed, Charles gave
+orders to extinguish the flames as soon as they were discovered, but
+every one was so occupied with saving his own portion of booty that
+nothing was accomplished and the town-hall caught fire and the church
+of Notre Dame. From the latter some ornaments and treasures were saved
+and the bones of Ste. Perpete, with other holy relics, were rescued by
+Charles himself at risk to his own life.
+
+ "It was never known how the fire originated. Some say it was
+ due to a defective flue. To my mind," [concludes the pious
+ historian],[27] "it was the Divine Will that Dinant should be
+ destroyed on account of the pride and ill deeds of the people. I
+ trust to God who knows all. The duke's people alone lost more than
+ a hundred thousand crowns' value."
+
+_Cy fust Dinant_, "Dinant was," is the sum of his description, four
+days after the conflagration.[28]
+
+On September 1st, Philip, who had remained at Bouvignes while all this
+passed under the direction of Charles, took boat and sailed down to
+Namur. It was almost a triumph,--that trip that proved one of the last
+ever made by the proud duke--and the procession on the river and the
+entry into Namur were closed by a humble embassy from Liege in regard
+to certain points of their peace.
+
+Du Clercq gravely relates, by the way, that the Count of St. Pol's men
+had had no part in the plunder of Dinant. This was hard on the
+poor fellows. Therefore, Philip turned over to their mercies, as a
+compensation for this deprivation, the little town of Tuin, which had
+been rebellious and then submitted. Tuin accepted its fate, submitted
+to St. Pol, and then compounded the right of pillage for a round sum
+of money. Moreover, they promised to lay low their gates and their
+walls and those of St. Trond. In this way, it is said that the
+constable made ten thousand Rhenish florins. Still both he and his men
+felt ill-compensated for the loss of the booty of Dinant.
+
+Charles continued a kind of harassing warfare on the various towns of
+Liege territory. The people of Liege themselves seem to have varied
+in their humour towards Charles, sometimes being very humble in their
+petitions for peace and again very insolent. As a rule, this conduct
+seems to be traceable to their hope of Louis's support. On September
+7th, there was one pitched battle where victory decided the final
+terms of the general peace, and after various skirmishes and
+submissions, Charles disbanded his troops for the winter and joined
+his father at Brussels.
+
+
+[Footnote 1: _Doc. inedits sur l'hist. de France_. "Melanges," ii.,
+398.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Polain, _Recits historiques sur l'ancien pays de Liege_,
+I, etc.]
+
+[Footnote 3: See Kirk, _Charles the Bold_, i., 329.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Jacques de Hemricourt suggested four chief points of
+difficulty in Liege government:
+
+1. The size of the council--two hundred, where twenty would do.
+
+2. The equal voice granted to all gilds without regard to size, when
+all were assembled by the council to vote on a matter.
+
+3. Extension of franchise to youths of fifteen.
+
+4. Facile naturalisation laws. (_See_ Kirk, i., 325.)]
+
+[Footnote 5: In many cases when the interdict was imposed, it is
+probable that it was only partially operative.]
+
+[Footnote 6: See Victor Hugo, _Le Rhin_, i. The Walloon dialect varies
+greatly between the towns. Here are a few words of the "Prodigal Son"
+as they are written in Liege, Huy, and Lille:
+
+LIEGE. Jesus lizi d'ha co: In homme aveut deux fis. Li pus jone derit
+a s'pere: pere dinnez-m'con qui m'dent riv' ni di vosse bin; et l'pere
+lezi partagea s'bin.
+
+HUY. Jesus l'zi d'ha co: Eun homme avut deux fis. Li peus jone derit a
+s'pere etc.
+
+LILLE. Jesus leu dit incore: un homme avot deux garchens. L'pus jeune
+dit a sin pere-mon pere donez me ch que j'dor recouvre d'vo bien; et
+l'pere leu-z-a done a chacun leu parchen.
+
+See also _Doc. inedits concernant l'hist. de la Belgique_, ii., 238,
+for comment on Scott's treatment of the language.]
+
+[Footnote 7: The numbers are probably exaggerated. To-day it contains
+about two hundred thousand.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Du Clercq, iv., 203.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Du Clercq, iv., 249.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Du Clercq, iv., 239-262.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Gachard, _Doc. ined_., ii., 285, 322. For letters and
+negotiations anterior to this peace see p. 197 _et seq_.]
+
+[Footnote 12: Duclos, v., 236.]
+
+[Footnote 13: Book ii., ch. i. To-day there are only about eight
+thousand inhabitants.]
+
+[Footnote 14: In addition to Commines and Du Clercq _see also_ Kirk,
+i., 385, for quotations from Borgnet and others.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Gachard, _Doc. ined_., i., 213, _et passim_.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Gachard, _Doc. ined.,_ ii., 350.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Est falme commune que tres haute princesse la ducesse
+de Bourgogne, a cause desdictes injures at conclut telle hayne sur
+cestedite ville de Dinant qu'elle a jure comme on dist que s'il li
+devoit couster tout son vaellant, fera ruynner cestedite ville en
+mettant toutes personnes a l'espee. (Gachard, _Doc. ined_., ii.,
+222.)]
+
+[Footnote 18: Gachard, _Doc. ined_., ii., 337, _et passim_.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Du Clercq, iv., 273.]
+
+[Footnote 20: He says messengers were put to death without regard to
+their sacred office, even a little child being torn limb from limb.
+Priests were thrown into the river for refusing to say mass, and the
+situation was strained to the last degree.]
+
+[Footnote 21: _Qui a mande ce vieil monnart vostre duc_, etc.]
+
+[Footnote 22: Du Clercq, iv., 278.]
+
+[Footnote 23: De Ram, _Documents relatifs aux troubles du pays de
+Liege,_ "Henricus de Merica," p. 159.]
+
+[Footnote 24: Vel vendebantur in servos. See De Ram _et passim_ for
+documents.]
+
+[Footnote 25: It seems to be well attested that the prisoners were
+tied together and drowned.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Du Clercq, iv., 280.]
+
+[Footnote 27: _Ibid._, 281.]
+
+[Footnote 28: In 1472, a new church was erected "on the spot formerly
+called Dinant" and after that, little by little, the town came to
+life. (Gachard, _Analectes Belgiques_, 318, etc.).]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+THE NEW DUKE
+
+1467
+
+
+The Good Duke's journey to Bouvignes where he witnessed the manner in
+which his authority was vindicated was his last effort. In the early
+summer following, on Friday, June 10th, Philip, then at Bruges, was
+taken ill and died on the following Monday, June 13th, between nine
+and ten in the evening.[1] Charles was summoned on the Sunday, and it
+seemed as though his horse's hoofs hardly struck the pavement as he
+rode, so swift was his course on the way to Bruges.
+
+When he reached the house where his father lay dying, he was told that
+speech had already ceased, but that there was still life. The count
+threw himself on his knees by the bedside, weeping in all tenderness,
+and implored a paternal benediction and pardon for all wherein he had
+offended his father. Near the duke stood his confessor who begged the
+dying man to make a sign if he could still understand what was said
+to him. On this admonition and in reply to his son's prayers, Philip
+turned his eyes to Charles, looked at him and pressed the hand which
+was laid upon his own, but further token was beyond his strength. The
+count stayed by his side until he breathed his last.
+
+Thus ended the life of a man who had been a striking figure in Europe
+for forty years. His most fervent dream, indeed, had never been
+fulfilled. All his pompous vows to wrest the Holy Land from the
+invading Turks had proved vain. Many years had passed since he had
+had military success of any kind, and even in his earlier life his
+successes had been owing to diplomacy and to a happy conjunction
+of circumstances rather than to skilful generalship. He possessed
+pre-eminently the power of personality.
+
+When Duke John of Burgundy fell on the bridge at Montereau and Philip
+came into his heritage, Henry V. of England was in the full flush of
+his prosperity, standing triumphant over England and France, and in a
+position to make good his claim with three stalwart brothers to back
+him. All these young men had died prematurely. Their only descendant
+was Henry VI., and that meagre and wretched representative of the
+ambitious Henry V. had had no spark of the character of his father and
+uncles. The one vigorous element in his life was his wife, Margaret
+of Anjou, who diligently exerted herself to keep her husband on his
+throne. In vain were her efforts. By 1467, Edward of York was on that
+throne. Gone, too, was Charles VII., whose father's acts had clouded
+his early, whose son darkened his latter years.
+
+Out of his group of contemporaries, Duke Philip alone had marched
+steadily to every desired goal. His epitaph gave a fairly accurate
+list of his achievements in doggerel verses:
+
+ "John was born of Philip, child of good King John.
+ To that John, I, Philip, was born his eldest son.
+ Flanders, Artois, and Burgundy his will bequeathed to me
+ Therein to follow him and rule them legally.
+ With Holland, Zealand, Hainaut, my own realm greater grew.
+ Luxemburg, Brabant, Namur soon were added too.
+ The Liegeois and the German my lawful rights defied,
+ By force of right and arms they have been pacified.
+ At one single time against me were maintained
+ French, English, German forces,--nothing have they gained.
+ Against King Charles the Seventh, I warred in great array.
+ From me he begged a peace and king was from that day!
+ The mighty conflicts that I fought in all are numbered seven.
+ Not once was I defeated. To God the praise be given.
+ Time and time again Liege and Ghent revolted,
+ But I put them down. I would not be insulted.
+ In Barrois and Lorraine, King Rene warred upon me.
+ Of Sicily erst king, captivity soon won he.
+ Louis, son of Charles, depressed and refugee,
+ From me received his crown. Five years my guest was he.
+ Edward, Duke of York, fled, wretched, to my land;
+ That now he's England's king is due my aid and hand.
+ To defend the Church, which is the House Divine,
+ The Golden Fleece was founded, that great order mine.
+ Christian faith to succour in vigour and in strength,
+ My galleys sailed the sea in all its dreary length.
+ In later days I planned and most sincerely meant
+ To take the field myself, but Death did that prevent.
+ When Eugene the Pope by the council was disdained,
+ Through my control alone as Pope was he retained.
+ In 1467, Time my goal has set.
+ When I am seventy-one, I pay Dame Nature's debt.
+ With father and grandfather, I now lie buried here.
+ As in life I ever was their equal and their peer.
+ Good Jesu was my guide in every word and deed,
+ Beseech him every one that Heaven be my meed!"
+
+The territories thus named, that passed to the new duke, covered
+a goodly space of earth. Had Philip not slacked his ambition at a
+critical time, undoubtedly he could have left a royal rather than a
+ducal crown to his son. He did not so will it, and, moreover, in a
+way he had receded from his independence as he had accepted feudal
+obligations towards Louis XI. which he never had towards Charles VII.
+
+Lured by the hope of becoming prime adviser of the French king, he had
+emphasised his position as first peer of France. Thus it was as Duke
+of Burgundy _par excellence_ that Philip died, as the typical peer
+whose luxury and magnificence far surpassed the state possible to his
+acknowledged liege. To his son was bequeathed the task of attempting
+to turn that ducal state into state royal, and of establishing a realm
+which should hold the balance of power between France and Germany.
+
+There was no doubt in Charles's mind as to which was the greater, the
+cleverer, the more powerful of the two, Louis the king and Charles the
+duke. Had not the former been a beggarly suppliant at his father's
+gates, as dauphin? As king, had he not been forced to yield at the
+gates of his own capital to every demand made by Charles, standing as
+the conscientious representative of the public welfare of France?
+
+Had not Louis befriended the contumelious neighbour of Charles, only
+to learn that his Burgundian cousin could and would deal summarily
+with all protests against his authority among the lesser folk on
+Netherland territory?
+
+The Croys made an attempt to gain the new duke's friendship, as
+appears from this letter to Duke Charles:
+
+ "Our very excellent lord, we have heard that it has pleased Our
+ Lord to take to Himself and to withdraw from the world the good
+ Duke Philip, our beloved lord and father, prince of glorious
+ memory, august duke, most Christian champion of the faith, patron
+ and pattern of the virtues and honours of Christianity, and the
+ dread of infidel lands. By his valorous deeds, he has won an
+ immortal name among living men, and deserves to our mind to find
+ grace before the merciful bounty of God whom we implore to pardon
+ his faults.
+
+ "Alas! our most doughty seigneur, thus dolorous death shows what
+ is to be expected by all mortals. How many lands, how many nobles,
+ how many peoples, how many treasures, and how many powers would
+ have been ready to prevent what has come to pass, and how many
+ prayers would have risen to God could He have prevented this
+ death!...
+
+ "Death is inevitable, and the death of the good is the end of all
+ evils and the beginning of all benefits, but still your loss
+ and ours cannot pass without affliction. Nevertheless, our most
+ puissant lord, when we consider that we are not left orphans, and
+ that you, his only son, remain to fill his place, this is a cause
+ for comfort.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "We implore you to be pleased to count us your loyal subjects
+ and very humble servitors and to permit us to go to you, to thus
+ declare ourselves, etc.
+
+ "A. DE CROY, "J. DE CROY."
+
+At the time of the duke's death, Olivier de La Marche was in England,
+whither he had accompanied the Bastard of Burgundy on a mission to
+King Edward.[2] Right royally had the latter received the embassy.
+
+ "Clad in purple, the garter on his leg and a great baton in his
+ hand, he seemed, indeed, a personage worthy of being king, for he
+ was a fine prince with a grand manner. A count held the sword
+ in front of him, and around his throne were from twenty to
+ twenty-five old councillors, white-haired and looking like
+ senators gathered together to advise their master."
+
+Thus appeared Edward on the occasion of a tourney given in honour
+of the embassy which La Marche proceeds to describe in detail. The
+Bastard of Burgundy, wearing the Burgundian coat-of-arms with a bar
+sinister, made a fine record for himself.
+
+After the tournament he invited the ladies to a Sunday dinner,
+
+ "especially the Queen and her sisters and made great preparations
+ therefor and then we departed, Thomas de Loreille, Bailiff of
+ Caux, and I to go to Brittany to accomplish our embassy. We
+ arrived at Pleume and were obliged to await wind and boats to
+ go into Brittany. While there, came the news that the Duke of
+ Burgundy was dead. You may believe how great was the bastard's
+ mourning when he heard of his father's death, and how the nobility
+ who were with him mourned too. Their pleasures were melted into
+ tears and lamentations for he died like a prince in all valour.
+
+ "In his life he accomplished two things to the full. One was he
+ died as the richest prince of his time, for he left four hundred
+ thousand crowns of gold cash, seventy-two thousand marks of silver
+ plate, without counting rich tapestries, rings, gold dishes
+ garnished with precious stones, a large and well equipped library,
+ and rich furniture. For the second, he died as the most liberal
+ duke of his time. He married his nieces at his own expense; he
+ bore the whole cost of great wars several times. At his own
+ expense, he refitted the church and chapel at Jerusalem. He gave
+ ten thousand crowns to build the tower of Burgundy at Rhodes; ...
+ No one went from him who was not well recompensed. The state
+ he maintained was almost royal. For five years he supported
+ Monseigneur the Dauphin, and was a prince so renowned that all the
+ world spoke well of him."
+
+The Bastard of Burgundy took leave of the English court and hastened
+to Bruges to join his brother, the Count of Charolais, who received
+him warmly. "Henceforth," explains Olivier, "when I mention the said
+count I will call him the Duke of Burgundy as is reasonable."
+
+Solemnly was the prince's body carried into the church of St. Donat
+in Bruges, there to repose until it could be taken to Burgundy to be
+buried at Dijon with his ancestors. La Marche dismisses the funeral
+with a brief phrase as he was not himself present at Bruges, being
+busied in Brittany. There was a memorial service there, the finest
+he ever saw. The arms of Burgundy were inserted in the chapel
+decorations, not merely pinned on,[2] a fact that impressed the
+chronicler. No nobles, not even those from Flanders, were permitted to
+put on mourning. The Duke of Brittany declared that none but him was
+worthy of the honour for so high a prince.
+
+ "So he alone wore mourning. At the end of the service I went to
+ thank him for the reverence he had shown the House of Burgundy,
+ and he responded that he had only done his duty. Then I finished
+ my business as quickly as I could and crossed the sea again and
+ returned to my new master."
+
+In his treatise on the eminent deeds of the Duke of Burgundy,[4]
+Chastellain recounts, more at length than La Marche, all that his
+great master had accomplished. Then he proceeds to describe the duke
+as he knew him.
+
+ He was medium in height, rather slight but straight as a rush,
+ strong in hip and in arm, his figure well-knit. His neck was
+ admirably proportioned to his body, his hand and foot were
+ slender, he had more bone than flesh, but his veins were
+ full-blooded. Like all his ancestors, his face was long, as was
+ his nose, his forehead high. His complexion was brunette, his hair
+ brownish, soft, and straight, his beard and eye-brows the same
+ colour, but the former curly, the latter were bushy and inclined
+ to stand up like horns when he was angry. His mouth was
+ well-proportioned, his lips full and high-coloured; his eyes were
+ grey, sometimes arrogant but usually amiable in expression.
+ His personality corresponded perfectly to his appearance. His
+ countenance showed his character, and his character was a witness
+ to the truth of his physiognomy. Nothing was contradictory,
+ perfect was the harmony between the inner and the outer man,
+ between the nobility of thought and the simple dignity,
+ well-poised and graceful. Among the great ones of this earth, he
+ was like a star in heaven. Every line proclaimed "I am a prince
+ and a man unique."
+
+ It was for his bearing rather than his beauty that he commanded
+ universal admiration. In a stable he would have looked like an
+ image in a temple. In a hall he was the decoration. Whereever his
+ body was, there, too, was his spirit, ready for the demands of the
+ hour. He was singularly joyous and nicely tempered in speech with
+ so much personal magnetism that he could mollify any enemy if he
+ could only meet him face to face. His dress was always rich and
+ appropriate. He was skilful in horsemanship, in archery, and in
+ tennis, but his chief amusement was the chase. He liked to linger
+ at the table and demanded good serving but was really moderate in
+ his tastes, as often he neglected pheasant for a bit of Mayence
+ ham or salted beef. Oaths and abuse were never heard from him. To
+ all alike his speech was courteous even when there was nothing to
+ be gained.
+
+ "Never, I assert, did falsehood pass his lips, his mouth was equal
+ to his seal and his spoken word to his written. Loyal as fine gold
+ and whole as an egg." Chastellain repeats himself somewhat in
+ the profusion of his eulogy, but such are the main points of his
+ characterisation. Then he proceeds to some qualifications:
+
+ "In order to avoid the charge of flattery, I acknowledge that he
+ had faults. None is perfect except God. Often he was very careless
+ in administration, and he neglected questions of justice, of
+ finance, and of commerce in a way that may redound to the injury
+ of his house. The excuse urged is that it was his deputies who
+ were at fault. The answer to that is that he trusted too much to
+ deputies and should not be excused for his confidence. A ruler
+ ought to understand his business himself.
+
+ "Also he had the vices of the flesh. He pleased his heart at the
+ desire of his eyes. At the desire of his heart he multiplied his
+ pleasures. His wishes were easy to attain. What he wanted was
+ offered freely. He neglected the virtuous and holy lady his wife,
+ a Christian saint, chaste and charitable. For this I offer no
+ excuse. To God I leave the cause.
+
+ "Another fault was that he was not wise in his treatment of his
+ nobles. Especially in his old age he often preferred the less
+ worthy, the less capable advisers. The answer to this charge is
+ that, as his health failed, whoever was by his side obtained
+ ascendency over him and succeeded in keeping the others at a
+ distance. Ergo, theirs is the malice and the excuse is to the
+ princely invalid. In his solitude even valets used their power, as
+ is not wonderful.
+
+ "He went late to mass and often out of hours. Sometimes he had
+ it celebrated at two o'clock or even three, and in so doing he
+ exceeded all Christian observance. For this there is no excuse
+ that I dare allege. I leave it to the judgment of God. He had,
+ indeed, obtained dispensation from the pope for causes which he
+ explained, _and he only_ is responsible. God alone can judge about
+ him.
+
+ "It would be a dreadful shame if his soul suffered for this
+ neglect in lifetime. Earth would not suffice to deplore, nor the
+ nature of man to lament the perdition of such a soul and of such a
+ prince. Hell is not worthy of him nor good enough to lodge him. 0
+ God, who rescued Trajan from Hades for a single virtuous act, do
+ not suffer this man to descend therein!"
+
+Having thus tried his best to give a vivid description of the father's
+personality, while acknowledging that he is not sure of the fate of
+his soul, the chronicler decides that it would be an excellent moment
+to paint the son, too, for all time, in view of his mortality. "I will
+use the past tense so that my words may be good for always."
+
+Duke Charles was shorter and stouter than Duke Philip, but well
+formed, strong in arm and thigh. His shoulders were rather thick-set
+and a trifle stooping, but his body was well adapted to activity.
+The contour of his face was rounder than that of his father, his
+complexion brunette. His eyes were black and laughing, angelically
+clear. When he was sunk in thought it seemed as though his father
+looked out of them. Like his father's mouth was his, full and red. His
+nose was pronounced, his beard brown, and his hair black. His forehead
+was fine, his neck white and well set, though always bent as he
+walked. He certainly was not as straight as Philip, but nevertheless
+he was a fine prince with a fair outer man.
+
+When he began to speak he often found difficulty in expressing
+himself, but once started his speech became fluent, even eloquent.
+His voice was fine and clear, but he could not sing, although he had
+studied the technique and was fond of music. In conversation he was
+more logical than his father, but very tenacious of his own opinion
+and vehement in its expression, although, at the bottom, he was just
+to all men.
+
+In council he was keen, subtle, and ready. He listened to others'
+arguments judicially and gave them due weight before his own concluded
+the discussion. He was attentive to his own business to a fault, for
+he was rather more industrious than became a prince. Economical of his
+own time, he demanded conscience of his subordinates and worked them
+very hard. He was fond of his servants and fairly affable, though
+occasionally sharp in his words. His memory was long and his anger
+dangerous. As a rule, good sense swayed him, but being naturally
+impetuous there was often a struggle between impulse and reason.
+
+He was a God-fearing prince, was devoted to the Virgin Mary, rigid in
+his fasts, lavish in charity. He was determined to avoid death and
+to hold on to his own, tooth and nail, and was his father's peer in
+valour. Like his father, he dressed richly; unlike him, he cared more
+for silver than for jewels. He lived more chastely than is usual to
+princes and was always master of himself. He drank little wine, though
+he liked it, because he found that it engendered fever in him. His
+only beverage was water just coloured with wine. He was inclined to no
+indulgence or wantonness. "At the hour in which I write his taste for
+hard labour is excessive, but in other respects his good sense has
+dominated him, at least thus far. It is to be hoped that as his reign
+grows older he will curb his over-strenuous industry."
+
+As to the duke's sympathies, Chastellain regrets that circumstances
+have turned him towards England. Naturally he belonged to the French,
+and it was a pity that the machinations of the king, "whose crooked
+ways are well known to God, have forced him into self-defence. Yet on
+his forehead he wears the fleur-de-lys."
+
+Chastellain acknowledges that Charles is accused of avarice, but
+defends him on the ground that he has been driven into collecting
+a large army. "A penny in the chest is worth three in the purse of
+another." "To take precautions in advance is a way to save honour and
+property," prudently adds the historian, who evidently flourishes
+his maxims to strengthen his own appreciation of the duke's economy,
+which, quite as evidently, is not pleasing to him. "I have seen him
+the very opposite of miserly, open-handed and liberal, rejoicing in
+largesse. When he came into his seigniory his nature did not change."
+It was simply the exigencies of his critical position that forced him
+to restrain his natural propensities and thus to gain the undeserved
+reputation for parsimony.
+
+It was also said that he was a very hard taskmaster, but as a matter
+of fact he demanded nothing of his soldiers that he was not ready to
+undertake himself. Like a true duke, he was his own commander, drew up
+his own troops himself in battle array, and then passed from one end
+of the line to the other, encouraging the men individually with cheery
+words, promising them glory and profit, and pledging himself to share
+their dangers. In victory he was restrained and showed more mercy than
+cruelty.
+
+After expatiating on the points where Charles was like his
+father--conventional princely qualities --Chastellain adds: "In some
+respects they differed. The one was cold and the other boiling with
+ardour; the one slow and prone to delay, the other strenuous in his
+promptness; the elder negligent of his own concerns, the younger
+diligent and alert. They differed in the amount of time consumed at
+meals and in the number of guests whom they entertained. They differed
+more or less in their voluptuousness and in their expenditures and in
+the way in which they took solace and amusement." But in all other
+respects, "in life they marched side by side as equals and if it
+please God He will be their conductor in glory everlasting" is the
+final assurance of their eulogist.
+
+Yet, lavish as the Burgundian poet is in his adjectives about his
+patron, there is considerable discrimination between his summaries of
+the two dukes. It is very evident that from his accession Charles
+was less of a favourite than his father. While endeavouring to be
+as complimentary as possible, distrust of his capacities creeps out
+between the lines. Chastellain died in 1475, and thus never saw
+Charles's final disaster. But the violence of his character had
+inspired lack of confidence in his power of achievement, a violence
+that made people dislike him as Philip with all his faults was never
+disliked.
+
+
+
+[Footnote 1: Du Clercq, iv., 302 _et seq_. Erasmus was born in this
+year, 1467.]
+
+[Footnote 2: II., 49.]
+
+[Footnote 3: "Non par armes attachees a espingles."]
+
+[Footnote 4: _Oeuvres_, vii., 213.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+THE UNJOYOUS ENTRY
+
+1467
+
+
+After the dauphin was crowned at Rheims, he was monarch over all his
+domains. Charles of Burgundy, on the other hand, had a series of
+ceremonies to perform before he was properly invested with the various
+titles worn by his father. Each duchy, countship, seigniory had to be
+taken in turn. Ghent was the first capital visited. Then he had
+to exchange pledges of fidelity with his Flemish subjects before
+receiving recognition as Count of Flanders.
+
+According to the custom of his predecessors, Charles stayed at the
+little village of Swynaerde, near Ghent, the night before he made his
+"joyous entry" into that city. It had chanced that the day selected by
+Charles for the event was St. Lievin's Day and a favourite holiday of
+the workers of Ghent. The saint's bones, enclosed conveniently in a
+portable shrine, rested in the cathedral church, whence they were
+carried once a year by the fifty-two gilds in solemn procession to
+the little village of Houthem, where the blessed saint had suffered
+martyrdom in the seventh century. All day and all night the saint's
+devotees, the Fools of St. Lievin, as they were called, remained at
+this spot. Merry did the festival become as the hours wore on, for
+good cheer was carried thither as well as the sacred shrine.
+
+Now the magistrates were a little apprehensive about the rival claims
+of the new count of Flanders and the old saint of Ghent. They knew
+that they could not cut short the time-honoured celebration for the
+sake of the sovereign's inauguration, so they decided to prolong the
+former, and directed that the saint should leave town on Saturday and
+not return until Monday. This left Sunday free for the young count's
+entry. It probably seemed a very convenient conjunction of events to
+the city fathers, because the more turbulent portion of the citizens
+was sure to follow the saint.
+
+Accordingly, Charles made a very quiet and dignified entrance,[1]
+having paused at the gates to listen to the fair words of Master
+Mathys de Groothuse as he extolled the virtues of the late Count of
+Flanders, and requested God to receive the present one, when he, too,
+was forced to leave earth, as graciously as Ghent was receiving him
+that day. All passed well; oaths of fealty were duly taken and given
+at the church of St. John the Baptist. Charles himself pulled the
+bell rope according to the ancient Flemish custom, and the Count of
+Flanders was in possession. This all took place in the morning of June
+28th. At the close of the ceremonies Charles withdrew to his hotel and
+the magistrates to their dwellings.
+
+The devotees of St. Lievin prolonged their holiday until Monday
+afternoon. It was five o'clock[2] when the revellers returned to
+Ghent. Many of the saint's followers were, by that time, more or less
+under the influence of the contents of the casks which had formed part
+of the outward-bound burden. The protracted holiday-making had its
+natural sequence. There was, however, too much method in the next
+proceedings for it to be attributed wholly to emotional inebriety.
+
+The procession passed through the city gate and entered a narrow
+street near the corn market, where stood a little house used as
+headquarters for the collection of the _cueillotte_, a tax on every
+article brought into the city for sale, and one particularly obnoxious
+to the people. Suddenly a cry was raised and echoed from rank to rank
+of St. Lievin's escort, "Down with the _cueillotte_."
+
+Then with the ingenious humour of a Celtic crowd, quick to take a
+fantastic advantage of a situation, a second cry was heard: "St.
+Lievin must go through the house. Lievin is a saint who never turns
+aside from his route."
+
+Delightful thought, followed by speedy action. Axes were produced and
+wielded to good effect.
+
+Down came the miniature customs-house in a flash. Little pieces of
+the ruin were elevated on sticks and carried by some of the rabble as
+standards with the cry "I have it--I have it." As they marched
+the procession was constantly augmented and the cries become more
+decidedly revolutionary: "Kill, kill these craven spoilers of God and
+of the world.[2] Where are they? Let us seek them out and slay them in
+their houses, those who have flourished at our pitiable expense."
+
+This was rank rebellion. Even under cover of St. Lievin's mantle,
+resistance to regularly instituted customs could hardly be described
+by any other name. Excited by their own temerity, the crowd now surged
+on to the great market-place in front of the Hotel de Ville, where the
+Friday market is held, instead of returning the saint promptly to his
+safe abiding-place as was meet.
+
+There the lawless deeds--lawless to the duke's mind certainly--became
+more audacious. Counterparts of the very banners whose prohibition
+had been part of the sentence in 1453 were unfurled,[4] and their
+possession alone proved insurrectionary premeditation on the part of
+the gild leaders. Ghent was in open revolt, and the young duke in
+their midst felt it was an open insult to him as sovereign count.
+
+His messenger failed to return from the market-place. His master
+became impatient and followed him to the scene of action with a small
+escort. As they drew near, the crowd thickened and hedged them in. The
+nobles became alarmed and urged the duke to return, but cries from
+the crowd promised safety to his person. To the steps of the Hotel de
+Ville rode the duke, his face dark, menacing with suppressed wrath.[5]
+
+As he dismounted, he turned towards a man whom he thought he saw
+egging on a disturbance and struck him with his riding whip, saying,
+"I know you." The man was quick enough to realise the value of the
+duke's violence at that moment and cried, "Strike again," but the
+Seigneur Groothuse, who had already tried to check Charles's anger and
+to curb the popular turbulence, exclaimed, "For the love of God do
+not strike again!" The wiser burgher at once understood the unstable
+temper of the mob, which had been fairly civil to the duke up to this
+moment. There were ugly murmurs to be heard that the blow would cost
+him dear.
+
+ "Indeed," says the courtly Chastellain, "the mischief was so
+ imminent that God alone averted it, and there was not an archer
+ or noble or man so full of assurance that he did not tremble with
+ fear, nor one who would not have preferred to be in India for his
+ own safety. Especially were they in terror for their young prince,
+ who, they thought, was exposed to a dolorous death."
+
+It was Groothuse alone who averted disaster:
+
+ "Do you not see that your life and ours hang on a silken thread?
+ Do you think you can coerce a rabble like this by threats and hard
+ words--a rabble who at this moment do not value you more than the
+ least of us? They are beside themselves, they have neither reason
+ nor understanding.[6]... If you are ready to die, I am not, except
+ in spite of myself. You must try quite a different method--appease
+ them by sweetness and save your house and your life.
+
+ "What could you do alone? How the gods would laugh! Your courage
+ is out of place here unless it enables you to calm yourself and
+ give an example to those poor sheep, wretched misled people whom
+ you must soothe. Go down in God's name. [They were within the town
+ hall.] Show yourself and you will make an impression by your good
+ sense and all will go well."
+
+To this eminently sound advice the young duke yielded. He appeared on
+a balcony or on the upper steps of the town hall and stood ready to
+harangue his unruly and turbulent subjects. A moment sufficed to still
+the turmoil and the silence showed a readiness to hear him speak.
+
+Charles was not perfectly at ease in Flemish, but he was wise enough
+to use that tongue. One trait of the Ghenters was respect for the
+person of their overlord. When that overlord showed any disposition to
+meet them half-way the response was usually immediate. So it was now.
+The crowd which had been attending to St. Lievin, and not to the
+duke's joyous entry, suddenly remembered that his welcome had been
+strangely ignored. Their grumblings changed to greetings. "Take heart,
+Monseigneur. Have no fear. For you we will live and die and none shall
+be so audacious as to harm you. If there be evil fellows with no bump
+of reverence, endure it for the moment. Later you shall be avenged. No
+time now for fear."
+
+This sounded better. Charles was sufficiently appeased to address the
+crowd as "My children," and to assure them that if they would but meet
+him in peaceful conference, their grievances should be redressed.
+"Welcome, welcome! we are indeed your children and recognise your
+goodness."
+
+Then Groothuse followed with a longer speech than was possible either
+to Charles's Flemish or to his mood. This address was equally
+well received, and matters were in train for the appointment of a
+conference between popular representatives and the new Count of
+Flanders, when suddenly a tall, rude fellow climbed up to the balcony
+from the square. Using an iron gauntlet as a gavel to strike on
+the wall, he commanded attention and turned gravely to address the
+audience as though he were on the accredited list of speakers:
+
+"My brothers, down there assembled to set your complaints before your
+prince, your first wish--is it not?--is to punish the ill governors of
+this town and those who have defrauded you and him alike."
+
+"Yes, yes," was the quick answer of the fickle crowd.--"You desire the
+suppression of the _cueillotte_, do you not?"--"Yes, yes."--"You
+want all your gates opened again, your banners restored, and your
+privileges reinforced as of yore?"--"Yes, yes." The self-appointed
+envoy turned calmly to Charles and said:
+
+"Monseigneur, this is what the citizens have come together to ask you.
+This is your task. I have said it in their behalf, and, as you hear,
+they make my words their own."
+
+Noteworthy is Chastellain's pious and horrified ejaculation over the
+extraordinary insolence of this big villain, who thus audaciously
+associated himself with his betters: "O glorious Majesty of God,
+think of such an outrageous and intolerable piece of villainy being
+committed before the eyes of a prince! For a low man to venture to
+come and stand side by side with such a gentleman as our seigneur, and
+to proffer words inimical to his authority--words the poorest noble in
+the world would hardly have endured! And yet it was necessary for this
+noble prince to endure and to tolerate it for the moment, and needful
+that he should let pass as a pleasantry what was enough to kill him
+with grief."
+
+Groothuse's answer to the man was mild. Evidently he did not think it
+was a safe moment to exasperate the mob: "'My friend, there was no
+necessity of your intruding up here, a place reserved for the prince
+and his nobles. From below, you could have been heard and Monseigneur
+could have answered you as well there as here. He requires no advocate
+to make him content his people. You are a strange master. Get down. Go
+down below and keep to your mates. Monseigneur will do right by every
+one.'
+
+"Off went the rascal and I do not know what became of him. The duke
+and his nobles were simply struck dumb by the scamp's outrage and his
+impudent daring."
+
+The sober report[7] is less detailed and elaborate, but the thread is
+the same. Monseigneur, having returned to his hotel, sent Monseigneur
+de la Groothuse, Jean Petitpas, and Richard Utenhove back to the
+market to invite the people to put their grievances in writing. A
+draft was made and carried to the duke. After he had examined it and
+discussed it with his council, he sent Monseigneur de la Groothuse
+back to the market-place to tell the people that he wanted to sleep
+on the proposition and would give his answer at an early hour on the
+morrow. All through the night the people remained in arms on the
+market-place. At about eight o'clock on June 30th Groothuse returned,
+thanked the people in the count's name for having kept such good
+watch, and was answered by cries of "_A bas la cueillotte_."
+
+Then he assured them that all was pardoned and that they should obtain
+what they had asked in the draft. Only he requested them to appoint a
+committee of six to present their demands to Monseigneur and then to
+go home. This they did. St. Lievin was restored to the church and his
+followers betook themselves to the gates specified in the treaty of
+Gaveren. These they broke down, and also destroyed another house where
+was a tax collector's office.
+
+"The report of these events carried to Monseigneur did not have a good
+effect upon his spirit. On the morrow Monseigneur quitted the city."
+The members of the corporation with the two deans and the popular
+committee of six having obtained audience before his departure,
+Groothuse acted as spokesman: "We implore you in all humility to
+pardon us for the insult you have suffered, and to sign the paper
+presented. The bad have had more authority than the good, which could
+not be prevented, but we know truly that if the draft is not signed
+they will kill us."
+
+It is evident in all this story that the municipal authorities were
+frightened to death and that Charles allowed himself to be restrained
+to an extraordinary extent considering the undoubted provocation. His
+reasons for conciliatory measures were two, and literally were his
+ducats and his daughter. He had with him all the portable treasure and
+ready money that his father had had at Bruges, a large treasure
+and one on which he counted for his immediate military
+operations--operations very important to the position as a European
+power which he ardently desired to attain.
+
+Still more important was the fact that his young daughter, Mary, now
+eleven years old, was living in Ghent, to a certain degree the ward of
+the city. If the unruly majority should realise their strength what
+easier for them than to seize the treasure and hold the daughter as
+hostage, until her father had acceded to every demand, and until
+democracy was triumphant not only in Ghent but in the neighbouring
+cities?
+
+Charles simply did not dare attempt further coercion of the democratic
+spirit until he was beyond the walls. It is evident that he was
+completely taken by surprise at Ghent's attitude towards him, as the
+city had always professed great personal attachment to him. But there
+was a difference between being heir and sovereign. The agreement was
+signed, with a mental reservation on the part of the Duke of Burgundy.
+He only intended to keep his pledge until he could see his way clear
+to make terms better to his liking.
+
+On Tuesday, June 30th, Charles left Ghent, taking his daughter and his
+treasure away, but a safe shelter for both was not easy to find.
+The duke's anticipations of the effect of Ghent's actions upon her
+neighbours were quickly proved to be no idle fears. There were revolts
+of more or less importance at Mechlin, at Antwerp, at Brussels, and
+other places. Moreover, there was serious discussion in the estates
+assembled at Louvain as to whether Charles should be acknowledged as
+Duke of Brabant, or whether the claims of his cousin, the Count of
+Nevers, should be considered as heir to Philip's predecessor, for the
+late duke's title had never been considered perfect.
+
+Louis XI. seized the opportunity to urge the pretensions of the
+latter, and there were many reasons to recommend him, in the
+estimation of the Brabanters, who saw advantage in having a sovereign
+exclusively their own, instead of one with the widespread geographical
+interests of the Burgundian family. The final decision was, however,
+for Charles; a notice of the resolution of the deputies was sent to
+him at Mechlin, and he made his formal "entry" into Louvain, where he
+received homage from the nobles, the good cities, and the university.
+
+The various insurgent manifestations were promptly quelled one after
+another, but, with a nature that neither forgot nor forgave, the duke
+was strongly impressed by them as personal insults. He blamed Ghent
+for their occurrence and deeply resented every one. Throughout
+Philip's whole career he remembered the localised tenure of his titles
+and the fact that they were not perfectly incontestable. For his own
+advantage he often found a conciliatory attitude the best policy.
+Charles considered all his rights heaven-born. Questioning his
+authority was rank rebellion. That he had accepted advice in regard
+to Ghent, and had been ruled by expediency for the nonce, did not
+mitigate his intense bitterness.
+
+In another town that gave him serious trouble at this time, nothing
+led him to curb the severity of his measures. Though only a
+"protector," not an overlord, when he suppressed a rebellion in Liege
+he rigorously exacted the most complete and humiliating penalties. The
+city charters were abrogated, all privileges were forfeited. As
+an unprotected village must Liege stand henceforth, walls and
+fortifications rased to the ground.
+
+ "The perron on the market-place of the said town shall be taken
+ down, and then Monseigneur the duke shall treat it according to
+ his pleasure. The city may not remake the said perron, nor replace
+ another like it in the market-place or elsewhere in the city. Nor
+ shall the said perron appear in the coat-of-arms of Liege."[8]
+
+This was a terrible indignity for the city and a clear proof of their
+fear of their bishop's friend.
+
+The episode impressed the citizens of Ghent with the duke's power, and
+made the more timorous anxious to erase the event of 1467 from his
+mind. The peace party finally prevailed in their arguments, but the
+scene of abnegation and self-humiliation crowning their apology was
+not enacted until eighteen months after the events apologised for,
+when the new duke had still further proven his metal.
+
+
+
+[Footnote 1: Gachard, _Doc. ined_., i., 210, etc.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Some authorities make this five A.M., but the _Rapport_
+is probably correct.]
+
+[Footnote 3: Chastellain, v., 260 _et passim_.]
+
+[Footnote 4: So say some historians. But it seems probable that the
+drapery of St. Lievin's shrine was hastily used as a flag.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Chastellain, v., ch. 7, etc.]
+
+[Footnote 6: These are Chastellain's words to be sure, but the sober
+_Rapport_ is similar in purport.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Gachard, _Doc. ined._, i., 212. ]
+
+[Footnote 8: Gachard. _Doc. ined_., ii., 462, "_Instrument notarie_."]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+THE DUKE'S MARRIAGE
+
+1468
+
+
+For many months before Philip's death there had been negotiations
+concerning Charles's marriage with Margaret of York. Always feeling a
+closer bond with his mother than with his father, Charles's sympathy
+had ever been towards the Lancastrian party in England, the family to
+whom Isabella of Portugal was closely related. Only the necessity for
+making a strong alliance against Louis XI. turned him to seek a bride
+from the House of York. It was on this business that La Marche and
+the great Bastard were engaged when Philip's death interrupted the
+discussion, which Charles did not immediately resume on his own
+behalf.
+
+Pending the final decision in regard to this important indication of
+his international policy, the duke busied himself with the adjustment
+of his court, there being many points in which he did not intend to
+follow his father's usage.[1] Philip's lavishness, without too close
+a query as to the disposition of every penny, was naturally very
+agreeable to his courtiers. There was a liberal air about his
+households. It was easy to come and go, and it was pleasant to have
+the handling of money and the giving of orders--orders which were
+fulfilled and richly paid without haggling. Charles had other notions.
+He was willing to pay, but he wanted to be sure of an adequate
+return. How he started in on his administration with reform ideas is
+delightfully told by Chastellain.[2]
+
+One of his first measures when he was finally established at Brussels
+was to secure more speedy execution of justice. He appointed a new
+provost, "a dangerous varlet of low estate, but excellently fitted to
+carry out perilous work." Then he determined to settle petty civil
+suits himself, as there were many which had dragged on for a long
+time. In order to do this and to receive complaints from poor people,
+he arranged to give audience three times a week, Monday, Wednesday,
+and Friday, after dinner. On these occasions he required the
+attendance of all his nobles, seated before him on benches, each
+according to his rank. Excuses were not pleasantly accepted, so that
+few places were empty. Charles himself was elevated on a high throne
+covered with cloth of gold, whence he pompously pronounced judgments
+and heard and answered petitions, a process that sometimes lasted two
+or three hours and was exceedingly tiresome to the onlookers.
+
+ "In outer appearance it seemed a magnificent course of action and
+ very praiseworthy. But in my time I have never heard of nor seen
+ like action taken by prince or king, nor any proceedings in the
+ least similar.
+
+ "When the duke went through the city from place to place and from
+ church to church, it was wonderful how much state and order was
+ maintained and what a grand escort he had. Never a knight so old
+ or so young who dared absent himself and never a squire was bold
+ enough to squeeze himself into the knights' places."
+
+At the levee, the same rigid ceremony was observed. Every one had
+to wait his turn in his proper room--the squires in the first, the
+knights in the second, and so on. All left the palace together to go
+to mass. As soon as the offering was made all the nobles were free
+to dine, but they were obliged to report themselves to the duke
+immediately after his repast. Any failure caused the forfeiture of the
+fee for the day. It was all very orderly and very dull.
+
+Thus Charles of Burgundy felt that he was law-giver, paternal guide,
+philosopher, and friend to his people. From time to time he delivered
+harangues to his court, veritable sermons. He obtained hearing, but
+certainly did not win popularity. The adulatory phrases used as mere
+conventionalities seemed to have actually turned his head. And those
+stock phrases were very grandiloquent. There is no doubt that such
+comparisons were used as Chastellain puts into the mouths of the first
+deputation from Ghent to ask pardon for the sins committed at the
+dolorous unjoyous entry into the Flemish capital.[2]
+
+ "My very excellent seigneur, when you who hold double place, place
+ of God and place of man, and have in yourself the double nature
+ by office and commission in divine estate, and as your noble
+ discretion knows and is cognisant, like God the Father, Creator,
+ of all offences committed against you, and who may be appeased
+ by tears and by weeping as He permits Himself to be softened by
+ contrition, entreaties, etc., and resumes His natural benignity by
+ forgetting things past [etc.].... Alas, what kindness did He use
+ toward Adam, His first offender, upon whom through his son Seth He
+ poured the oil of pity in five thousand future years, and then to
+ Cain the first born of mother He postponed vengeance for his crime
+ for ten generations etc. What did he do in Abraham's time, when He
+ sent word to Lot that if there were ten righteous men in Sodom and
+ Gomorrah He would remit the judgment on the two cities? In Ghent,"
+ etc.[4]
+
+In the chancellor's answer to this plea, the duke's consent to grant
+forgiveness to Ghent is again compared to God's own mercy. The divine
+attributes were referred to again and again, not only on the pages
+of contemporaneous chroniclers who may be accused of desiring ducal
+patronage, but also in sober state papers.
+
+There was one antidote to this homage universally offered to Charles
+wherever there was no rebellion against him. One of the rules of the
+Order of the Golden Fleece was that all alike should be subject to
+criticism by their fellows. In May, 1468, at Bruges, Charles held an
+assembly of the Order, the first over which he had presided. It was a
+fitting opportunity for the knights to express their sentiments. When
+it came to his turn to be reviewed, Charles listened quietly to the
+representations that his conduct fell short of the ideals of chivalry
+because he was too economical, too industrious, too strenuous, and not
+sufficiently cognisant of the merits of his faithful subjects of high
+degrees.[5]
+
+In these plaints, respectful as they are, there is perhaps a note of
+regret for the lavish and amusing good cheer of the late duke's times.
+Charles was undoubtedly husbanding his resources at this period. The
+vision of wide dominions was already in his dreams, and he was prudent
+enough to begin his preparations. And prudence is not a popular
+quality. Still his courtiers were not quite bereft of the gorgeous and
+spectacular entertainments to which the "good duke" had accustomed
+them. Soon after the assembly of the Order, the alliance between Duke
+Charles and Margaret of York was celebrated at Bruges. Our Burgundian
+Chastellain is not pleased with this marriage. That Charles inclined
+towards England at all was due to the French king, whom both he and
+his father had found untrustworthy. Again, had there been any other
+eligible _partie_ in England Charles would never have allied himself
+with King Edward when all his sympathies were with the blood of
+Lancaster. But when King Louis forsook his cousin Margaret of Anjou,
+whose woes should have commanded pity, simply for the purpose of
+undermining the Duke of Burgundy, the latter felt it wise to make
+Edward his friend.
+
+ "That it was sore against his inclination he confessed to one who
+ later revealed it to me, but he decided that it was better to
+ injure another rather than be down-trodden and injured himself.[6]
+
+ "For a long time there had been little love lost between him and
+ the king. The monarch feared the pride and haughtiness of his
+ subject, and the subject feared the strength and profound subtilty
+ of the king who wanted, he thought, to get him under the whip. And
+ all this, alas, was the result of that cursed War of Public Weal
+ cooked up by the French against their own king. When Charles was
+ deeply involved in it he was deserted by the others and the whole
+ weight of the burden fell on his shoulders, so that he alone was
+ blamed by the king, and he alone was forced to look to his own
+ safety and comfort. It is a pity when such things occur in a realm
+ and among kinsfolk."
+
+[Illustration: CHARLES, DUKE OF BURGUNDY, PRESIDING OVER A CHAPTER OF
+THE GOLDEN FLEECE
+
+FROM CONTEMPORANEOUS MINIATURE REPRODUCED IN LENGLET DU FRESNOY
+EDITION OF COMINES]
+
+
+Louis was busied with his own affairs in Touraine when news came to
+him that the marriage was to take place immediately. "If he mourned,
+it is not marvellous when I myself mourn it for the future result. But
+the king used all kinds of machinations to break off the alliance....
+God suffered two young proud princes to try their strength each at
+his will, often in ways that would have been incompatible in common
+affairs."
+
+The fullest account of the wedding is given by La Marche, an
+eyewitness of the event[7]:
+
+ "Gilles du Mas, maitre d'hotel du Duc de Bretagne--to you I
+ recommend myself. I have collected here roughly according to my
+ stupid understanding what I saw of the said festival, to send it
+ to you, beseeching you as earnestly as I can to advise me of the
+ noble states and high deeds in your quarter ... as becomes two
+ friends of one rank and calling in two fraternal, allied and
+ friendly houses.
+
+ "My lady and her company arrived at l'Ecluse on a Saturday, June
+ 25th, and on the morrow Madame the Duchess of Burgundy, mother
+ of the duke, Mlle. of Burgundy and various other ladies and
+ demoiselles visited Madame Margaret[8] and only
+
+stayed till dinner. The duchess was greatly pleased with her
+prospective daughter-in-law and could not say enough of her character
+and her virtues. There remained with Dame Margaret, on the part of
+the duchess, the Charnys, Messire Jehan de Rubempre and various other
+ladies and gentlemen to act the hosts to the strange ladies and
+gentlemen who had crossed from England with the bride. The Count and
+Countess de Charny met Madame as she disembarked and never budged from
+her side until she had arrived at Bruges.
+
+"The day after the duchess's visit, Monseigneur of Burgundy made his
+way to l'Ecluse with a small escort and entered the chateau at the
+rear. After supper, accompanied only by six or seven knights of the
+Order, he went very secretly to the hotel of Dame Margaret, who had
+been warned of his intention, and was attended by the most important
+members of her suite, such as the Seigneur d'Escalles, the king's
+brother.
+
+ "At his arrival when they saw each other the greetings were very
+ ceremonious and then the two sat down on one bench and chatted
+ comfortably together for some time. After some conversation, the
+ Bishop of Salisbury, according to a prearranged plan of his own,
+ kneeled before the two and made complimentary speeches. He was
+ followed by M. de Charny, who spoke as follows:
+
+ "'Monseigneur, you have found what you desired and since God has
+ brought this noble lady to port in safety and to your desire, it
+ seems to me that you should not depart without proving the
+ affection you bear her, and that you ought to be betrothed now
+ at this moment and give her your troth.'
+
+ "Monseigneur answered that it did not depend upon him. Then the
+ bishop spoke to Margaret and asked her what she thought. She
+ answered that it was just for this and nothing else that the king
+ of England had sent her over and she was quite ready to fulfil
+ the king's command. Whereupon the bishop took their hands and
+ betrothed them. Then Monseigneur departed and returned on the
+ morrow to Bruges.
+
+ "Dame Margaret remained at l'Ecluse until the following Saturday
+ and was again visited by Monseigneur. On Saturday the boats were
+ richly decorated to conduct my lady to Damme, where she was
+ received very honourably according to the capacity of that little
+ town. On the morrow, the 3rd of July, Monseigneur the duke set out
+ with a small escort between four and five o'clock in the morning,
+ and went to Damme, where he found Madame quite ready to receive
+ him as all had been prearranged, and Monseigneur wedded her as was
+ suitable, and the nuptial benediction was duly pronounced by the
+ Bishop of Salisbury. After the mass, Charles returned to his hotel
+ at Bruges, and you may believe that during the progress of the
+ other ceremonies he slept as if he were to be on watch on the
+ following night.
+
+ "Immediately after, Adolph of Cleves, John of Luxemburg, John of
+ Nassau, and others returned to Damme and paid their homage to the
+ new duchess, and then my lady entered a horse litter, beautifully
+ draped with cloth of gold. She was clad in white cloth of gold made
+ like a wedding garment as was proper. On her hair rested a crown
+ and her other jewels were appropriate and sumptuous. Her English
+ ladies followed her on thirteen hackneys, two close by her litter
+ and the others behind. Five chariots followed the thirteen
+ hackneys, the Duchess of Norfolk, the most beautiful woman in
+ England, being in the first. In this array Madame proceeded to
+ Bruges and entered at the gate called Ste. Croix."
+
+There were too many names to be enumerated, but La Marche cannot
+forbear mentioning a noble Zealander, Adrian of Borselen, Seigneur of
+Breda, who had six horses covered with cloth of gold, jewelry, and
+silk.
+
+ "I mention him for two reasons [he explains[9]]: first, that he
+ was the most brilliant in the procession, and the second is that
+ by the will of God he died on the Wednesday from a trouble in his
+ leg, which was a pity and much regretted by the nobility.
+
+ "The procession from Ste. Croix to the palace was magnificent,
+ with all the dignitaries in their order. So costly were the
+ dresses of the ducal household that Charles expended more than
+ forty thousand francs for cloth of silk and of wool alone.
+
+ "Prominent in this stately procession were the nations or foreign
+ merchants in this order: Venetians, Florentines--at the head of
+ the latter marched Thomas Portinari, banker and councillor of
+ the duke at the same time that he was chief of their nation and
+ therefore dressed in their garb; Spaniards; Genoese--these latter
+ showed a mystery, a beautiful girl on horseback guarded by
+ St. George from the dragon.--Then came the Osterlings, 108 on
+ horseback, followed by six pages, all clad in violet.
+
+ "Gay, too, was Bruges and the streets were all decorated with
+ cloth of gold and silk and tapestries. As to the theatrical
+ representations I can remember at least ten. There were Adam and
+ Eve, Cleopatra married to King Alexander, and various others.
+
+ "The reception at the palace was very formal. The dowager duchess
+ herself received her daughter-in-law from the litter and escorted
+ her by the hand to her chamber, and for the present we will leave
+ the ladies and the knighthood and turn to the arrangement of the
+ hotel.
+
+ "In regard to the service, Mme. the new duchess was served
+ _d'eschancon et d'escuyer tranchant et de pannetier_. All English,
+ all knights and gentlemen of great houses, and the chief steward
+ cried 'Knights to table,' and then they went to the buffet to get
+ the food, and around the buffet marched all the relations of
+ Monseigneur, all the knights of the Order and of great houses. And
+ for that day Mme. the duchess the mother declined to be served _a
+ couvert_ but left the honour to her daughter-in-law as was right.
+
+ "After dinner the ladies retired to their rooms for a little rest
+ and there were some changes of dress. Then they all mounted their
+ chariots and hackneys and issued forth on the streets in great
+ triumph and wonderful were the jousts of the Tree of Gold. Several
+ days of festivity followed when the usual pantomimes and shows were
+ in evidence.
+
+ "Tuesday, the tenth and last day of the fete, the grand _salle_ was
+ arranged in the same state as on the wedding day itself, except the
+ grand buffet which stood in the middle of the hall. This banquet,
+ too, was a grand affair and concluded the festivities.
+
+ On the morrow, Wednesday, July 15th, Monseigneur departed for
+ Holland on a pressing piece of business, and he took leave of the
+ Duchess of Norfolk and the other lords and ladies of quality and
+ gave them gifts each according to his rank. Thus ends the story
+ of this noble festival, and for the present I know nothing worth
+ writing you except that I am yours."
+
+To this may be added the letter of one of the Paston family who was in
+Margaret's train.[10]
+
+ "John Paston the younger to Margaret Paston:
+
+ "To my ryght reverend and worchepfull Modyr Margaret Paston
+ dwelling at Caster, be thys delyveryed in hast.
+
+ "Ryth reverend & worchepfull Modyr, I recommend me on to you as
+ humbylly as I can thynk, desyryng most hertly to her of your
+ welfare & hertsese whyche I pray God send you as hastyly as my
+ hert can thynk. Ples yt you to wete that at the makyng of thys
+ byll my brodyr & I & all our felawshep wer in good helle, blyssyd
+ be God.
+
+ "As for the gydyn her in thys countre it is as worchepfull as all
+ the world can devyse it, & ther wer never Englyshe men had so good
+ cher owt of Inglong that ever I herd of.
+
+ "As for tydyngs her but if it be of the fest I can non send yow;
+ savyng my Lady Margaret was maryed on Sonday last past at a town
+ that is called Dame IIj myle owt of Brugge at v of the clok in the
+ morning; & sche was browt the same day to Bruggys to hyr dener;
+ & ther sche was receyvyd as worchepfully as all the world cowd
+ devyse as with presession with ladys and lordys best beseyn of eny
+ pepell that ever I sye or herd of. Many pagentys were pleyed in
+ hyr way to Brugys to hyr welcoming, the best that ever I sye.
+ And the same Sonday my Lord the Bastard took upon hym to answere
+ xxiiij knyts & gentylmen within viij dayis at jostys of pese &
+ when that they wer answered, they xxiiij & hymselve shold torney
+ with other xxv the next day after, whyche is on Monday next
+ comyng; & they that have jostyd with hym into thys day have been
+ as rychly beseyn, & hymselfe also, as clothe of gold & sylk &
+ sylvyr & goldsmith's werk might mak hem; for of syche ger & gold
+ & perle & stonys they of the dukys coort neyther gentylmen nor
+ gentylwomen they want non; for with owt that they have it by
+ wyshys, by my trowthe, I herd nevyr of so gret plente as ther is.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ And as for the Dwkys coort, as of lords & ladys & gentylwomen
+ knyts, sqwyers & gentylmen I hert never of non lyek to it
+ save King Artourys cort. And by my trowthe I have no wyt nor
+ remembrance to wryte to you half the worchep that is her; but that
+ lakyth as it comyth to mynd I shall tell you when I come home
+ whyche I trust to God shal not be long to; for we depart owt of
+ Brygge homward on Twysday next comyng & all folk that cam with my
+ lady of Burgoyn out of Ingland, except syche as shall abyd her
+ styll with hyr whyche I wot well shall be but fewe.
+
+ "We depart the sooner for the Dwk hathe word that the Frenshe king
+ is purposyd to mak wer upon hym hastyly & that he is with in IIIj
+ or v dayis jorney of Brugys & the Dwk rydeth on Twysday next
+ comyng forward to met with hym. God geve hym good sped & all hys;
+ for by my trowthe they are the goodlyest felawshep that ever I cam
+ among & best can behave themselves & most like gentlemen.
+
+ "Other tydyngs have we non her; but that the Duke of Somerset &
+ all hys band departyd well beseyn out of Brugys a day befor that
+ my Lady the Duchess cam thedyr & they sey her that he is to Queen
+ Margaret that was & shal no more come her agen nor be holpyn by
+ the Duke. No more; but I beseche you of your blessyng as lowly as
+ I can, wyche I beseche you forget not to geve me everday onys.
+ And, Modyr, I beseche you that ye wol be good mastras to my lytyll
+ man & to se that he go to scole.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Wreten at Bruggys the Friday next after Seynt Thomas.
+
+ "Your sone & humbyll servaunt,
+
+ "J. PASTON THE YOUNGER."
+
+
+[Footnote 1: Chastellain, v., 570.]
+
+[Footnote 2: V., 576.]
+
+[Footnote 3: This deputation was composed of representatives from "all
+the city in its entirety in three chief members--the bourgeois and
+nobles, the fifty-two _metiers_, and the weavers who possess twelve
+different places in the city entirely for themselves and in their
+control." The formal apology was made later. (Chastellain, v., 291.)]
+
+[Footnote 4: _Ibid_ 306. By letters patent given on July 28, 1467,
+Duke Charles pardoned the Ghenters and confirmed the privileges which
+he had conceded to them, but he exacted that a deputation from the
+three members [_Trois membres_] of the city should come to Brussels to
+beg pardon on their knees, bareheaded, ungirded, for all the disorder
+of St. Lievin. This act of submission took place probably not until
+January, 1469, though August 8, 1468, is also mentioned as the date.]
+
+[Footnote 5: _Hist, de l'Ordre_, etc., p. 511.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Chastellain, V., 342.]
+
+[Footnote 7: III., 101. Evidently this was composed for a separate
+work and then incorporated into the memoirs.]
+
+[Footnote 8: There is a beautiful portrait of her in MS. 9275 in the
+Bibliotheque de Burgogne. _See_ also Wavrin, _Anchiennes Croniques
+d'Engleterre_, ii., 368.]
+
+[Footnote 9: III., 108.]
+
+[Footnote 10: _The Paston Letters_, ii., 317.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+THE MEETING AT PERONNE
+
+1468
+
+
+ "My brother, I beseech you in the name of our affection and of
+ our alliance, come to my aid, come as speedily as you can, come
+ without delay. Written by the own hand of your brother.
+
+ "FRANCIS."
+
+Such were the concluding sentences of a fervent appeal from the
+Duke of Brittany that followed Charles into Holland, whither he had
+hastened after the completion of the nuptial festivities.
+
+The titular Duke of Normandy found that his royal brother was in no
+wise inclined to fulfil the solemn pledges made at Conflans. His ally,
+Francis, Duke of Brittany, was plunged into terror lest the king
+should invade his duchy and punish him for his share in the
+proceedings that had led up to that compact.
+
+It is in this year that Louis XI. begins to show his real astuteness.
+Very clever are his methods of freeing himself from the distasteful
+obligations assumed towards his brother. They had been easy to make
+when a hostile army was encamped at the gates of Paris. Then Normandy
+weighed lightly when balanced by the desire to separate the allies.
+That separation accomplished, the point of view changed. Relinquish
+Normandy, restored by the hand of heaven to its natural liege lord
+after its long retention by the English kings? Louis's intention
+gradually became plain and he proved that he was no longer in the
+isolated position in which the War for Public Weal had found him. He
+had won to himself many adherents, while the general tone towards
+Charles of Burgundy had changed.[1]
+
+In April, 1468, the States-General of France assembled at Tours in
+response to royal writs issued in the preceding February.[2] The
+chancellor, Jouvencal, opened the session with a tedious, long-winded
+harangue calculated to weary rather than to illuminate the assembly.
+Then the king took the floor and delivered a telling speech. With
+trenchant and well chosen phrases he set forth the reasons why
+Normandy ought to be an intrinsic part of the French realm. The
+advantages of centralisation, the weakness of decentralisation, were
+skilfully drawn. The matter was one affecting the kingdom as a whole,
+in perpetuity; it was not for the temporal interests of the present
+incumbent of regal authority, who had only part therein for the brief
+space of his mortal journey. Louis's words are pathetic indeed, as
+he calls himself a sojourner in France, _en voyage_ through life,
+as though the fact itself of his likeness to the rest of ephemeral
+mankind was novel to his audience. He reiterated the statement that
+the interests involved were theirs, not his.
+
+It was a goodly body which listened to Louis. The greatest feudal
+lords, indeed, were not present, but many of the lesser nobility were,
+while sixty-four towns sent, all told, about 128 deputies. These
+hearers gave willing attention to the thesis that it was a burning
+shame for the French people to pay heavy taxes simply to restrain the
+insolent peers from rebelling against their sovereign--those noble
+scions of the royal stock whose bounden duty it was to protect the
+state and the head of the royal house.
+
+What was the reason for their selfish insubordination? The root of the
+evil lay in the past, when extensive territories had been carelessly
+alienated, and their petty over-lords permitted to acquire too much
+independence of the crown, so that the monarchy was threatened with
+disruption. There was more to the same purpose and then the deputies
+deliberated on the answer to make to this speech from the throne. It
+was an answer to Louis's mind, an answer that showed the value of
+suggestion. Charles the Wise had thought that an estate yielding an
+income of twelve thousand livres was all-sufficient for a prince of
+the blood. Louis XI. was more generous. He was ready to allow his
+brother Charles a pension of sixty thousand livres. But as to the
+government of Normandy--why! no king, either from fraternal affection
+or from fear of war, was justified in committing that province to
+other hands than his own.
+
+The States-General dissolved in perfect accord with the monarch, and a
+definite order was left in the king's hands, declaring that it was
+the judgment of the towns represented that concentration of power was
+necessary for the common welfare of France. Public opinion declared
+that national weakness would be inevitable if the feudatories were
+unbridled in their centrifugal tendencies. Above all, Normandy must be
+retained by the king. On no consideration should Louis leave it to his
+brother.[2]
+
+Before the dissolution of the assembly there was some discussion as to
+the probable attitude of the great nobles in regard to this platform
+of centralisation. Very timid were the comments on Charles of
+Burgundy. Would he not perhaps be an excellent mediator between the
+lesser dukes and the king? Would it not be better to suspend action
+until his opinion was known, etc? But at large there was less reserve.
+The statements were emphatic. Naught but mischief had ever come to
+France from Burgundy. The present duke's father and grandfather had
+wrought all the ill that lay in their power. As for Charles, his
+illimitable greed was notorious. Let him rest content with his
+paternal heritage. Ghent and Bruges were his. Did he want Paris too?
+Let the king recover the towns on the Somme. Rightfully they were
+French. Louis made no scruple in pleading the invalidity of the treaty
+of Conflans, because it had been wrested from him by undue influence.
+And this royal sentiment was repeated here and there with growing
+conviction of its justice.
+
+While Charles was occupied with the preparation for his wedding, Louis
+was engaged in levying troops and mobilising his forces, and these
+preparations continued throughout the summer of 1468. Naturally, news
+of this zeal directed against the dukes of Normandy and of Brittany
+followed the traveller in Holland.
+
+Charles was in high dudgeon and wrote at once to the king, reminding
+him that these seigneurs were his allies, and demanding that nothing
+should be wrought to their detriment. Conscious that his remonstrance
+might be futile, and urged on by appeals from the dukes, Charles
+hastened to cut short his stay in Holland so that he might move nearer
+to the scene of Louis's activities. His purpose in going to the north
+had been twofold--to receive homage as Count of Holland and Zealand,
+and to use his new dignity to obtain large sums of money for which he
+saw immediate need if he were to hold Louis to the terms wrested from
+him.
+
+In early July, Charles had crossed from Sluis in Flanders to
+Middelburg, and thence made his progress through the cities of
+Zealand, receiving homage as he went. Next he passed to The Hague,
+where the nobles and civic deputies of Holland met him and gave
+him their oaths of fealty on July 21st. Fifty-six towns[4] were
+represented and there were also deputies from eight bailiwicks and the
+islands of Texel and Wieringen. "It is noteworthy," comments a Dutch
+historian, "that the people's oath was given first. The older custom
+was that the count should give the first pledge while the people
+followed suit."
+
+As soon as he was thus legally invested with sovereign power, Charles
+demanded a large _aide_ from Holland and Zealand--480,000 crowns of
+fifteen stivers for himself; 32,000 crowns as pin money for his new
+consort; 16,000 crowns as donations for various servants, and 4800
+crowns towards his travelling expenses. The total sum was 532,800
+crowns. The share of Holland and West Friesland was 372,800 crowns,
+and of Zealand 16,000 crowns, to be paid within seven and a half
+years. In Holland, Haarlem paid the heaviest quota, 3549 crowns, and
+Schiedam the smallest, 350 crowns, while Dordrecht and the South
+Holland villages were assessed at 39,200 crowns, and the remainder was
+divided among the other cities and villages.
+
+There was considerable opposition to the assessments. In many cases
+the new imposts upon provisions pressed very heavily on the poor
+villagers. Having obtained promise of the grant, however, Charles left
+all further details in its regard to the local officials and returned
+to Brussels at the beginning of August to make his own preparation.
+For, by that time, Louis's intentions of evading the treaty of
+Conflans were plain, though there still fluttered a thin veil of
+friendship between the cousins. Gathering what forces he could
+mobilise, ordering them to meet him later, Charles moved westward and
+took up his quarters at Peronne on the river Somme.
+
+Louis had been bold in his utterance to the States-General as to his
+perfect right to ignore the treaty of Conflans, to dispossess his
+brother, and to bring the great feudatories to terms. In the summer
+of 1468 he made advances towards accomplishing the last-named
+desideratum. Brittany was invaded by royal troops, but his victory was
+diplomatic rather than military, as Duke Francis peaceably consented
+to renounce his close alliances with Burgundy and England, nominally
+at least. Further, he agreed to urge Charles of France to submit his
+claims to Normandy to the arbitration of Nicholas of Calabria and the
+Constable St. Pol.[5]
+
+Charles of Burgundy remained to be settled with on some different
+basis. And in regard to him Louis XI. took a resolve which terrified
+his friends and caused the world to wonder as to his sanity. All
+previous attempts at mediation having failed--St. Pol was among the
+many who tried--the king determined to be his own messenger to parley
+with his Burgundian cousin. It is curious how small was his measure
+of personal pride. He had been negligent of his personal safety at
+Conflans, but even then Charles had better reason to respect and
+protect him than in 1468, after Louis had manoeuvred for three years
+in every direction to harass and undermine the young duke's power,
+and when, too, the latter was aware of half of the machinations and
+suspicious of more.
+
+Yet Louis's famous visit to Peronne was no sudden hare-brained
+enterprise. There is much evidence that he nursed the project for many
+weeks without giving any intimation of his intentions. Nor was the
+situation as strange as it appears, looking backward.
+
+Charles had doubtless made all preparations to combat Louis if need
+were, and had chosen Peronne for his headquarters with the express
+purpose of being able to watch France, and, at the same time, he had
+published abroad that his military preparations were solely for
+the purpose of keeping his obligations to his allies. Now these
+obligations were momentarily removed by the action of those same
+allies. Francis of Brittany had entered into amicable relations with
+his sovereign, young Charles of France had accepted arbitration to
+settle the fraternal relations of the royal brothers, while the
+correspondence between Louis and Liege, was still unknown to the Duke
+of Burgundy. For the moment, the latter, therefore, had no definite
+quarrel with the French king. But he was not in the least anxious for
+an interview with him. Charles was as far as ever from understanding
+his cousin. Even without definite knowledge of Louis's efforts to
+make friends in the Netherlands, Charles suspected enough to turn his
+youthful distrust of the man's character into mature conviction that
+friendship between them was impossible. But he could not refuse the
+royal overtures. His letter of safe-conduct to his self-invited
+visitor bears the date of October 8th, and runs as follows:[6]
+
+ "MONSEIGNEUR:
+
+ "I commend myself to your good graces. Sire, if it be your
+ desire to come to this city of Peronne in order that we may talk
+ together, I swear and I promise you by my faith and on my honour
+ that you may come, remain and return in safety to Chauny or Noyon,
+ according to your pleasure and as often as it shall please you,
+ freely and openly without any hindrance offered either to you or
+ to any of your people by me or by any other for any cause that now
+ exists or _that may hereafter arise_."
+
+Guillaume de Biche acted as confidential messenger between duke and
+king. He it was whom Charles had dismissed from his own service in
+1456 at his father's instance. From that time on the man had been in
+Louis's household, deep in his secrets it was said, and certainly
+admitted to his privacy to an extraordinary degree. This letter was
+written by Charles in the presence of Biche, through whose hand it
+passed directly to the king.
+
+By October, Louis was at Ham, prepared to move as soon as the
+safe-conduct arrived. No time was lost after its receipt. On Sunday,
+October 9th, the king started out, accompanied by the Bishop of
+Avranches, his confessor, by the Duke of Bourbon, Cardinal Balue,
+St. Pol, a few more nobles, and about eighty archers of the Scottish
+guard. As he rode towards Peronne, Philip of Crevecoeur, with two
+hundred lances, met him on the way to act as his escort to the
+presence of the duke, who awaited his guest on the banks of a stream a
+short distance out of Peronne.
+
+St. Pol was the first of the royal party to meet the duke as herald of
+Louis's approach. Then Charles rode forward to greet the traveller. As
+he came within sight of his cousin, he bowed low to his saddle and was
+about to dismount when Louis, his head bared, prevented his action.
+Fervent were the kisses pressed by the kingly lips upon the duke's
+cheeks, while Louis's arm rested lovingly about the latter's neck.
+Then he turned graciously to the by-standing nobles and greeted them
+by name. But his cousinly affection was not yet satisfied. Again he
+embraced Charles and held him half as long as before in his arms. How
+pleasant he was and how full of confidence towards this trusted cousin
+of his!
+
+The cavalcade fell into line again, with the two princes in the
+middle, and made a stately entry into Peronne at a little after
+mid-day.[7] The chief building then and the natural place to lodge
+a royal visitor was the castle. But it was in sorry repair, ill
+furnished, and affording less comfort than a neighbouring house
+belonging to a city official. Here rooms had been prepared for the
+king and a few of his suite, the others being quartered through the
+town. At the door Charles took his leave and Louis entered alone with
+Cardinal Balue and the attendants he had chosen to keep near him.
+These latter were nearly all of inferior birth, and were treated
+by their master with a familiarity very astonishing to the stately
+Burgundians.
+
+Louis entered the room assigned for his use, walked to the window,
+and looked out into the street. The sight that met his view was most
+disquieting. A party of cavaliers were on the point of entering the
+castle. They were gentlemen just arrived from Burgundy with their
+lances, in response to a summons issued long before the present visit
+was anticipated. As he looked down on the troops, Louis recognised
+several men who had no cause to love him or to cherish his memory.
+There was, for instance, the queen's brother Philip de Bresse[8] who
+had led a party against Louis's own sister Yolande of Savoy. At a
+time of parley this Philip had trusted the sincerity of his
+brother-in-law's profession and had visited him to obtain his
+mediation. The king had violated both the specified safe-conduct and
+ambassadorial equity alike, and had thrown De Bresse into the citadel
+of Loches, where he suffered a long confinement before he succeeded in
+making his escape. He was a Burgundian in sympathy as well as in race.
+But with him on that October day Louis noticed various Frenchmen who
+had fallen under royal displeasure from one cause or another and had
+saved their liberty by flight, renouncing their allegiance to him
+for ever. Four there were in all who wore the cross of St. Andrew.
+Approaching Peronne as they had from the south, these new-comers had
+ridden in at the southern gates without intimation of this royal
+visitation extraordinary until they were almost face to face with
+guest and host. Their arrival was "a half of a quarter of an hour
+later than that of the king."
+
+When Philip de Bresse and his friends learned what was going on, they
+hastened to the duke's chambers "to give him reverence." Monseigneur
+de Bresse was the spokesman in begging the duke that the three above
+named should be assured of their security notwithstanding the king's
+presence at Peronne,--of security such as he had pledged them in
+Burgundy and promised for the hour when they should arrive at his
+court. On their part they were ready to serve him towards all and
+against all. Which petition the duke granted orally. "The force
+conducted by the Marshal of Burgundy was encamped without the gates,
+and the said marshal spoke no ill of the king, nor did the others I
+have mentioned."[9]
+
+It was, however, a situation in which apprehension was not confined
+to the men of lower station. To Louis, looking down from his window,
+there seemed dire menace in the mere presence of these persons who had
+heavy grievances against him, and the unfortified private house seemed
+slight protection against their possible vengeance. Here, Charles
+might disavow injury to him as something happening quite without his
+knowledge. On ducal soil the safest place was assuredly under shelter
+patently ducal. There, there would be no doubt of responsibility did
+misfortune happen.
+
+Straightway the king sent a messenger to Charles asking for quarters
+within the castle. The request was granted and the uneasy guest passed
+through the massive portals between a double line of Burgundian
+men-at-arms. It was no cheerful, pleasant, palatial dwelling-place
+this little old castle of Peronne. So thick were the walls that vain
+had been all assaults against it.[10] Designed for a fortress rather
+than a residence, it had been repeatedly used as a prison, and the air
+of the whole was tainted by the dungeons under its walls, dungeons
+which had seen many unwilling lodgers. Five centuries earlier than
+this date, Charles the Simple had languished to death in one of the
+towers.
+
+This change of arrangement, or rather the disquieting reason for the
+change, undoubtedly clouded the peacefulness of the occasion. Yet
+outward calm was preserved. Commines asserts that the two princes
+directed their people to behave amicably to each other and that the
+commands were scrupulously obeyed. For two or three days the desired
+conferences took place between Charles and Louis. The king's wishes
+were perfectly plain. He wanted Charles to forsake all other alliances
+and to pledge himself to support his feudal chief, first and foremost,
+from all attacks of his enemies. The Duke of Brittany had submitted
+to his liege. If the Duke of Burgundy would only accept terms equally
+satisfactory in their way, the pernicious alliance between the two
+would vanish, to the weal of French unity.
+
+[Illustration: PHILIP DE COMMINES.]
+
+Apparently the first discussion was heard by none except the Cardinal
+Balue and Guillaume de Biche. Charles was willing to pledge allegiance
+and to promise aid to his feudal chief, but under limitations that
+weakened the value of his words. Nothing could induce him to renounce
+alliance with other princes for mutual aid, did they need it. There
+was a second interview on the following day. Charles held tenaciously
+to his position. Then there came a sudden alteration in the situation,
+a strange dramatic shifting of the duke's point of view.
+
+The city of Liege had submitted perforce to the behests of her
+imperious neighbour, but the citizens had never ceased to hope that
+his unwelcome "protection" might be dispensed with; that, by the aid
+of French troops, they might eventually wrest themselves free from
+the Burgundian incubus. In spite of all promises to Charles, secret
+negotiations between the anti-Burgundian party and Louis XI. had never
+ceased. The latter never refused to admit the importunate embassies to
+his presence. He was glad to keep in touch with the city even in
+its ruined condition. He sent envoys as well as received them, and
+Commines states definitely that, in making his plan to visit Peronne,
+the fact of a confidential commission recently despatched to Liege had
+wholly slipped the king's mind.
+
+In that town the duke's lieutenant, Humbercourt, had been left to
+supervise the humiliating changes ordered. And the work of demolition
+was the only industry. Other ordinary business was at a standstill.
+For a period there was a sullen silence in the streets and the church
+bells were at rest. In April, a special legate from the pope arrived
+to see whether ecclesiastical affairs could not be put on a better
+footing.
+
+It was about the same time that the States-General were meeting
+at Tours that, under the direction of this legate, Onofrio de
+Santa-Croce, the cathedral was purified with holy water, and Louis of
+Bourbon celebrated his very first mass, though he had been seated on
+the episcopal throne for twelve years. Then Onofrio tried to mediate
+between the city and the Duke of Burgundy. To Bruges he went to
+see Charles, and obtained permission to draft a project for the
+re-establishment of the civic government, to be submitted to the duke
+for approval.
+
+If Onofrio thought he had reformed the bishop by forcing him into
+performing his priestly rites he soon learned his mistake. That
+ecclesiastic speedily disgusted his flock by his ill-timed
+festivities, and then forsook the city and sailed away to Maestricht
+in a gaily painted barge, with gay companions to pass the summer in
+frivolous amusements suited to his dissolute tastes. Such was the
+state of affairs when the report of Louis's extensive military
+preparations encouraged the Liegeois to hope that he was to take the
+field openly against the duke.
+
+About the beginning of September, troops of forlorn and desperate
+exiles began to return to the city. They came, to be sure, with shouts
+of _Vive le Roi!_ but, as a matter of fact, they seemed willing to
+make any accommodation for the sake of being permitted to remain.
+"Better any fate at home than to live like wild beasts with the
+recollection that we had once been men."
+
+To make a long story short, Onofrio again endeavoured to rouse the
+bishop to a sense of his duty. Again he tried to make terms for the
+exiles and to re-establish a tenable condition. It was useless. Louis
+of Bourbon refused to approach nearer to Liege than Tongres, and
+declined to meet the advances of his despairing subjects. It was just
+at this moment that fresh emissaries arrived from Louis, despatched,
+as already stated, _before_ Charles had consented to prolong the
+truce.
+
+Excited by their presence the Liegeois once more roused themselves to
+action. A force of two thousand was gathered at Liege, and advanced by
+night upon Tongres--also without walls--surrounded the house where lay
+their bishop, and forced him to return to Liege. Violence there was
+and loss of life, but, as a matter of fact, the mob respected the
+person of their bishop and of Humbercourt the chief Burgundian
+official. This event happened on October 9th, the very day that Louis
+rode recklessly into Peronne.
+
+On Wednesday, October 11th, the news of the fray reached Peronne,
+but news greatly exaggerated by rumour. Bishop, papal legate, and
+Burgundian lieutenant all had been ruthlessly murdered in the very
+presence of Louis's own envoys, who had aided and abetted the hideous
+crime! To follow the story of an eyewitness:[11]
+
+ "Some said that everyone was dead, others asserted the contrary,
+ for such advertisments are never reported after one sort. At
+ length others came who had seen certain canons slain and supposed
+ the bishop[12] to be of the number, as well as the said seigneur
+ de Humbercourt and all the rest. Further, they said that they had
+ seen the king's ambassadors in the attacking company and mentioned
+ them by name. All this was repeated to the duke, who forthwith
+ believed it and fell into an extreme fury, saying that the king
+ had come thither to abuse him, and gave commands to shut the gates
+ of the castle and of the town, alleging a poor enough excuse,
+ namely, that he did this on account of the disappearance of a
+ little casket containing some good rings and money.
+
+ "The king finding himself confined in the castle, a small one at
+ that, and having seen a force of archers standing before the gate,
+ was terrified for his person--the more so that he was lodged in
+ the neighbourhood of a tower where a certain Count de Vermandois
+ had caused the death of one of his predecessors as king of
+ France.[13] At that time, I was still with the duke and served him
+ as chamberlain, and had free access to his chamber when I
+ would, for such was the usage in this household.
+
+ "The said duke, as soon as he saw the gates closed, ordered all to
+ leave his presence and said to a few of us that stayed with him
+ that the king had come on purpose to betray him, and that he
+ himself had tried to avoid his coming with all his strength, and
+ that the meeting had been against his taste. Then he proceeded to
+ recount the news from Liege, how the king had pulled all the wires
+ through his ambassadors, and how his people had been slain. He was
+ fearfully excited against the king. I veritably believe that if
+ at that hour he had found those to whom he could appeal ready to
+ sympathise with him and to advise him to work the king some
+ mischief, he would have done so, at the least he would have
+ imprisoned him in the great tower.
+
+ "None were present when the words fell from the duke but myself
+ and two grooms of the chamber, one of whom was named Charles de
+ Visen, a native of Dijon, an honest fellow, in good credit with
+ his master. We aggravated nothing, but sought to appease the duke
+ as much as in us lay. Soon he tried the same phrases on others,
+ and a report of them ran through the city and penetrated to the
+ very apartment of the king, who was greatly terrified, as was
+ everyone, because of the danger that they saw imminent, and
+ because of the great difficulty in soothing a quarrel when it
+ has commenced between such great princes. Assuredly they were
+ blameworthy in failing to notify their absent servants of this
+ projected meeting. Great inconveniences were bound to arise from
+ this negligence."
+
+Such is Commines's narrative. Eyewitness though he was, it must be
+remembered that when he wrote the account of this famous interview it
+was long after the event, and when his point of view was necessarily
+coloured by his service with Louis. Delightful, however, are the
+historian's own reflections that he intersperses with his plain
+narrative. To his mind the only period when it is safe for princes to
+meet is
+
+ "in their youth when their minds are bent on pleasure. Then they
+ may amuse themselves together. But after they are come to man's
+ estate and are desirous each of over-reaching the other, such
+ interviews do but increase their mutual hatred, even if they incur
+ no personal peril (which is well-nigh impossible). Far wiser is
+ it for them to adjust their differences through sage and good
+ servants as I have said at length elsewhere in these memoirs."
+
+Then our chronicler proceeds to give numerous instances of disastrous
+royal interviews before returning to his subject and to Peronne:
+
+ "I was moved [he adds again at the beginning of his new chapter]
+ to tell the princes my opinion of such meetings.[14] Thus the
+ gates were closed and guarded and two or three days passed by.
+ However, the Duke of Burgundy would not see the king, nor had
+ Louis's servants entry to the castle except a few, and those only
+ through the wicket. Nor did the duke see any of his people who had
+ influence over him.
+
+ "The first day there was consternation throughout the city. By the
+ second day the duke was a little calmed down. He held a council
+ meeting all day and the greater part of the night. The king
+ appealed to every one who could possibly aid him. He was lavish in
+ his promises and ordered fifteen thousand crowns to be given where
+ it might count, but the officer in charge of the disbursement of
+ this sum acquitted himself ill and retained a part, as the king
+ learned later.
+
+ "The king was especially afraid of his former servants who had
+ come with the army from Burgundy, as I mentioned above, men who
+ were now in the service of the Duke of Normandy.
+
+ "Diverse were the opinions in the above-mentioned council-meeting.
+ Some held that the safe-conduct accorded to the king protected
+ him, seeing that he fairly observed the peace as it had been
+ stated in writing. Others rudely urged his capture without further
+ ceremony, while others again advised sending for his brother, the
+ Duke of Normandy, and concluding with him a peace to the advantage
+ of all the princes of France. They who gave this advice thought
+ that in case it was adopted, the king should be restrained of his
+ liberty. Further, it was against all precedent to free so great a
+ seigneur when he had committed so grave an offence.
+
+ "This last argument so nearly prevailed that I saw a man booted
+ and spurred ready to depart with a packet of letters addressed to
+ Monseigneur of Normandy, being in Brittany, and stayed only for
+ the Duke of Burgundy's letter. However, this came to naught. The
+ king made overtures to leave as hostages the Duke of Bourbon, the
+ cardinal, his brother, and the constable with a dozen others while
+ he should be permitted to return to Compiegne after peace was
+ concluded. He promised that the Liegeois should repair their
+ mischief or he would declare himself their foe. The appointed
+ hostages were profuse in their offers to immolate themselves, at
+ least they were in public. I do not know whether they would have
+ said the same things in private. I rather suspect not. And in
+ truth, I believe that those who were left would never have
+ returned.
+
+ "On the third night after the arrival of the news, the duke never
+ undressed, but lay down two or three times on his bed, and
+ then rose and walked up and down. Such was his way when he was
+ troubled. I lay that night in his chamber and talked with him from
+ time to time. In the morning his fury was greater than ever, his
+ tone very menacing, and he seemed ready to go to any extreme.
+
+ "However, he finally brought himself to say that if the king would
+ swear the peace and would accompany him to Liege to help avenge
+ Monsgn. of Liege, his own kinsman, he would be satisfied. Then
+ he suddenly betook himself to the king's chamber and expressed
+ himself to that effect. The king had a friend[15] who warned him,
+ assuring him that he should suffer no ill if he would concede
+ these two points. Did he do otherwise he ran grave risk, graver
+ than he would ever incur again."
+
+ When the duke entered the royal presence his voice trembled, so
+ agitated was he and on the verge of breaking into a passion. He
+ assumed a reverential attitude, but rough were mien and word as he
+ demanded whether the king would keep the treaty of peace as it had
+ been drafted, and whether he was ready to swear to it. "Yes" was
+ the king's response. In truth, nothing had been added to the
+ agreement made before Paris, or at least little as far as the Duke
+ of Burgundy was concerned. As regarded the Duke of Normandy, it
+ was stipulated that if he would renounce that province he should
+ have Champagne and Brie besides other neighbouring territories for
+ his share.
+
+ Then the duke asked if the king would accompany him to avenge the
+ outrage committed upon his cousin the bishop.
+
+ "To which demand the king gave assent as soon as the peace was
+ sworn. He was quite satisfied to go to Liege and with a small or
+ large escort, just as the duke preferred. This answer pleased
+ the duke immensely. In was brought the treaty, out of the king's
+ coffer was taken the piece of the true cross, the very one carried
+ by Saint Charlemagne, called the Cross of Victory, and thereupon
+ the two swore the peace.
+
+ "This was now October 14th. In a minute the bells pealed out their
+ joy throughout Peronne and all men were glad. It hath pleased the
+ king since to attribute the credit of this pacification to me."
+
+There was undoubtedly an immense sense of relief in Peronne when this
+degree of accommodation was reached. The duke was unwilling, however,
+to have too much rejoicing in his domains until he had ascertained for
+himself the state of Liege. Among the letters despatched from Peronne
+this October 14th, was the following to the magistrates of Ypres:[16]
+
+ "Dear and well beloved friends, considering that we have to-day
+ made peace and convention with Monseigneur the king, and that for
+ this reason you might be inclined to let off fire-works and make
+ other manifestations of joy, we hasten to advise you that ... our
+ pleasure is you shall not permit fireworks or assemblies in our
+ town of Ypres on account of the said peace until we have subdued
+ the people of Liege, and avenged the said outrage [described
+ above]. This with God's aid we intend to do. We are on the point
+ of departure with all our forces for Liege. Beloved, may our Lord
+ protect you.
+
+ "Written in our castle of Peronne, October 14, 1468."
+
+A certain G. Ruple conveyed his own impressions to the magistrates of
+Ypres, possibly managing to slip them under the same cover.[17]
+
+ "To-day, at about 10 o'clock, peace was concluded between the king
+ and Monseigneur, and also between the king and the Duke of Berry.
+ Here, bells are ringing and the _Te Deum_ is sung. It is generally
+ believed that Monseigneur will depart to-morrow. God deserves
+ thanks for the result, for I assure you that last night the
+ outlook was not clear."[18]
+
+The king wrote as follows to his confidential lieutenant:
+
+ "PERONNE, October 14th.
+
+ "Monseigneur the grand master, you are already informed how there
+ has been discussion in my council and that of my brother-in-law of
+ Burgundy, as to the best manner of adjusting certain differences
+ between him and me. It went so far that in order to arrive at a
+ conclusion I came to this town of Peronne. Here we have busied
+ ourselves with the requisitions passing between us, so that to-day
+ we have, thanks to our Lord, in the presence of all the nobles
+ of the blood, prelates and other great and notable personages in
+ great numbers, both from my suite and from his, sworn peace
+ solemnly on the true cross, and promised to aid, defend and
+ succour each other for ever. Also on the same cross we have
+ ratified the treaty of Arras with its corrections and other points
+ which seemed productive of peace and amity.
+
+ "Immediately after this the Duke of Burgundy ordered thanksgivings
+ in the churches of his lands, and in this town he has already had
+ great solemnity. And because my brother of Burgundy has heard that
+ the Liegeois have taken prisoner my cousin the bishop of Liege,
+ whom he is determined to deliver as quickly as possible, he has
+ besought me as a favour to him, and also because the bishop is my
+ kinsman whom I ought to aid, to accompany him to Liege, not far
+ from here. This I have agreed to, and have chosen as my escort
+ a portion of the troops under monseigneur the constable, in the
+ hopes of a speedy return by the aid of God.
+
+ "And because it is for my weal and that of my subjects I write to
+ you at once, because _I am sure_ you will be pleased, and that
+ you will order like solemnities. Moreover, monseigneur the grand
+ master, as I lately wrote to you, pray as quickly as possible
+ disband my _arriere ban_ together with the free lances, and
+ do every possible thing for the mass of poor folks; appoint
+ well-to-do men as leaders in every bailiwick and district. Above
+ all, see to it that they do not indulge in any new and startling
+ conduct. That done, if you wish to come to Bohan, to be nearer
+ me, I would be glad, so as to be able to provide for any further
+ action that may arise. Written at Peronne October 14th.
+
+ "Loys MEURIN.
+
+ "To our dear and beloved cousin the Count of Dammartin, grand
+ master of France."[19]
+
+Dammartin thought that this letter was phrased for the purpose of
+passing Charles's censorship. He took the liberty of disregarding his
+master's orders; the troops were not disbanded, and he held himself
+in readiness to go to fetch the errant monarch if he did not return
+speedily from the enemy's country. His letter to the king and the
+unwritten additions delivered by his confidential messengers terrified
+his liege lest too much zeal on his behalf in France might work him
+ill in Liege. A week later Louis writes again:
+
+ NAMUR, Oct. 22nd.
+
+ "MONSEIGNEUR THE GRAND MASTER:
+
+ "I have received your letter by Sire du Bouchage. _Be assured that
+ I make this journey to Liege under no constraint, and that I never
+ took any journey with such good heart as I do this._ Since God and
+ Our Lady have given me grace to be friends with Monseigneur of
+ Burgundy, be sure that never shall our rabble over there take arms
+ against me. Monseigneur the grand master, my friend, you have
+ proved that you love me, and you have done me the greatest service
+ that you can, and there is another service that you can do. The
+ people of Monseigneur of Burgundy think that I mean to deceive
+ them, and people there [in France] think that I am a prisoner.
+ Distrust between the two would be my ruin.
+
+ "Monseigneur, as to the quarters of your men, you know what we
+ planned, you and I, touching the action of Armagnac. It seems
+ to me that you ought to send your people straight ahead in that
+ direction and I will furnish you four or five captains as soon as
+ I am out of this, and you can make what choice you will. M. the
+ grand master, my friend, come, I beg you, to Laon and await me
+ there. Send me a messenger the minute you arrive and I will let
+ you have frequent news. Be assured that as soon as the Liegeois
+ are subdued, on the morrow I will depart, for Monsg. of Burgundy
+ is resolved to urge me to go as soon as he has finished his work
+ at Liege, and he desires my return more than I do. Francois Dunois
+ will tell you what good cheer we are making. Adieu, monseigneur,
+ etc.
+
+ "Writ at Namur, Oct. 22nd.
+
+ "LOUIS "TOUSSAINT.
+
+ "To our dear and beloved cousin the Count of Dammartin, grand
+ master of France."[20]
+
+Letters of the same date to Rochefoucauld and others also declare that
+Louis goes most gladly with his dear brother of Burgundy and that the
+affair will not require much time. To Cardinal Balue he writes only a
+few words, telling him that the messenger will be more communicative.
+
+Between Peronne and Namur did the party turn aside to visit the
+young Duchess of Burgundy, either at Hesdin or at Aire? Such is the
+conjecture of a learned Belgian editor, and he carries his surmise
+further in suggesting that in this brief sojourn was performed
+Chastellain's mystery of "The Peace of Peronne."[21] Perhaps these
+verses, if put in the mouths of Louis and Charles, may have pleased
+the princely spectators of the dramatic poem. Mutual admiration was
+the key-note of these flowery speeches while the other _dramatis
+personae_ expressed unstinted admiration for the wonderful deed
+accomplished by these two pure souls who have sworn peace when they
+might have brought dire war on their innocent subjects.
+
+ "Never did David, nor Ogier, nor Roland, that proud knight,
+ nor the great Charlemagne, nor the proud Duke of Mayence, nor
+ Mongleive, the heir, from whom issued noble fruit, nor King
+ Arthur, nor Oliver, nor Rossillon, nor Charbonnier in their dozens
+ of victories approach or touch with hand or foot the work I treat
+ of."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ [The king speaks.]
+
+ "Charles, be assured that Louis will be the re-establisher and
+ provider of all that touches your honour and peace between you
+ and him. That he will ever be appreciator of you and avenger, a
+ nourisher of joy and love in repairing all that my predecessor
+ did.
+
+ [The duke speaks.]
+
+ "And Charles, who loves his honour as much as his soul, wishes
+ nothing better than to serve you and this realm and to extol
+ your house. For I know that is the reason why I have glory and
+ reputation. Then if it please God and Our Lady, my body will keep
+ from blame."
+
+One stanza, indeed, uttered by Louis strikes a note of doubt:
+"Charles, so many debates may occur, so many incidents and accidents
+in our various actions, that a rupture may be dreaded."
+
+Vehemently did the duke repudiate the bare possibility of a new breach
+between him and his liege. The whole is a paean at a love feast. If the
+two together heard their counterfeits express such perfect fidelity,
+how Louis XI. must have laughed to himself behind his mask of forced
+courtesy! Charles, on the other hand, was quite capable of taking it
+all seriously, wholly unconscious that he had not cut the lion's claws
+for once and all.
+
+
+[Footnote 1: _See_ Lavisse iv^{ii}.,356.]
+
+[Footnote 2: The letters of convocation bear the date February 26,
+1467, o.s. Tournay elected four deputies. By April 30th, they had
+returned home, and on May 2d they made a report. The items of
+expenditure are very exact. So hard had they ridden that a fine horse
+costing eleven crowns was used up and was sold for four crowns. M. Van
+der Broeck, archivist of Tournay, extracted various items from the
+register of the Council. _See_ Kervyn's note. Chastellain, v., 387.]
+
+[Footnote 3: _See_ Lavisse iv^[ii]., 356.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Dordrecht was not among them. Her deputies held that
+it was illegal for them to go to The Hague. Some time later Charles
+received the oaths at Dordrecht. (Wagenaar, _Vaderlandsche Hist._,
+iv., 101.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Treaty of Ancenis, September 10, 1468. _See_ Lavisse,
+iv^[ii].] One of the results of the War of Public Weal was that St.
+Pol was appointed constable of France.]
+
+[Footnote 6: The original is in the Mss. de Baluze, Paris, Bibl. Nat.;
+Lenglet, iii., 19.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Commines and a letter to the magistrates of Ypres are the
+basis of this narrative. (Gachard, _Doc. ined._, i., 196.) There
+is, however, a mass of additional material both contemporaneous and
+commentating. _See also_ Michelet, Lavisse, Kirk, etc. Chastellain's
+MS. is lost.]
+
+[Footnote 8: _See_ Lavisse, iv^[ii]., 397.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Ludwig v. Diesbach, (_See_ Kirk, i., 559.) The author
+was a page in Louis's train, who afterwards played a part in Swiss
+affairs.]
+
+[Footnote 10: It was never captured until Wellington took it in 1814.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Commines, ii., ch. vii.]
+
+[Footnote 12: The bishop did indeed meet his death at the hands of the
+mob, but it was many years later.]
+
+[Footnote 13: _Le roi ... se voyait loge, rasibus d'une grosse tour ou
+un Comte de Vermandois fit mourir un sien predecesseur Roy de France_.
+(Commines, ii., ch. vii.)]
+
+[Footnote 14: _Memoires_, ii., ch. ix.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Undoubtedly Commines wishes it to be inferred that this
+was he. The main narrative followed here is Commines, whose memoirs
+remain, as Ste.-Beuve says, the definitive history of the times. There
+are the errors inevitable to any contemporary statement. Meyer, to be
+sure, says, apropos of an incident incorrectly reported, _Falsus in
+hoc ut in pluribus historicus_. Kervyn de Lettenhove three centuries
+later is also severe. _See_, too, "L'autorite historique de Ph. de
+Commynes," Mandrot, _Rev. Hist_., 73.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Gachard, _Doc. ined._, i., 199.]
+
+[Footnote 17: _Ibid._, 200.]
+
+[Footnote 18: _Waer ic certiffiere dat het dezen nacht niet wel claer
+ghestaen heeft._]
+
+[Footnote 19: _Lettres de Louis XI_, iii., 289. The king apparently
+never resented the part played by Dammartin when he was dauphin. His
+letters to him are very intimate.]
+
+[Footnote 20: _Lettres_, iii., 295. (Toussaint is probably Toustain.)]
+
+[Footnote 21: Kervyn ed., _Oeuvres de Chastellain_, vii., xviii. _See_
+poem, _ibid._, 423. The MS. in the Laurentian Library at Florence
+bears this line: "Here follows a mystery made because of the said
+peace of good intention in the thought that it would be observed by
+the parties." Hesdin is, however, a long way out of the route between
+Peronne and Namur, where the party was on October 14th. It would
+hardly seem possible for journey and visit in so brief a time.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+AN EASY VICTORY
+
+1468
+
+
+It was in the midst of heavy rains that the journey was made to Namur
+and then on to the environs of Liege. Grim was the weather, befitting,
+in all probability, Charles's own mood. The king's escort was confined
+to very few besides the Scottish guard, but a body of three hundred
+troopers was permitted to follow him at a distance, while the faithful
+Dammartin across the border kept himself closely informed of every
+incident connected with the march that his scouts could gather, and
+in readiness to fall upon Burgundian possessions at a word of alarm,
+while he restrained his ardour for the moment in obedience to Louis's
+anxious command.
+
+By the fourth week of October the Franco-Burgundian party were settled
+close to Liege in straggling camps, separated from each other by hills
+and uneven ground. Long was the discussion in council meeting as to
+the best mode of procedure. Liege was absolutely helpless in the face
+of this coalition. Wide breaches made her walls useless. Moats she had
+never possessed, for digging was well-nigh impossible on her rocky
+site covered by mud and slime from the overflow of the Meuse. On
+account of this evident weakness, the king advised dismissing half the
+army as needless, advice that was not only rejected immediately but
+which excited Charles's doubts of the king's good faith. Over a week
+passed and feeble Liege continued obstinate, while each division of
+the army manoeuvred to be first in the assault for the sake of the
+plunder. But advance was very difficult, for the soldiers were
+impeded in their movements by the slime. Wild were some of the night
+skirmishes over the uneven, slippery ground and amidst the little
+sheltering hills.
+
+On one occasion, "a great many were hurt and among the rest the Prince
+of Orange (whom I had forgotten to name before), who behaved that day
+like a courageous gentleman, for he never moved foot off the place he
+first possessed.
+
+The duke, too, did not lack in courage but he failed sometimes
+in order giving, and to say the truth, he behaved himself not so
+advisedly as many wished because of the king's presence."[1]
+
+There is no doubt that Charles entertained increasingly sinister
+suspicions of his guest. He thought the king might either try to enter
+the city ahead of him and manage to placate his ancient allies by a
+specious explanation, or else he might succeed in effecting his escape
+without fulfilling his compact. At last Charles appointed Sunday,
+October 30th, for an assault. On the 29th, his own quarters were in
+a little suburb of mean, low houses, with rough ground and vineyards
+separating his camp from the city. Between his house and that of the
+king, both humble dwellings, was an old granary, occupied by a picked
+Burgundian force of three hundred men under special injunctions to
+keep close watch over the royal guest and see that he played no sudden
+trick. To further this purpose of espionage, they had made a breach in
+the walls with heavy blows of their picks.
+
+The men were wearied with all their marching and skirmishing, and in
+order to have them in fighting trim on the morrow, Charles had ordered
+all alike to turn in and refresh themselves. The exhausted troops
+gladly obeyed this injunction. Charles was disarmed and sleeping, so,
+too, were Philip de Commines and the few attendants that lay within
+the narrow ducal chamber. Only a dozen pickets mounted guard in the
+room over Charles's little apartment, and kept their tired eyes open
+by playing at dice.
+
+On that Saturday night when Charles was thus prudently gathering
+strength for the final tussle, the people of Liege also indulged in
+repose, counting on Sunday being a day of rest, that is, the major
+part of the burgher folk did within city limits. But another plan was
+on foot among some of the inhabitants of an outlying region. An attack
+on the Burgundian camp was planned by a band from Franchimont, a wild
+and wooded district, south of the episcopal see. The natives there had
+all the characteristics of mountaineers, although the heights of their
+rugged country reached only modest altitudes.[2]
+
+These invaders were fortunate in obtaining as guides the owners of
+the very houses requisitioned for the lodgings of the two princes.
+Straight to their goal they progressed through paths quite unknown to
+the foe, and therefore unwatched. The highlanders made a mistake
+in not rushing headlong to the royal lodgings, where in the first
+confusion they might have accomplished their design upon the lives of
+Louis and of Charles or at least have taken the two prisoners. But a
+pause at a French nobleman's tent created a disturbance which roused
+the archers in the granary. The latter sallied out, to meet with a
+fierce counter-attack. In order to confuse them the mountaineers
+echoed the Burgundian cries, _Vive Bourgogne, vive le roy et tuez,
+tuez_, and they were not always immediately identified by their harsh
+Liege accent.
+
+The highlanders were far outnumbered by the Burgundians, and it was
+only by dint of their desperate courage and by reason of the pitchy
+darkness and of the locality with its unknown roughness that the
+former inflicted the damage that they did.
+
+Commines and his fellows helped the duke into his cuirass, and stood
+by his person, while the king's bodyguard of Scottish archers "proved
+themselves good fellows, who never budged from their master's feet and
+shot arrow upon arrow out into the darkness, wounding more Burgundians
+than Liegeois." The first to fall was Charles's own host, the guide of
+the marauders to his own cottage door. There were many more victims
+and no mercy. It was, indeed, an encounter characterised by the
+passions of war and the conditions of a mere burglarious attack on
+private houses.
+
+Quaking with fear was the king. He thought that if the duke should now
+fail to make a complete conquest of Liege, his own fate would hang in
+the balance. At a hasty council meeting held that night, Charles
+was very doubtful as to the expediency of carrying out his proposed
+assault upon the city. Very distrustful of each other were the allies,
+a fact that caused Philip de Commines to comment,[3] "scarcely fifteen
+days had elapsed since these two had sworn a definitive peace and
+solemnly promised to support each other loyally. But confidence could
+not enter in any way."
+
+Charles gave Louis permission to retire to Namur and wait until the
+duke had reduced the recalcitrant burghers once for all. Louis thought
+it wiser to keep close to Charles's own person until they parted
+company for ever, and the morrow found him in the duke's company as he
+marched on to Liege.
+
+ "My opinion is, [says Commines], that he would have been wise to
+ depart that night. He could have done it for he had a hundred
+ archers of his guard, various gentlemen of his household, and,
+ near at hand, three hundred men-at-arms. Doubtless he was stayed
+ by considerations of honour. He did not wish to be accused of
+ cowardice."
+
+Olivier de la Marche, also present as the princely pair entered Liege,
+heard the king say: "March on, my brother, for you are the luckiest
+prince alive." As they entered the gates, Louis shouted lustily,
+"_Vive Bourgogne_," to the infinite dismay of his former friends, the
+burghers of Liege.
+
+The remainder of the history of that dire Sunday morning differs from
+that of other assaults only in harrowing details, and the extremity of
+the pitilessness and ferocity manifested by the conquerors. Charles
+had previously spared churches, and protected the helpless. Above
+all he had severely punished all ill treatment of respectable women.
+Little trace of this former restraint was to be seen on this occasion.
+The inhabitants were destroyed and banished by dozens. Those who fled
+from their homes leaving their untasted breakfasts to be eaten by the
+intruding soldiers, those who were scattered through the numerous
+churches, those who attempted to defend the breaches in the walls--all
+alike were treated without mercy.
+
+The Cathedral of St. Lambert, Charles did endeavour to protect. "The
+duke himself went thither, and one man I saw him kill with his own
+hand, whereupon all the company departed and that particular church
+was not pillaged, but at the end the men who had taken refuge there
+were captured as well as the wealth of the church."
+
+[Illustration: OLIVIER DE LA MARCHE
+
+(FROM MS. REPRODUCED IN MEM. COURONNES, ETC., PAR L'ACAD,
+
+ROYALE DE BELGIQUE VOL. XLIX.)]
+
+At about midday Charles joined Louis at the episcopal palace, where
+the latter had found apartments better suited to his rank than the
+rude huts that had sheltered him for the past few days. The king was
+in good spirits and enjoyed his dinner in spite of the unsavoury
+scenes that were still in progress about him. He manifested great joy
+in the successful assault, and was lavish in his praises of the duke's
+courage, taking care that his admiring phrases should be promptly
+reported to his cousin.[4] His one great preoccupation, however, was
+to return to his own realm.
+
+After dinner the duke and he made good cheer together. "If the king
+had praised his works behind his back, still more loud was he in
+his open admiration. And the duke was pleased." No telling sign of
+friendship for Charles had Louis spared that day, so terrified was he
+lest some testimony from his ancient proteges might prove his ruin.
+"Let the word be Burgundy," he had cried to his followers when the
+attack began. "_Tuez, tuez, vive Bourgogne_."
+
+There is another contemporaneous historian who somewhat apologetically
+relates the following incident of this interview.[5] In this friendly
+Sabbath day chat, Charles asked Louis how he ought to treat Liege when
+his soldiers had finished their work. No trace of kindliness towards
+his old friends was there in the king's answer.
+
+"Once my father had a high tree near his house, inhabited by crows
+who had built their nests thereon and disturbed his repose by their
+chatter. He had the nests removed but the crows returned and built
+anew. Several times was this repeated. Then he had the tree cut down
+at the roots. After that my father slept quietly."
+
+Four or five days passed before Louis dared press the question of his
+return home. The following note written in Italian, dated on the day
+of the assault, is significant of his state of mind:
+
+
+ LOUIS XI. TO THE COUNT DE FOIX
+
+ "Monseigneur the Prince:
+
+ "To-day my brother of Burgundy and I entered in great multitude
+ and with force into this city of Liege, and because I have great
+ desire to return, I advise you that on next Tuesday morning I will
+ depart hence, and I will not cease riding without making any stops
+ until I reach there.[6] I pray you to let me know what is to be
+ done.
+
+ "Writ at Liege, October 30th.
+
+ "LOYS
+
+ "DE LA LOERE."
+
+
+Punctilious was Louis in his assurances to his host that if he could
+be of any further aid he hoped his cousin would command him. If there
+were, indeed, nothing, he thought his best plan would be to go to
+Paris and have the late treaty duly recorded and published to insure
+its validity. Charles grumbled a little, but finally agreed to speed
+his parting guest after the treaty had been again read aloud to the
+king so that he might dissent from any one of its articles or ever
+after hold his peace.
+
+Quite ready was Louis to re-confirm everything sworn to at Peronne.
+Just as he was departing he put one more query: "'If perchance my
+brother now in Brittany should be dissatisfied with the share I accord
+him out of love to you, what do you want me to do?' The duke answered
+abruptly and without thought: 'If he does not wish to take it, but
+if you content him otherwise, I will trust to you two.' From this
+question and answer arose great things as you shall hear later. So
+the king departed at his pleasure, and Mons. de Cordes and d'Emeries,
+Grand Bailiff of Hainaut escorted him out of ducal territory."[7]
+
+ "O wonderful and memorable crime of this king of the French
+ [declares a contemporaneous Liege sympathiser.][8] Scarcely
+ anything so bad can be found in ancient annals or in modern
+ history. What could be more stupid or more perfidious, or a better
+ instance of infamy than for a king who had incited a people to
+ arms against the Burgundians to act thus for the sake of his own
+ safety? Not once but many times had he pledged them his faith,
+ offering them defence and assistance against the same Burgundians.
+ And now when they are overwhelmed and confounded by this
+ Burgundian duke, this king actually co-operates with their foe, to
+ their damage, wears that foe's insignia and dares to hide himself
+ behind those emblems, and assist to destroy those to whom he
+ himself had furnished aid and subsidies with pledges of good
+ faith! I am ashamed to commit this to writing, and to hand it down
+ to posterity, knowing that it will seem incredible to many. But
+ it is so notorious throughout France and is confirmed by so many
+ adequate witnesses who have seen and heard these things that no
+ room is left for doubt of their veracity except to one desiring to
+ ignore the truth."[9]
+
+November 2d is the date of Louis's departure. It needs no stretch
+of the imagination to believe the words of his little Swiss page,
+Diesbach, when he says that on reaching French soil Louis dismounted
+and kissed the ground in a paroxysm of joy that he was his own man
+again.[10] Devoutly, too, he gave thanks to God for helping him in his
+need. Still this joy was concealed under euphemistic phrases in his
+correspondence. On November 5th, he wrote again to the Duke of Milan
+from Beaumont:
+
+ "We went in person with the duke against the Liegeois, on account
+ of their rebellion and offence, and the city being reduced by
+ force to the power of the duke, we have left him in some part of
+ Liege as we were anxious to return to our kingdom of France."
+
+In January, 1469, Guillaume Toustain, the brother of the faithful
+secretary Aloysius Toustain, who had written several of Louis's
+letters from Liege, goes to Pavia to finish his studies, and Louis
+writes to the Duke of Milan asking him to assure his protege a
+pleasant reception in the university.
+
+The ratification of the treaty took place duly at Paris on Saturday,
+November 19th, and the king also sternly forbade the circulation of
+any "paintings, rondels, ballads, songs, or defamatory pamphlets"
+about Charles.[11] The same informant tells us that loquacious birds
+were put under a ban.
+
+ "And on the same day in behalf of the king, and by virtue of his
+ commission addressed to a young man of Paris named Henry Perdriel,
+ all the magpies, jays, and _chouettes_, caged or otherwise, were
+ taken in charge, and a record was made of all the places where the
+ said birds were taken and also all that they knew how to say, like
+ _larron, paillart_, etc., _va hors, va! Perrette donnes moi a
+ boire_, and various other phrases that they had been taught."
+
+Abbe le Grand thinks that "Perrette" was meant for Peronne instead of
+a mistress of Louis of that name. But this conjecture seems the only
+basis for the very deep-rooted tradition that _Peronne_ was a word
+Louis could not bear to have uttered.
+
+"In the way of justice there is nothing going on here, [wrote one
+Anthony de Loisey from Liege to the president of Burgundy], except
+every day they hang and draw such Liegeois as are found or have been
+taken prisoners and have no money to ransom themselves. The city is
+well plundered, nothing remains but rubbish. For example I have not
+been able to find a sheet of paper fit for writing to you, but with
+all my pains could get nothing but some leaves from an old book."[12]
+
+Charles decided that nothing should be left standing except churches
+and ecclesiastical buildings. On November 9th, before the final fires
+were lit, he departed from the wretched town and went down the left
+bank of the Meuse to an abbey on the river, where he paused for the
+night. Four leagues distant from the city was this place, and from it
+were plainly visible the flames of the burning buildings on that grim
+St. Hubert's Day--a day when Liege had been wont to give vent to
+merriment.
+
+"From all the dangers that had encompassed him, Charles escaped with
+his life, simply because his hour had not yet struck, and because
+he was God's chosen instrument to punish the sinning city," is the
+verdict of one chronicler who does not spare his fellow-Liegeois for
+their follies while he profoundly pities their fate.[13]
+
+Out of the many contemporaneous accounts a portion of a private letter
+from the duke's cup-bearer to his sister is added:[14]
+
+ "Very dear sister, with a very good heart I recommend myself to
+ you and to all my good friends, men and women in our parts, not
+ forgetting my _beaux-peres,_ Martin Stephen and Dan Gauthier. Pray
+ know that, thanks to God, I and all my people are safe and sound.
+ As to my horses, one was wounded and another is sick in the hands
+ of the marshals at Namur, and the others are thin enough and have
+ no grain to eat except hay. The weather, has, indeed, been enough
+ to strike a chill to the hearts of men and horses. Since we left
+ Burgundy there have not been three fine days in succession and we
+ are in a worse state than wolves.
+
+ "You already know how we passed through Lorraine and Ratellois
+ without troubling about Salesart or other French captains, nor the
+ other Lorrainers either, although they were under orders to
+ attack us, and were no more afraid of us than we of them. As we
+ approached the territory of Hainaut, M. the duke sent Messire
+ Pierre de Harquantbault[15] to us to show us what road to take.
+ He told us that the duke had made a treaty with the king, who had
+ visited him, news that filled us with astonishment....
+
+ After skirmishing for several days we reached the faubourgs of
+ Liege and remained there three of four days under arms, with no
+ sleep and little food, and our horses standing in the rain with no
+ shelter but the trees. While we were thus lodged, the king and
+ the duke with a fair escort arrived and took up their quarters in
+ certain houses near the faubourg. [... Constant firing was
+ interchanged for several days. Sallies were essayed and men were
+ slain.]
+
+ "Finally a direct attack was made on the king and Monseigneur
+ and there were more of their people than ours and that night
+ Monseigneur was in great danger. The following Sunday at 9 A.M. we
+ began the assault in three separate quarters. It was a fine thing
+ to see the men-at-arms march on the walls of the said city, some
+ climbing and others scaling them with ladders. The standards
+ of monseigneur the marshal and monsgn. de Renty who had been
+ stationed together in the faubourgs, were the first within the
+ said city which contained at that moment sixteen to eighteen
+ thousand combatants, who were surprised when they saw their walls
+ scaled.
+
+ "In a moment we entered crying 'Burgundy' and 'city gained.' Ever
+ so many of their people were slain and drowned in their flight. We
+ flew to reach the market-place and the church of St. Lambert where
+ a number of prisoners were taken and thrown into the water. Our
+ ensign stood in the midst of the fray on the market-place, in the
+ hopes that they would rally for a combat but they rallied only
+ to flee. While we held our position on the square several were
+ created knights.... All the churches--more than four hundred--were
+ pillaged and plundered. It is rumoured that they will be burnt
+ together with the rest of the city. Piteous it is to see what ill
+ is wrought.... [The king] stayed in the city with Monseigneur two
+ or three days. Then he departed, it is said for Brussels to await
+ my said lord. It is a great thing to have seen the puissance of my
+ master, _which is great enough to defeat an emperor_. I believe
+ the Burgundians will shortly return to Burgundy.
+
+ "I paid my respects to my said lord, who received me very well. At
+ present I am listed[16] among those whose term is almost expired
+ and I am ready to follow him wherever he wishes until my service
+ is out, which will be soon. I would have written before had I had
+ any one to send it by. Pray write me about yourself by the first
+ comer. Praying our Lord, beloved sister, to keep you. Written in
+ Liege, November 8, 1468.
+
+ "JEHAN DE MAZILLES."
+
+
+This sober letter and other accounts by reliable witnesses agree as to
+the terrible havoc wrought in the city by the assault on October 30th
+and by determined and systematic measures of destruction, both during
+Charles's ten days' sojourn for the express purpose of completing the
+punishment and after his departure. Yet the result assuredly fell
+short of the intention. The destruction was not complete as was that
+of Dinant. Vitality remained, apart from the ecclesiastical nucleus
+intentionally preserved by the duke.
+
+Having watched the tongues of flame lap the unfortunate city, Charles
+turned with his army towards Franchimont, that rugged hill country
+which had proved a nest of hardy and persistent antagonists to
+Burgundian pretensions. Jehan de Mazilles is in close attendance and
+gives further details of the pitiless fashion in which Charles carried
+out his purpose of leaving no seed of resistance to germinate. Four
+nights and three days they sojourned in a certain little village while
+there was a hard frost and where, without unarming, they "slept under
+the trees and drank water." Meantime a small party was despatched
+by the duke to attack the stronghold of Franchimont. The despairing
+Liegeois who had taken refuge there abandoned it, and it was taken by
+assault. A few more days and the duke was assured that Liege and her
+people were shorn of their strength. When the remnant of survivors
+began to creep back to the city and tried to recover what was left
+of their property, many were the questions to be settled. Lawsuits
+succeeded to turmoils and lingered on for years.
+
+In the lordly manner of conquerors Charles, too, demanded
+reimbursement for his trouble in bending these free citizens to
+his illegal will. The reinstated bishop wanted his rents and legal
+perquisites, all difficult to collect, and many were the ponderous
+documents that passed on the subject. How justly pained sounds
+Charles's remonstrance on the default of payment of taxes to his
+friend, the city's lord!
+
+"Therefore [he writes,] in consideration of these things, taking into
+account the terror of our departure to Brussels last January, we
+decide, my brother and I, that the payment of both _gabelle_ and poll
+tax must be forced, and that we cannot permit the retarding of such
+taxes under any colour or pretence. At the request of our brother and
+cousin we order the inhabitants of the said territories to pay both
+_gabelle_ and poll tax, all that is due from the time it was imposed
+and for the time to come, under penalty of the confiscation of their
+goods and their persons."
+
+It was the old story of bricks without straw--taxes and rents for
+property ruthlessly destroyed were so easy. To this extent of tyranny
+had Duke Philip never gone, and undoubtedly the treatment of Liege was
+a step towards Charles's final disaster. So much hatred was excited
+against him that his adherents fell off one by one when his luck began
+to fail him.
+
+No omen of misfortune was to be seen at this time, however. That month
+of November saw him master absolute wherever he was and he used his
+power autocratically. At Huy, he had a number of prisoners executed.
+At Louvain, at Brussels, he gave fresh examples of his relentlessness
+as an overlord.
+
+
+[Footnote 1: Commines, ii., ch. xi. It was not far from the place
+where another Prince of Orange tried to cross the Meuse exactly a
+hundred years later.]
+
+[Footnote 2: The story of the "men of Franchimont" is questioned.
+Commines is the only authority for it.]
+
+[Footnote 3: II., ch. xiii.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Commines, ii., ch. xiii.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Oudenbosch, _Veterum scriptorum, etc. Amplissima
+Collectio_, ed. E. Martene, iv. Rerum Leodiensim. Opus Adriani de
+Veteri Busco, p. 1343. The writer acknowledges that the story is
+hearsay.]
+
+[Footnote 6: "_Non cessero di cavalchare senza fare demoia alcuna.
+Lettres,iii_., 300.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Commines, ii., ch. xiv.]
+
+[Footnote 8: "_O proeclarum et memorabile facinus hujus regis
+Francorum_."]
+
+[Footnote 9: Basin, _Histoire des regnes de Charles VII. et de Louis
+XI_., Quicherat ed., ii., 204. This also appears in _Excerpta ex
+Amelgardi. De gestis Ludovici XI_., cap. xxiii. Martene's _Amplissima
+Collectio,_ iv., 740 _et seq_.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Quoted in Kirk, i., 606, note.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Jean de Roye, _Chronique Scandaleuse_, ed. Mandrot, i.,
+220.]
+
+[Footnote 12: Comines-Lenglet, iii., 83.]
+
+[Footnote 13: Johannes de Los, _Chronicon_, p. 60. _Quia hora nendum
+venerat._ De Ram, "Troubles du pays de Liege."]
+
+[Footnote 14: Commynes-Dupont, _Preuves_, iii., 242. Letter of Jehan
+de Mazilles to his sister.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Hagenbach, later Governor of Alsace.]
+
+[Footnote 16: _Conte aux escros_. This word strictly applies to the
+prisoners on a jailer's list--evidently used in jest.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+A NEW ACQUISITION
+
+1469-1473
+
+
+This successful expedition against Liege carried Charles of Burgundy
+to the very crest of his prosperity. His self-esteem was moreover
+gratified by the regard shown to him at home and abroad. A man who
+could force a royal neighbour into playing the pitiful role enacted by
+Louis XI. at Peronne was assuredly a man to be respected if not loved.
+And messages of admiration and respect couched in various terms
+were despatched from many quarters to the duke as soon as he was at
+Brussels to receive them.
+
+Ghent had long since made apologies for the sorry reception accorded
+to their incoming Count of Flanders in 1467, but Charles had postponed
+the formal _amende_ until a convenient moment of leisure. January 15,
+1469, was finally appointed for this ceremony and the occasion was
+utilised to show the duke's grandeur, the city's humiliation, to as
+many people as possible who might spread the report far and wide.
+
+It was a Sunday. Out in the courtyard of the palace the snow was thick
+on the ground where a group of Ghent burghers cooled their heels for
+an hour and a half, awaiting a summons to the ducal presence. There,
+too, where every one could see those emblems of the artisans'
+corporate strength, fluttered fifty-two banners unfurled before the
+deans of the Ghentish _metiers_.[1]
+
+Within, the great hall of the palace showed a splendid setting for a
+brilliant assembly. The most famous Burgundian tapestries hung on the
+walls. Episodes from the careers of Alexander, of Hannibal, and of
+other notable ancients formed the background for the duke and his
+nobles, knights of the Golden Fleece, in festal array. As spectators,
+too, there were all the envoys and ambassadors then present in
+Brussels from "France, England, Hungary, Bohemia, Naples, Aragon,
+Sicily, Cyprus, Norway, Poland, Denmark, Russia, Livornia, Prussia,
+Austria, Milan, Lombardy, and other places."
+
+Charles himself was installed grandly on a kind of throne, and to his
+feet Olivier de la Marche conducted the civic procession of penitents.
+Before this pompous gathering, after a statement of the city's sin and
+sorrow, the precious charter called the Grand Privilege of Ghent
+was solemnly read aloud, and then cut up into little pieces with a
+pen-knife. Next followed a recitation of the penalties imposed upon,
+and accepted by, the citizens (closing of the gates, etc)., and then
+the paternal Count of Flanders, duly mollified, pronounced the fault
+forgiven with the benediction, "By virtue of this submission and by
+keeping your promises and being good children, you shall enjoy our
+grace and we will be a good prince." "May our Saviour Jesus Christ
+confirm and preserve this peace to the end of this century," is the
+pious ejaculation with which the _Relation_ closes.
+
+Among the witnesses of the above scene, when the independent citizens
+of Ghent meekly posed as the duke's children, were envoys from George
+Podiebrad, ex-king of Bohemia. Lately deposed by the pope, he was
+seeking some favourable ally who might help him to recover his realm.
+He had conceived a plan for a coalition between Bohemia, Poland,
+Austria, and Hungary to present a solid rampart against the Turks,
+and strong enough to dictate to emperor and pope. He was ready for
+intrigue with any power and had approached Louis XI. and Matthias
+Corvinus, King of Hungary, before turning to Charles of Burgundy.[2]
+
+Meantime, the Emperor Frederic tried to knit links with this same
+Matthias by suggesting that he might be the next emperor, assuring
+him that he could count on the support of the electors of Mayence, of
+Treves, and of Saxony. He himself was world-weary and was anxious to
+exchange his imperial cares for the repose of the Church could he
+only find a safe guardian for his son, Maximilian, and a desirable
+successor for himself. Would not Matthias consider the two offices?
+
+Potent arguments like these induced Matthias not only to turn his back
+on Podiebrad, but to accept that deposed monarch's crown which the
+Bohemian nobles offered him May 3, 1469. Then he proceeded to ally
+himself with Frederic, elector palatine, and with the elector of
+Bavaria. This was the moment when the ex-king of Bohemia made renewed
+offers of friendly alliance to Charles of Burgundy. In his name the
+Sire de Stein brought the draft of a treaty of amity to Charles which
+contained the provision that Podiebrad should support the election
+of Charles as King of the Romans, in consideration of the sum of two
+hundred thousand florins (Rhenish).[2]
+
+This modest sum was to secure not only Podiebrad's own vote but his
+"influence" with the Archbishop of Mayence, the Elector of Saxony
+and the Margrave of Brandenburg.[4] While Podiebrad thus dangled
+the ultimate hopes of the imperial crown before the duke's eyes, he
+over-estimated his credulity. As a matter of fact the royal exile had
+no "influence" at all with the first named elector, and the last, too,
+showed no disposition whatsoever to serve his unstable policy. Both
+were content to advise Emperor Frederic. The sole result of the empty
+overtures was to increase Charles's own sense of importance.
+
+Another negotiation which sought him unasked had, however, a material
+influence on the course of events, and must be touched on in some
+detail. Sigismund of Austria--first duke then archduke,--Count of
+Tyrol, cousin of the Emperor Frederic, was a member of the House of
+Habsburg. In 1449, he had married Eleanor of Scotland, and became
+brother-in-law of Louis during the term of the dauphin's first
+marriage. An indolent, extravagant prince, he was greatly dominated
+by his courtiers. His heritage as Count of Tyrol included certain
+territories lying far from his capital, Innsbruck. Certain portions
+of Upper Alsace, lands on both sides of the Rhine, Thurgau, Argau in
+Switzerland, Breisgau, and some other seigniories in the Black Forest
+were under his sway.
+
+These particular domains were so remote from Innsbruck that the
+authority of the hereditary overlord had long been eluded. The nobles
+pillaged the land near their castles very much at their own sweet
+will. The harassed burghers appealed to the Alsatian Decapole,[5] and
+again to the free Swiss cantons for protection, and sometimes obtained
+more than they wanted.
+
+Mulhouse was seriously affected by these lawless depredations. To her,
+Berne promised aid in a twenty-five years' alliance signed in 1466,
+and at Berne's insistance the cowardly nobles restrained their
+license. But when the city attempted to extend its authority Sigismund
+interfered. Having no army, however, he could not recover Waldshut,
+which the Swiss claimed a right to annex, except by offering ten
+thousand florins for the town's ransom. Poor in cash as he was in men,
+he had, however, no means to pay this ransom and begged aid in every
+direction. Moreover, he feared further aggressions from the cantons,
+which were growing more daring. What man in Europe was better able to
+teach them a lesson than Charles, the destroyer of Liege, the stern
+curber of undue liberty in Flanders? Was he not the very person to
+tame insolent Swiss cowherds?
+
+In the course of the year 1468, Sigismund made known to Charles his
+desire for a bargain, intimating that in case of the duke's refusal,
+he would carry his wares to Louis XI. At that moment, Charles was
+busied with Liege and showed no interest in Sigismund's proposition.
+The latter tried to see Louis XI. personally in accordance with his
+imperial cousin's advice that an interview might be more effective
+than a letter.
+
+It did not prove a propitious time, however; Louis was deeply engaged
+with Burgundy and he was not disposed to take any steps that might
+estrange the Swiss--and any espousal of Sigismund's interests might
+alienate them. He did not even permit an opening to be made, but
+stopped Sigismund's approach to him by a message that he would not for
+a moment entertain a suggestion inimical to those dear friends of his
+in the cantons--a sentiment that quickly found its way to Switzerland.
+
+Thus stayed in his effort to win Louis's ear, Sigismund decided that
+he would make another essay towards a Burgundian alliance, this time
+face to face with the duke. On to Flanders he journeyed and found
+Charles in the midst of the ostentatious magnificence already
+described. Ordinary affairs of life were conducted with a splendour
+hardly attained by the emperor in the most pompous functions of his
+court. Sigismund was absolutely dazzled by the evidence of easy
+prosperity. The fact that a maiden was the duke's sole heiress led
+the Austrian to conceive the not unnatural idea that this attractive
+Burgundian wealth might be turned into the impoverished imperial
+coffers by a marriage between Mary of Burgundy and Maximilian, the
+emperor's son.
+
+[Illustration: MARY OF BURGUNDY FROM CONTEMPORANEOUS MINIATURE
+REPRODUCED IN BARANTE, "LES DUCS DE BOURGOGNE"]
+
+The visitor not only thought of this possibility, but he immediately
+broached it to Charles. The bait was swallowed. As to the main
+proposition which Sigismund had come expressly to make, that, too,
+was not rejected. The duke perceived that the transfer of the Rhenish
+lands to his jurisdiction might militate to his advantage. A passage
+would be opened towards the south for his troops without the need of
+demanding permission from any reluctant neighbour. The risk of trouble
+with the Swiss did not affect him when weighing the advantages of
+Sigismund's proffer, a proffer which he finally decided to accept.
+Probably he found his guest a pleasant party to a bargain, for not
+only did he broach the tempting alliance between Mary and Maximilian,
+but he, too, seems to have hinted that the title of "King of the
+Romans" might be added to the long list of appellations already signed
+by Charles.[6] As Sigismund was richer in kin, if not in coin, than
+the feeble Podiebrad, Charles gave serious heed to the suggestion
+which fell incidentally from his guest's lips, in the course of the
+long conversations held at Bruges.
+
+Certain precautions were taken to protect Charles from being dragged
+into Swiss complications against his will, and then in May, 1469,
+the treaty of St. Omer was signed,[7] wherein the Duke of Burgundy
+accorded his protection to Sigismund of Austria and received from him
+all his seigniorial rights within certain specified territories.
+
+The most important part of this cession comprised Upper Alsace and
+the county of Ferrette, but there were also many other fragments of
+territory and rights of seigniory involved, besides lordship over
+various Rhenish cities, such as Rheinfelden, Saeckingen, Lauffenburg,
+Waldshut and Brisac. This last named town commanded the route
+eastward, as Waldshut that to the southeast, and Thann the highway
+through the Vosges region.
+
+Fifty thousand florins was the price for the property and the claims
+transferred from Sigismund to Charles. Ten thousand were to be paid at
+once, in order to ransom Waldshut from the Swiss. The remainder was
+due on September 24th. On his part, Sigismund specifically recognised
+the duke's right to redeem all domains nominally his but mortgaged for
+the time being, certain estates or seignorial rights having been thus
+alienated for 150 years.
+
+This territorial transfer was not a sale. It was a mortgage, but a
+mortgage with possession to the mortgagee and further restricted by
+the provision that there could be no redemption unless the mortgager
+could repay at Besancon the whole loan plus all the outlay made by the
+mortgagee up to that date. Instalment payments were expressly ruled
+out. The entire sum intact was made obligatory. Therefore the danger
+of speedy redemption did not disquiet Charles. He knew the man he had
+to deal with. Sigismund's lack of foresight and his prodigality were
+notorious. There was faint chance that he could ever command the
+amount in question. Accordingly, Charles was fairly justified in
+counting the mortgaged territory as annexed to Burgundy in perpetuity.
+
+Sigismund pocketed his florins eagerly. Nothing could have been more
+welcome to him. But this relief from the pressure of his pecuniary
+embarrassment did not inspire him with love for the man who held his
+lost lands. His sentiments towards Charles were very similar to those
+of an heir towards a usurer who has helped him in a temporary strait
+by mulcting him of his natural rights.
+
+As for the emperor, when this transfer of territory was an
+accomplished fact, he began to take fright at the consequences. He did
+not like this intrusion of a powerful French peer into the imperial
+circle.[8] At the same time he was ready to make him share
+responsibility in any further difficulties that might arise between
+Sigismund and the Swiss.
+
+The least skilful of prophets could have foreseen difficulties for
+Charles on his own account, both foreign and domestic. His own
+relations with the Swiss had always been friendly enough, but he had
+never before been so near a neighbour, while, within the Rhine lands,
+it was an open question whether the bartered inhabitants were to
+enjoy or regret their new tie with Burgundy. The importance of their
+sentiments was a matter of as supreme indifference to Charles as was
+danger from the Confederation. Neither conciliation nor diplomacy
+was in his thoughts. He had no conception of the intricacies of the
+situation. He counted the landgraviate as definitely his by the treaty
+of St. Omer as Brabant by heritage or Liege by conquest.
+
+The need of a kindly policy towards the little valley towns--a policy
+that might have won their allegiance--never occurred to him. They were
+his property and Peter von Hagenbach was, in course of time, made
+lieutenant-governor in his behalf.
+
+Apart from all personal considerations of enmity and amity of natives
+and neighbours, the territory of Upper Alsace and the county of
+Ferrette, delivered from needy Austria to rich Burgundy, like a coat
+pawned by a poor student, was held under very complex and singular
+conditions.[9] The status of the bargain between Sigismund and Charles
+was in point of fact something between pawn and sale, according to the
+point of view. Sigismund fully intended to redeem it, while Charles
+did not admit that possibility as remotely contingent. Nor was that
+the only peculiarity. The itemised list of the ceded territories as
+given in the treaty was far from telling the facts of the possessions
+passing to Sigismund's proxy.
+
+In the first place the Austrian seigniories were not compact. They
+were scattered here and there in the midst of lands ruled by others,
+as the Bishop of Strasburg, the Abbe of St. Blaise in the Black
+Forest, the count Palatine, the citizens of Basel and of Mulhouse, and
+others.
+
+The existent variety in the extent and nature of Austrian title was
+extraordinary. Nearly every possible combination of dismembered
+prerogative and actual tenure had resulted from the long series of
+ducal compositions. In some localities a toll or a quit-rent was the
+sole cession, and again a toll or a prerogative was almost the only
+residue remaining to the ostensible overlord, while all his former
+property or transferable birthright privileges were lodged in
+various hands on divers tenures. There were cases in which the
+mortgagee--noble, burgher, or municipal corporation--had taken the
+exact place of the Austrian duke and in so doing had become the vassal
+of his debtor, stripped of all vested interest but his sovereignty.
+For in these bargains wherein elements of the Roman contract and
+feudal customs were curiously blended, two classes of rights had been
+invariably reserved by the ducal mortgagers:
+
+ (1) Monopolies, regal in nature, such as assured free circulation on
+the highways, the old Roman roads, all jurisdiction of passports and
+travellers' protection.
+
+ (2) The suzerainty. This comprised the power to confer fiefs, of
+requisition of military service, of requesting _aids_ and admission to
+strongholds, cities, or castles, _le droit de forteresse jurable et
+rendable_.
+
+In these regards the compact between Charles and Sigismund differed
+from all previous covenants not only in degree, but in kind. The Duke
+of Burgundy entered into the _sovereign_ as well as into the mangled,
+maimed, and curtailed proprietary rights of the hereditary over-lord.
+
+In his assumption of this involved and doubtful property, Charles laid
+heavy responsibilities on his shoulders. The actual price of fifty
+thousand gold florins paid to Sigismund was a mere fraction of the
+pecuniary obligations incurred, while the weight of care was difficult
+to gauge. He succeeded to princes weak, frivolous, prodigal, whose
+misrule had long been a curse to the land. The incursions of
+the Swiss, the repeated descents of the Rhine nobles from their
+crag-lodged strongholds to pillage and destroy, terrified merchants
+and plunged peaceful labourers into misery.
+
+Through hatred of the absentee Austrians, the neighbouring cities
+repeatedly became the accomplices of these brigands, affording them
+asylums for refitting and free passage when they were laden with
+evident booty.
+
+In all departments of finance and administration disorder prevailed.
+The chief officials, castellans and councillors, enjoyed high salaries
+for neglected duties. The castles were in wretched repair and there
+were insufficient troops to guard the roads. There was no dependence
+upon the receipts nominally to be expected. In the sub-mortgaged
+lands, the lords simply levied what they could, without the slightest
+responsibility for the order of the domain; they did not hesitate to
+charge their suzerain for repairs never made, confident that no one
+would verify their declaration.
+
+In the territories of the immediate domain, the Austrian dukes and
+their officials had no notion of the rigid system maintained in
+Burgundy. Only here and there can little memoranda be found and these
+are confused and obscure. There is a dearth of accurate records like
+those voluminous registers of outlays kept by Burgundian receivers,
+registers so rich in detail that they are more valuable for the
+historian than any chronicle.
+
+Exact appraisal of the resources of these _pays de par de la_ was very
+difficult. Between 1469 and 1473 there were three efforts to obtain
+reliable information by means of as many successive commissions
+despatched to the Rhine valley by the Duke of Burgundy.
+
+Envoys drew up minutes of their observations in addition to their
+official reports and all were preserved in the archives. As these were
+written from testimony gathered on the spot, such as the accounts of
+the receivers now lost, etc., there is real value in the documents.
+
+The first commission in behalf of Burgundy was composed of two Germans
+and three Walloons. One of the former was Peter von Hagenbach, who
+won no enviable reputation in the later exercise of his office as
+lieutenant-governor of the annexed region, to which he was shortly
+afterwards appointed. This first commission entered into formal
+possession in Charles's name and instituted some desired reforms
+immediately, such as policing the highways, etc.
+
+The second commission made its visit in 1471. It consisted of Jean
+Pellet, treasurer of Vesoul, and Jean Poinsot, procureur-general of
+Amont.
+
+The third commission (1473) was under the auspices of Monseigneur
+Coutault, master of accounts at Dijon. He carried with him the report
+of his predecessors and made his additions thereto.
+
+Charles's directions to Poinsot and Pellet (June 13, 1471) were vague
+and general. They were "to see the conduct of his affairs" _(voir la
+conduite de ses affaires_). The important point was to find out how
+much revenue could be obtained. As the duke's plan of expansion grew
+larger he had need of all his resources.
+
+The reports were eminently discouraging. Outlay was needed
+everywhere--income was small. As the chances of peculation diminished,
+the castellans deserted their posts and left the castles to decay.
+The Burgundian commission of 1471 found the difficulties of their
+exploration increased by two items. Charles had not advanced an
+allowance for their expenses and they were anxious to be back at
+Vesoul by Michaelmas, the date of the change in municipal offices and
+of appropriations for the year. It was in hopes of receiving advance
+moneys that they delayed in starting, but the approaching election and
+coming winter finally decided them to set out, pay their own expenses,
+and complete the business as rapidly as they could in a fortnight.
+
+The summary of this report of 1471 was that there was little present
+prospect that Charles would be able to reimburse himself for his
+necessary expenses. An undue portion of authority and of revenue was
+legally lodged in alien hands. Charles was possessed of germs of
+rights rather than of actual rights. The earlier creditors of Austria
+held all the best mortgages with their attendant emoluments. The
+immediate profits accruing to the Duke of Burgundy fell far short
+of the minimum necessary to disburse to keep his government, his
+strongholds, his highways in repair. Very disturbed were the good
+treasurer of Vesoul and the procureur-general of Amont at this state
+of affairs, and distressed at the prospect of the ampler receipts from
+Burgundy being required to relieve the pressing necessities of the
+poor territories _de par de la_.
+
+To avoid this contingency, the commissioners recommended the duke
+to redeem all the existing mortgages great and small. It would cost
+140,000 florins, but the revenue would at once increase with the new
+security which would immediately follow under firm Burgundian rule.
+Sole master, Charles could then enforce obedience from nobles and
+cities and better conditions would be inaugurated.
+
+Evidently this rational advice was not taken, for it is repeated by
+Coutault in 1473. Redemption of the mortgages, "if your affairs can
+afford it," is the counsel given by the chamber of accounts at Dijon,
+though this sage board adds that they were well aware that in the
+previous month Monseigneur could not put his hands on a hundred
+florins to redeem one wretched little _gagerie._ The native coffers of
+the region did not suffice to settle the salaries of the officers in
+charge.
+
+Such then was the new acquisition of Charles after four years of his
+administration. Peter von Hagenbach, his deputy in charge of this
+unremunerative territory, is a character painted in the darkest
+colours by all historians. It is more than probable that his unpopular
+efforts to make bricks without straw were largely responsible for his
+unenviable reputation. Ground between the upper and lower millstones
+of Charles's clamours for revenues and popular clamours that the
+people had nothing wherewith to pay, Hagenbach developed into a
+taskmaster of the hardest and most unpitying type, who made himself
+thoroughly hated by the people he was set to rule.
+
+It must be remembered that there was no cleft in nationality or in
+language between governor and governed. He was not a foreigner set
+over them. He was one of them raised to a high position. There was
+then no French element in Lower Alsace. It was then German pure and
+simple.
+
+[Illustration: UPPER ALSACE AND ADJACENT TERRITORY BY PERMISSION OF
+HACHETTE, 1902]
+
+
+[Footnote 1: Gachard, _Doc. ined_., i., 204-209. "Relation de
+l'assemblee solennelle tenue a Bruxelles le 15 Jan., 1469."]
+
+[Footnote 2: See Toutey, _Charles le Temeraire et la ligue de
+Constance_, p. 7.]
+
+[Footnote 3: See the text given in Comines-Lenglet, iii., 116. Charles
+is characterised as _ducem strenuum in armis ac justitiae praecipium
+zelatorem_.]
+
+[Footnote 4: See Toutey, p. 8; also Lavisse, iv^{ii}., 371.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Thus was named the assembly of ten Alsatian towns from
+Strasburg to Basel, organised into a half independent confederation by
+the Emperor Charles IV.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Toutey, p. 11.]
+
+[Footnote 7: See "Fontes Rerum Austriacarum" Chmel, J., _Urkunden zur
+Geschichte von Osterreich_, etc., II^2, 223 _et passim_. One document,
+p. 229, has _Marz_ as a misprint for _Mai_.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Charles was, to be sure, already within that circle for
+some of his Netherland provinces, but his feudal obligations there
+were very shadowy.]
+
+[Footnote 9: See Toutey, Lavisse, etc., and above all a valuable
+article by L. Stouff, entitled "Les Possessions Bourguignonnes dans la
+vallee du Rhin sous Charles le Temeraire," _Annales de l'Est,_ vol.
+18. This article, is the result of a careful examination of the
+reports made by Poinsot and Pellet, Charles's commissioners.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+ENGLISH AFFAIRS
+
+1470-1471
+
+
+In order to follow out the extension of Burgundian jurisdiction in
+one direction, the course of events in the duke's life has been
+anticipated a little. The thread of the story now returns to 1469,
+when Charles and Sigismund separated at St. Omer both well pleased
+with their bargain. Charles tarried for a time at Ghent and Bruges
+and then proceeded to Zealand and Holland, where his sojourn had been
+interrupted in 1468 by his alarm about French duplicity. In the glow
+caused by his past achievements, his present reputation, and future
+prospects, Charles of Burgundy was in a mood to prove to his subjects
+his excellence as a paternal ruler. Wherever he paused on his journey
+easy access was permitted to his presence and he was lavish in the
+time given to receiving petitions from the humblest plaintiff. The
+following gruesome incident is an illustration of the summary methods
+attributed to him.[1]
+
+Shortly before the ducal visit to Middelburg, the governor, a man
+of noble birth, a knight, fell in love with a married woman who
+indignantly repudiated his advances. In revenge the governor had the
+husband arrested on a charge of high treason. The wife, left without a
+protector, continued obdurate to the knight until the alternative of
+her husband's release or his death was offered her as the reward for
+accepting the governor's base suit or as the penalty of her refusal.
+She chose to redeem the prisoner. Having paid the price she went to
+the prison and was led to her husband truly, but he lay dead and in
+his coffin!
+
+When the Duke of Burgundy was once within the Zealand capital, this
+injured woman hastened to throw herself at his feet, a petitioner
+for justice. He heard her complaint and straightway summoned the
+ex-governor to his presence. The accused confessed that he had been
+carried away by his adoration for the woman, reminded Charles of
+his long and faithful devotion to the late duke and to himself, and
+offered any possible reparation for his crime. The duke ordered him to
+marry his victim. The widow was horrified at the suggestion, but was
+forced by her family to accept it. After the nuptial benediction, the
+knight again appeared before Charles to assure him that the plaintiff
+was satisfied. "She, yes," replied the duke coldly, "but not I." He
+remanded the bridegroom to prison, had him shriven and executed all
+within an hour. Then the bride was summoned and shown her second
+husband in his coffin as she had seen her first, and on the same spot.
+"It was a penalty that hit the innocent as well as the guilty, for the
+plaintiff died from the double shock."
+
+The duke, satisfied with his rigour, went on to Holland. Everywhere he
+evinced himself equally uncompromising towards the nobles, amiable and
+considerate towards the lower classes and humble folk. Various other
+stories related about him at this epoch are difficult to accept as
+authentic, for the main detail has appeared at other times under
+different guises. Wandering tales seem to alight, like birds of
+passage, on successive people in lands and epochs widely apart, mere
+hallmarks of certain characteristics re-embodied.
+
+The Hague was the duke's headquarters during two months, and there
+also he held open court and gave audience to many embassies in the
+midst of his administrative work pertaining to Holland and its nearest
+neighbours. He took measures to recover what he claimed had been
+usurped by Utrecht, and he initiated proceedings to make good the
+title of Lord of Friesland, that will-o'-the wisp to successive Counts
+of Holland and never acknowledged by the Frisians. In efforts to weld
+together the various provinces the months passed, until a new turn of
+foreign events began to absorb the duke's whole attention.
+
+The details of English politics with all the reasons for revolution
+and counter-revolution involved in the complicated civil disorders,
+the Wars of the Roses, affected Charles's policy but they can only
+be suggested in his biography. It must be remembered that the modern
+impression of English stability and French fickleness in political
+institutions, an impression casting reflections direct and indirect
+upon literature as well as history, is based on the changes in France
+from 1789 down to the fourth quarter of the nineteenth century. Quite
+the reverse is the earlier tradition based on the kaleidoscopic
+shifts familiar to several generations of observers in the fifteenth
+century[2]; stable and firm felt the French as they heard the tidings
+of the brief triumphs of belligerent factions across the Channel.
+
+Since 1461, Henry VI. of the House of Lancaster had been a passive
+prisoner, while Margaret of Anjou had exhausted herself in efforts
+to win adherents at home and abroad for her captive husband and her
+exiled son.[3] In 1463, she had received some aid, some encouragement
+from Philip of Burgundy, although he had recognised Edward IV. as king
+and although, too, his personal sympathies were Yorkish rather than
+Lancastrian.
+
+It was Charles who escorted the errant lady into Lille, but later the
+duke himself entertained her munificently. The poverty-stricken exile
+probably found the accompanying ducal gifts more to the immediate
+purpose than the ducal feasts. Two thousand gold crowns were bestowed
+upon herself, a hundred upon each of her ladies, while various
+Lancastrian nobles were tided over hard times by useful sums of money.
+
+Pleasant though the recognition was, however, the pecuniary assistance
+was quite insufficient to accomplish Margaret's purpose. For nine
+years Edward IV. sat on his throne and no serious efforts were made to
+dislodge him. As he never forgot his mother's lineage, the sympathies
+of Charles of Burgundy were with the exiles, and Queen Margaret may
+have counted confidently on that sympathy proving valuable for her son
+as soon as Charles himself had a free hand. But when he came into his
+heritage, his marriage with Margaret of York put a definite end to
+those hopes. The new duke thereby declared his acceptance of the king
+whom the Earl of Warwick had seated upon the English throne. Then
+came clashing of wills between that king and his too powerful
+subject-adviser.[4] To punish his unruly royal protege, Warwick turned
+his attention to the Duke of Clarence, brother and heir presumptive to
+Edward IV. A marriage was planned between this possible future monarch
+and the earl's eldest daughter and then quickly celebrated at Calais
+without the king's knowledge (July, 1469).
+
+In the same summer occurred a rising in Yorkshire, possibly instigated
+by Warwick.[5] The malcontents, sixty thousand strong, declared that
+the king was giving ear to base counsellors and must be coerced into
+better ways. An attempt to suppress this revolt by the royal troops
+resulted in a pitched battle where Earl Rivers, the father of
+Elizabeth Woodville, the young queen, was taken prisoner and beheaded.
+
+Edward, baffled, finally turned for aid to Warwick. Over the Channel
+hastened the earl and his new son-in-law, levied troops, met the king
+at Olney, and--Edward found himself if not exactly a prisoner, at
+least under restraint. Two sovereigns--both without power even over
+their own actions,--such was the situation in England at the end of
+1469, when Charles of Burgundy was self-complacently regarding Louis
+XI. as a foe convinced of his own inferiority.
+
+A menacing letter from this redoubtable ducal brother-in-law was
+probably the reason why Edward IV. was set at liberty, and why a
+reconciliation was patched up between him and his councillor, with
+full pardon for Warwick's adherents. But it was short-lived. A fresh
+outbreak in March, 1470, made another change. Warwick and Clarence
+sided with the rebels, the king was victorious, and his unfaithful
+friend and brother were again forced to flee under a shower of menaces
+hurled after them.
+
+ "But, and He [Clarence] or Richart Erle of Warrewyk our Rebell and
+ Traytour come into oure seid Land we woll ... that ye doo Hym
+ and Theym to be arrested ... He that Taketh and Bryngeth unto Us
+ either of theym, he shal have for his Reward C._l_ of Land in
+ Yerely Value to Hym and to his Heyres or Mil. _Lib_ in Redy money
+ at his election."[6]
+
+Such was the proclamation issued on March 22d by the king himself at
+York.
+
+Between Edward and Charles a new link had just been forged in the
+chain of friendship. The Order of the Garter is thus acknowledged by
+the duke:
+
+ "We have to-day received from our much honoured seigneur and
+ brother, the king of England, his Order of the Garter together
+ with the mantle and other ornaments and things appertaining to the
+ said Order and have ... taken the oath according to the statutes
+ of the Order.
+
+ "Done in our city of Ghent under our Grand Seal, February 4, 1469
+ [O.S.]."[7]
+
+Now it was in consideration of needs that might arise in the near
+future, following on the trail of these wide-reaching English
+convulsions, that Charles felt it necessary to make preparations for
+a strong military defence calculated to suit any emergency. Louis XI.
+had a permanent force at his command. He had made the beginning of the
+French standing army, the nucleus of one of those bodies that have
+ever since urged each other on to expensive growth from opposite sides
+of European frontiers. What one monarch possessed that must his near
+neighbour have.
+
+Feudal service, volunteer militia, paid mercenaries, were all alike
+unstable bulwarks for a nation. Nation as yet Charles had not, but
+he wanted to be betimes with his bulwarks. This was why he issued
+an ordinance for the levy of a thousand lances, amounting to five
+thousand combatants, to be paid with regular wages and kept ready at
+call under officers of his own appointment. The ducal treasury could
+not stand the whole expense. To meet the deficit, Charles asked from
+his Netherland Estates an annual subsidy of 120,000 crowns for three
+years. Power to impose taxes he had none. A request to each individual
+province was all the requisition that he could make.
+
+In this case, most of the provinces approached had acceded to the
+demand, when the Estates of Flanders convened at Lille. Here the
+Chancellor of Burgundy expounded to them the grounds of the demand,
+and then the session was changed to Bruges, where they debated on the
+merits of the request, urged on further by explanatory letters from
+Charles. Finally, a deputation was appointed by the Estates to go over
+to Ghent and present a _Remonstrance_ to their impatient sovereign
+beggar.
+
+Three points were set forth. The deputies objected to this grant being
+asked only from the lands _de par de ca_--the Netherlands and not from
+the Burgundies. Secondly, they wished a definite assessment imposed on
+each province. Thirdly, they desired a declaration that the fiefs and
+arriere-fiefs already bound to furnish troops should be exempt from
+share in this tax. The remonstrance was courtly in tone. Written
+in French, the concluding phrases were in Latin and suggested that
+nothing was more becoming a prince than clemency, especially towards
+his subjects.[8]
+
+Vigorous and emphatic was the prince's response.[9] How could Burgundy
+furnish money? It is a poor land. It takes after France.[10] But its
+men make a third of the army. They are the Burgundian contribution. As
+to an assessment, what is the use unless the tax is surely to be paid?
+Only out of malice is this idle point suggested.
+
+ "You act as you have always done--you Flemings. Neither to my
+ father nor to me have you ever been liberal. What you have
+ granted--sometimes more than our request--has always been given so
+ tardily as to prove the lack of good will. Your Flemish skulls
+ are hard and thick and you cling to your stubborn and perverse
+ opinions.... I am half of France and half of Portugal and I know
+ how to meet such heads as yours, ay and _will_ do it. You have
+ always either hated or despised your prince--if powerful you
+ hated, if weak you despised. I prefer your hatred to your
+ contempt. Not for your privileges or anything else will I permit
+ myself to be trampled on--and I have the power to prevent such
+ trampling."
+
+ Laying stress on the extreme modesty of his demand, whose purpose
+ mainly was for defence of Flanders, the duke proceeded to berate
+ his visitors soundly for their presumptuous haggling, declaring
+ that as to the fiefs and arriere-fiefs he would see to it that no
+ double burdens were borne.
+
+ "And when you shall have determined to accord my request,--which
+ you will assuredly do (and I do not mean to burden you further
+ unless I am forced to it),--send some of your deputies after me to
+ Lille or St. Omer, and there, with my chancellor and my council, I
+ will determine the apportionment and we will speak also of other
+ matters touching my province of Flanders."
+
+It was this vehement oratory--and this vehemence was repeated on many
+occasions--that did more to alienate Charles from his hereditary
+subjects than his actual demands. There is little doubt that his
+period of residence in their midst brought with it hatred rather
+than liking. No political error of his serves to explain the Flemish
+attitude towards the duke as does his method of address, the
+gratuitous contempt displayed towards burghers whose purses were
+needed for his game. The _aide_ was granted, indeed, but it was levied
+with sullen reluctance.
+
+What cause Charles had to make his preparations, what were the
+proceedings of the English exiles may be seen from the following
+letters to his mother and to the town of Ypres. The first is probably
+in answer to her questionings; the second is a specimen of the
+epistles showered upon the border towns.
+
+ "TO MY VERY REDOUBTABLE LADY AND MOTHER,
+
+ MADAME THE DUCHESS, AT AIRE:
+
+ "May it please you to know that in regard to what the Sgr. de
+ Crevecoeur has written you about the king's proclamations that he
+ intends to maintain his treaties and promises to me, etc., and has
+ no desire to sustain the Earl of Warwick, and wishes my subjects
+ to be reimbursed for the damages inflicted by him and his,
+ assuredly, my Lady and Mother, the contrary has been and is well
+ known before the said publications and after. The Earl of Warwick
+ is my foe and could not, according to the treaty existing between
+ the king and me, be received in Normandy or elsewhere in the realm
+ ... [complaints about the procedure have been sent to king and
+ parliament and councillors, without redress, etc.] What is more,
+ the Admiral of France has sent thither a spy under pretext of
+ carrying a letter to Sgr. de la Groothuse, which man was charged
+ to spy upon my ships and by means of a caravel named the
+ _Brunette_, sent for this purpose by the admiral, to cut the
+ cables to set them adrift and founder--or to capture certain ships
+ with such captains, knights, and gentlemen as he could find, and
+ myself, too, if they were able.
+
+ "Furthermore, the said spy was charged to spy on my towns, etc.,
+ and those of the caravel called the _Brunette_ were charged, if
+ they failed in taking my ships, or in cutting their cables, to
+ set fire to them--all in direct conflict with the terms of the
+ treaties, and procedures that the king would never have tolerated
+ had he had the slightest intention of maintaining his word ...
+ [Charles does not consider Groothuse to blame at all, etc.][11]
+
+
+_Letter from Charles of Burgundy to the Magistrates of Ypres, June 10,
+1470_
+
+ "DEAR FRIENDS:
+
+ "It has come to your knowledge how after the Duke of Clarence and
+ the Earl of Warwick were expelled from England on account of their
+ sedition and their ill deeds, they have declared themselves both
+ by words and deeds of aggression our enemies, and on _Vendredi
+ absolut_[12] went so far as to capture by fraud ships and property
+ belonging to our subjects, and have further done damage whenever
+ opportunity presented itself.
+
+ "In order to repel them we have ordered them to be attacked on
+ the sea. Moreover, at the same time we were advised that the same
+ Clarence and Warwick and their people, after they were routed at
+ sea by the troops of my honoured lord and brother, Edward, King of
+ England, retreated to the marches of Normandy and were honourably
+ received at Honfleur by the Admiral of France with all which they
+ had saved from the raid on our subjects after the defeat.
+
+ "All this was direct infringement of the treaties lately made
+ between Monseigneur the king and myself. Therefore, we wrote at
+ once to Monsgr. the king begging him not to favour or aid the said
+ Clarence and Warwick in his land of Normandy or elsewhere in his
+ realm, nor to permit them to sell or distribute the property of
+ our subjects, and to show his will by publishing such prohibitions
+ throughout Normandy and elsewhere where need is.
+
+ "Also we wrote to the court of parliament at Paris, and to the
+ council of my said seigneur at Rouen. The answer was that the king
+ meant to keep the treaty between him and us and had ordered his
+ subjects in Normandy not to retain the property belonging to our
+ subjects ... but we have since learned that, notwithstanding,
+ this same property has been distributed and ransoms have been
+ negotiated in the sight and knowledge of the Admiral of France and
+ his officers.
+
+ "Moreover, it is perfectly evident that by means of the aid
+ furnished by the king to the said Clarence and Warwick, the latter
+ are enabled to continue the war on our subjects and not on the
+ English, it being understood that they who were banished from
+ England are not strong enough to return by the force of arms but
+ must do so by friendship and favour.... On account of the above
+ and other depredations, we shall attack the said Warwick and
+ Clarence on the sea as pirates, and all who aid them as is needful
+ for the protection of our lands and subjects.
+
+ "Written at Middelburg in Zealand, June 20, 1470."[13]
+
+ "Tell Monsieur de Warwick that the king will assist him to recover
+ England either with the help of Queen Margaret or by whatever
+ other means he may propose.... Only let him communicate his
+ desires in this respect as speedily as possible and the king will
+ lay aside all other affairs for the purpose of accomplishing it,"
+
+wrote the complaisant King of France in his directions to the
+confidential messenger sent to discuss matters with the English
+earl.[14]
+
+
+But that was not his language towards his cousin of Burgundy, whom he
+assured that there should be no infringement of their treaty, and that
+it was greatly to his royal displeasure that Flemish property
+captured at sea in defiance of that treaty should be sold in French
+market-places. There is a hot correspondence,[15] that is, it is hot
+on the side of Charles, while Louis's phrases are smoothly surprised
+at there being any cause for dissatisfaction. The circumstances shall
+be investigated, his cousin satisfied, etc. One letter from the duke
+to two of Louis's council is emphatic in its expressions of doubt as
+to the good faith of these royal statements:
+
+ "ARCHBISHOP AND YOU ADMIRAL:
+
+ "The vessels which you assure me are destined by the king for
+ an attack on England have attempted nothing except against my
+ subjects; but, by St. George, if some redress be not seen to, I
+ will take the matter into my own hands without waiting for your
+ motions, tardy and dilatory as they are."[16]
+
+
+Reprisals were made accordingly, and the innocent French merchants,
+coming peaceably to the fair at Antwerp, suffered confiscation of
+their private property, while the duke felt fully justified in
+stationing his fleet off the coast of Normandy to guard the Channel.
+Philip de Commines was one of the company who went at the duke's
+behest to Calais to urge the governor, Wenlock, to be faithful to King
+Edward, and to give no shelter to the rebellious earl and his protege
+Clarence.[17]
+
+Louis feared an outbreak of hostilities at an inconvenient moment. He
+temporised. To Warwick, he denied a personal interview, but at the
+same time he sent him a confidential emissary, Sr. du Plessis, to whom
+he wrote as follows:
+
+ "Monsieur du Plessis, you know the desire I have for Warwick's
+ return to England, as well because I wish to see him get the
+ better of his enemies--or that at least through him the realm of
+ England may be embroiled--as to avoid the questions which have
+ arisen out of his sojourn here.... For you know that these Bretons
+ and Burgundians have no other aim than to find a pretext for
+ rupturing peace and reopening the war, which I do not wish to see
+ commenced under this colour.... Wherefore I pray you take pains,
+ you and others there, to induce Mons. de Warwick to depart by all
+ arguments possible. Pray use the sweetest methods that you can, so
+ that he shall not suspect that we are thinking of anything else
+ but his personal advantage."[18]
+
+
+To gain time was Louis's ardent wish at that moment. The envoys
+sent by Louis to placate the duke's resentment at the incidents in
+connection with the Warwick affair, and to assure him that Louis meant
+well by him and his subjects, found Charles holding high state at St.
+Omer. When they were admitted to audience, the duke was discovered
+sitting on a lofty throne, five feet above floor level, "higher than
+was the wont of king or emperor to sit." His hat remained on his head
+as the representatives of his feudal overlord bowed to him and he
+acknowledged their obeisance by a slight nod and a gesture permitting
+them to rise.
+
+Hugonet, a member of the ducal council, answered their address with
+a prosy speech. Burgundian officials revelled in grandiloquent
+phrases--which this time bored Charles, He cut short the harangue
+impatiently, took the floor himself, and made a statement of the
+injuries he had suffered. Louis had promised to be his friend, but he
+was aiding the foe of the duke's brother. The envoys repeated their
+sovereign's offers of redress. Charles declared that redress was
+impossible. Pained, very pained were the French envoys to think that
+a petty dispute could not be settled amicably. "The king desires to
+avoid friction. He offers you friendship, peace, and redress for every
+wrong. It will not be his fault if trouble ensue. Monseigneur, the
+king and you have a judge who is above you both."
+
+The insinuation that it was he who was ready to break the peace
+infuriated Charles. He started to his feet, his eyes flashing with
+fire. "Among us Portuguese there is a custom that when our friends
+become friends to our foes we send them to the hundred thousand devils
+of hell."[19] "A piece of bad taste to send by implication a king of
+France to a hundred thousand devils," comments the suave Chastellain,
+aghast at this impolite, emphatic, though indirect reference to Louis
+XI.
+
+Equally aghast were the Burgundian courtiers present at this occasion.
+After all, they, too, were French by nature. To wreck the new-made
+peace for the sake of the English alliance, which had never been
+really popular among them, that seemed an act of rash unwisdom.
+
+ "A murmur went the rounds of the ducal suite because their chief
+ thus implied contempt for the name of France to which the duke
+ belonged. Not going quite so far as to call himself English,
+ though that was what his heart was, he boasted of his mother,
+ ancient friend of England and enemy of France."
+
+
+There were, indeed, times when the duke was more emphatic in asserting
+his English blood. Plancher cites a scrap of writing in his own hands
+which probably belonged to a letter to the magistrates and citizens of
+Calais, whom he addresses, "O you my friends."[20] While reiterating
+that he simply must defend his own state he adds, "By St. George who
+knows me to be a better Englishman and more anxious for the weal of
+England than you other English ... [you] shall recognise that I am
+sprung from the blood of Lancaster," etc. His claims of kinship varied
+with the circumstances.
+
+While he was so conscious of his own greatness, present and future,
+and of his own laudable intentions to do well by his subjects, it is
+quite possible, too, that Charles was puzzled more or less consciously
+by his failure to win popularity. For he was quite as unpopular with
+his courtiers as with his subjects. The former did not like the rigid
+court rules. There was no pleasure in sitting through audiences silent
+and stiff "as at a sermon," and exposed to personal reprimands from
+their chief if there were the slightest lapses from his standard of
+conduct. They did not know on what meat the duke was feeding his
+imagination, an imagination that already saw him as Caesar. Had he
+actually attained the loftier rank that he dreamed of, his premature
+arrogance might have been forgotten, but his pride of glory invisible
+to the world about him was undoubtedly a bar to his popularity during
+the years 1470-73.
+
+Before this pompous scene passed at St. Omer, Louis had been relieved
+of anxiety in regard to the stability of his kingdom, and the dangers
+of an heir like his brother who might easily be used as a tool by some
+clever faction opposed to the ruling monarch. On June 10th, a son was
+born to him, afterwards Charles VIII. of France. Complaisant still
+were his words to his Burgundian cousin, but the moment was drawing
+near when his efforts to circumvent him were no longer secret.
+
+The embassy returned home. Possibly their report of the duke's
+passionate words goaded the king into discarding his mask of
+friendship. At any rate, his next steps were unequivocal in showing
+which side of the fresh English quarrel he meant to espouse. Margaret
+of Anjou hated the Earl of Warwick, not only because he had unseated
+her husband but because he had doubted her fidelity to that husband.
+Nevertheless, under Louis's persuasions, she consented to forget her
+past wrongs and to stake her future hopes on fraternising with him on
+a basis of common hate for Edward IV. The alliance was to be sealed
+by the marriage of young Edward of Lancaster, the prince whose very
+legitimacy Warwick had questioned, with the earl's younger daughter.
+It was a singular union to be accepted by the parents, separated as
+they had been by the wall of insults interchanged during more than a
+decade of bitter enmity.
+
+Louis brought his cousin to this step of concession. She saw her
+seventeen-year-old son betrothed to the sixteen-year-old Anne Neville,
+and later she herself swore reconciliation to Warwick on a piece of
+the true cross in St. Mary's Church at Angers (August 4, 1470).
+
+ "Monsieur du Plessis [wrote Louis XI. on July 25th], I have sent
+ you Messire Ivon du Fou, to put the affairs of Monsieur de Warwick
+ in surety, and I order him to make such arrangements that the
+ people of the said M. de Warwick will suffer no necessity until he
+ is there. To-day we have made the marriage of the Queen of England
+ and of him, and hope to-morrow to have all in readiness to
+ depart."[21]
+
+
+[Illustration: MEDAL OF CHARLES, DUKE OF BURGUNDY (FROM BARANTE)]
+
+Meanwhile, the king kept agents in all the Somme towns, insinuating
+opposition to the duke, and reminding the citizens that they were
+French at heart. His ambassadors passed in and out of the Burgundian
+court, saying many things in secret besides those they said in public.
+Plenty there were that wished for war, remarks the observant Commines.
+Nobles like St. Pol and others could not maintain the same state in
+peace as in war, and state they loved. In time of war four hundred
+lances attended the constable, and he had a large allowance to
+maintain them from which he reaped many a profitable commission
+besides the fees of his office and his other emoluments. "Moreover,"
+adds Commines, "the nobles were accustomed to say among themselves
+that if there were no battles without, there would be quarrels within
+the realm."
+
+The matter of the grants to Charles of France had been settled to his
+royal brother's liking, not to that of his Burgundian ally. Champagne
+and Brie, so cheerfully promised at Peronne, were withdrawn and
+Guienne substituted. When Normandy had been exchanged for Champagne
+and Brie, as it was arranged at Peronne, Charles of Burgundy approved
+the change as he thought it assured him an obedient friend as
+neighbour.[22] The second change, Guienne instead of Champagne and
+Brie, was quite a different thing.
+
+Guienne bordered the Bay of Biscay far away from Burgundy. Naturally,
+Charles was not content. Then, too, it looked as though he had lost a
+useful friend as well as a neighbour, for the new Duke of Guienne was
+formally reconciled to his brother and took oath that his fraternal
+devotion to his monarch should never again waver.
+
+Long before Charles was completely convinced that Louis was not going
+to maintain the humble attitude assumed at Peronne and Liege, he
+became very suspicious that intrigues were on foot against him. "He
+hastened to Hesdin where he entered into jealousy of his servants"
+says Commines. That he was assured that there were reasons for his
+apprehensions appears in an epistle circulated as an open letter,[23]
+to various cities, wherein he makes a detailed statement of the plots
+against his life by one Jehan d'Arson and Baldwin, son of Duke Philip.
+
+Sorry return was this from one recognised as Bastard of Burgundy and
+brought up in the ducal household. Further, one Jehan de Chassa,
+Charles's own chamberlain, had taken French leave of the duke's
+service and made his way to the king in his castle of Amboise, where
+he had been pleasantly received and promised rich reward when he had
+"executed his damnable designs against our person."
+
+Messengers sent by this Chassa to Baldwin in Charles's court at St.
+Omer were arrested as suspicious, and that circumstance frightened
+Baldwin and caused him to take to his heels, leaving his retinue, his
+horses, and his baggage behind. He dreaded lest he might be attainted
+and convicted of treason, and therefore he took shelter with the king.
+
+ "Saved from this conspiracy by the goodness and clemency of God,
+ we inform you of the events so that you may render thanks
+ by public processions, solemn masses, sermons, and prayers,
+ beseeching Him devoutly and from the heart that He will always
+ guard and defend our person, our lands, seigniories, and subjects
+ from such plots.
+
+ "May God protect you, dear subjects. Written in our castle of
+ Hesdin, December 13, 1470.
+
+ "CHARLES.
+
+ "LE GROS."
+
+
+It was not long before Charles had less reason to fear French
+"subtleties." At an assembly of notables[24] convened at Tours at the
+end of 1470, Louis dropped the mask of friendship worn uneasily for
+just two years, and made an open brief of his grievances against the
+duke.
+
+His case was cited with a luxury of detail more or less authentic. The
+interview at Peronne was a simple trap conceived by Balue and the Duke
+of Burgundy. The treaties of 1465 and 1468, both obtained by undue
+pressure, had not been respected by Charles, etc. The assembly was
+obedient to suggestion. It was a packed house.
+
+Even Commines shows that it is not surprising that there was
+unanimity[25] in the declaration that according to God and his
+conscience in all honour and justice the king was released from those
+treaties, and the way was paved for an invasion into Picardy as soon
+as possible.
+
+Charles's public accusations of plots against him did not go
+unanswered. Jehan de Chassa promptly issued a rejoinder:
+
+ "As Charles, soi-disant Duke of Burgundy, has sent to divers
+ places letters signed by himself and his secretary, Jehan le
+ Gros, written at Hesdin, December 13th, falsely charging me with
+ plotting against his life with Baldwin, Bastard of Burgundy,
+ and Jehan d'Arson, I, considering that it is matter touching my
+ honour, feel bound to reply.... By God and by my soul I declare
+ that these charges against me made by Charles of Burgundy are
+ false and disloyal lies"[26]
+
+Baldwin, too, expressed righteous indignation at the slur on his
+character, but he remained in the French court as did many others who
+had formerly served Charles.
+
+Meanwhile, the Earl of Warwick, having left his daughter in the hands
+of Margaret of Anjou, openly aided by Louis, sailed back to England in
+September But there had been one further change of base of which the
+earl was still unconscious. His elder son-in-law had not rejoiced in
+the Warwick-Lancaster alliance. It brought young Prince Edward to the
+fore, and bereft the Duke of Clarence--long ready to replace Edward of
+York--of any immediate prospects. Therefore he was inclined to accept
+offers of a reconciliation tendered him by King Edward.
+
+Despite his secret change of heart, Clarence sailed with Warwick and
+joined with him in the proclamations scattered over England, declaring
+that the exiles were returning to "set right and justice to their
+places, and to reduce and redeem for ever the realm from its
+thraldom." Never a mention of either Edward IV. or Henry VI. Perhaps
+it was as convenient to see which way the wind blew and to put in a
+name accordingly.
+
+On landing, however, "King Henry VI." was raised as a cry. In
+Nottinghamshire, where Edward lay, not a word was heard for York.
+There was no conflict. Edward felt that Fate had turned against him
+and off he rode to Lyme with a small following, took ship, and made
+for Holland. It was stormy, pirates from the Hanseatic towns gave
+chase, and glad was Edward to take shelter at Alkmaar where De la
+Groothuse, Governor of Holland, welcomed him in the name of the
+duke.[27] Edward was quite destitute. He had nothing with which to pay
+his fare across the Channel but a gown lined with marten's fur, and as
+for his train, never so poor a company was seen.
+
+Eleven days later, Warwick was master of all England and official
+business was transacted in the name of Henry VI., "limp and helpless
+on his throne as a sack of wool." He was a mere shadow and pretence
+and what was done in his name was done without his will or knowledge.
+
+Charles of Burgundy did not hasten to greet his unbidden guest. He
+would rather have heard that his brother-in-law were dead, but he bade
+Groothuse show him every courtesy and supply him with necessaries and
+five hundred crowns a month for luxuries. After a time, and perhaps
+informed by weather prophets that the Lancastrian wind blowing over in
+England was but a fickle breeze, he consented to forget his hereditary
+sympathies.
+
+ "The same day that the duke received news of the king's arrival in
+ Holland, I was come from Calais to Boulogne (where the duke then
+ lay) ignorant of the event and of the king's flight.[28] The duke
+ was first advised that he was dead, which did not trouble him much
+ for he loved the Lancaster line far better than that of York.
+ Besides he had with him the Dukes of Exeter and of Somerset and
+ divers others of King Henry's faction, by which means he thought
+ himself assured of peace with the line of Lancaster. But he feared
+ the Earl of Warwick, neither knew he how to content him that was
+ to come to him, I mean King Edward, whose sister he had married
+ and who was also brother-in-arms, for the king wore the Golden
+ Fleece and the duke the Garter.
+
+ "Straightway then the duke sent me back to Calais accompanied by
+ a gentleman or two of this new faction of Henry, and gave me
+ instructions how to deal with this new world, urging me to
+ go because it was important for him to be well served in the
+ matter.[29] I went as far as Tournehem, a castle near to Guisnes,
+ and then dared not proceed because I found people fleeing for fear
+ of the English who were devastating the country.... Never before
+ had I needed a safe-conduct for the English are very honourable.
+ All this seemed very strange to me for I had never seen these
+ mutations in the world."
+
+Commines was uncertain as to what he had better do and wanted
+instructions. "The duke sent me a ring from his finger, bidding me go
+forward with the promise that if I were taken prisoner he would redeem
+me." New surprises met the envoy at Calais. None of the well-known
+faces were to be seen. "Further, upon the gate of my lodgings and
+the very door of my chamber were a hundred white crosses and rhymes
+signifying that the King of France and Earl of Warwick were one--all
+of which seemed strange to me." Well received was Commines and
+entertained at dinner. It was told at table how within a quarter of an
+hour after the arrival of news from England every man wore this livery
+(the ragged staff of Warwick), so speedy and sudden was the change.
+"This is the first time that I ever knew how little stable are these
+mundane affairs."
+
+ "In all communications that passed between them and me, I repeated
+ that King Edward was dead, of which fact I said I was well
+ assured, notwithstanding that I knew the contrary, adding further
+ that though it were not so, yet was the league between the Duke of
+ Burgundy and the king and realm of England such that this accident
+ could not infringe it--whomever they would acknowledge as king him
+ would we recognise.... Thus it was agreed that the league should
+ remain firm and inviolate between us and the king and realm of
+ England save that for Edward we named Henry."
+
+Commines explains further that the wool trade was what made amity with
+England necessary to Flanders and Holland, "which is the principal
+cause that moved the merchants to labour earnestly for peace."
+
+Charles made vague promises to his uninvited guest, declaring
+ostentatiously that his blood was Lancastrian. Nevertheless he
+finally consented to an interview with him of York, in spite of the
+remonstrances of the Lancastrians, Somerset and Exeter. "The duke
+could not tell whom to please and either party he feared to displease.
+But in the end, because sharp war was upon him face to face, he
+inclined to the English dukes, accepting their promises against the
+Earl of Warwick, their ancient enemy." King Edward, "who was on the
+spot and very ill at ease," was quieted by secret assurances that the
+duke was obliged to dissimulate. "Seeing that he could not keep the
+king but that he was bound to return to England and fearing for divers
+considerations altogether to discontent him, Charles pretended that he
+could not aid the king and forbade his subjects to enter his service."
+Privately, however, he gave him fifty thousand florins of St. Andrew's
+cross, and had two or three ships fitted out at Vere in Zealand, a
+harbour where all nations were received. Besides this he secretly
+hired fourteen well appointed "ships of the Easterlings, which
+promised to serve him till he landed in England and for fifteen days
+after, "great aid considering the times."
+
+King Edward departed out of Flanders in the year 1471, when the
+Duke of Burgundy went to wrest Amiens and St. Quentin back from the
+king.[30] "The said duke thought now howsoever the world went in
+England he could not speed amiss because he had friends on both
+sides."[31]
+
+Edward's adventures in England proved that he had not lost his hold
+there. Warwick's extraordinary brief success was but a flash in the
+pan. London opened her gates and then the pitched battle at Barnet
+gave a final verdict between the rival Houses which England accepted.
+This battle was fought on April 14th, when the thick fog and the like
+speech of the two bodies caused hopeless confusion. Many friends slew
+each other unwittingly, and among the slain was the indefatigable,
+energetic Warwick who had hoped to play with his royal puppets. Only
+forty-four was he and worthy of a better and more statesmanlike
+career.
+
+On that same day Margaret of Anjou and her son landed at Weymouth.
+Hearing of Warwick's death, they tried to reach Wales but were
+intercepted and forced to fight at Tewkesbury. Here the young prince,
+too, met his death. To Edward's direct command is attributed the
+murder of the unfortunate Henry VI. in the Tower, which happened at
+about the same time. The desolated Margaret of Anjou lingered five
+years under restraint in England before she was ransomed by King
+Louis.
+
+ "Sir John Paston to Margaret Paston. Wreten at London the
+ Thorysdaye in Esterne weke, 1471.
+
+ "God hathe schewyd Hym selffe marvelouslye lyke Hym that made all
+ and can undoo agayn whare Hym lyst."[32]
+
+Charles of Burgundy could now pride himself on his foresight. His
+brother of the two Orders was himself again.
+
+ "The very day on which this fight happened [says Commines] the
+ Duke of Burgundy, being before Amiens, received letters from
+ the duchess his wife, that the King of England was not at all
+ satisfied with him, that he had given his aid grudgingly and as if
+ for very little cause he would have deserted him. To speak plainly
+ there never was great friendship between them afterwards. Yet the
+ Duke of Burgundy seemed to be extremely pleased at this news and
+ published it everywhere."
+
+A transaction of his own of this time, the duke did not publish. It
+was a procedure perhaps justified by these wonderful "mutations in the
+world" which impressed Commines as strange and terrible. The Duke of
+Burgundy caused a legal document to be drawn up attesting his own
+heirship to Henry VI. of England, and filed the same in the Abbey of
+St. Bertin with all due formality. If there came more "mutations"
+in the world whose very existence was a new experience to Philip de
+Commines, Charles was ready to interpose his own plank in the new
+structure.
+
+In the archives of the House of Croy in the chateau of Beaumont, rests
+this document, which was duly signed by Charles on November 3, 1471,
+in his own hand "so that greater faith" be given to the statement
+that no one was truer heir to the Lancaster House than Charles of
+Burgundy.[33] Two canons attested the instrument as notaries, and the
+witnesses were Hugonet, Humbercourt, and Bladet.
+
+It was expressly stipulated that if there were any delay in the duke's
+entering upon his English inheritance--which devolved to him
+through his mother,--a delay caused by motives of public utility of
+Christendom, and of the House of Burgundy, this should not prejudice
+his rights or those of his successors. A mere deferring of assuring
+the titles, etc., brought no prejudice to his rights. His delay ended
+in his death and Edward IV. never had to combat this claim of the
+brother-in-law who had helped him, though grudgingly, to regain his
+throne.
+
+
+[Footnote 1: Meyer is the earliest historian to tell this story and it
+is vouched for by no existing contemporary evidence.]
+
+[Footnote 2: From Henry VI.-Henry VII. the English throne was twice
+lost and twice regained by each of the rival Houses of York and
+Lancaster. Thirteen pitched battles were fought between Englishmen on
+English soil. Three out of four kings died by violence. Eighty persons
+connected with the blood royal were executed or assassinated.]
+
+[Footnote 3: Ramsay, _Lancaster and York_, ii., 232 _et seq._; Oman,
+_Hundred Years' War_ and _Warwick, the King-maker_, are followed here
+in addition to Kirk, Lavisse, etc.]
+
+[Footnote 4: That the king chose his wife without the earl's knowledge
+or consent has been accepted as the chief cause, and again denied by
+various authorities.]
+
+[Footnote 5: See Oman's _Warwick_, p. 185.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Rymer, _Faedera_, xi., 654; negotiations had been going on
+for about a year.]
+
+[Footnote 7: _Ibid._, 651.]
+
+[Footnote 8: "Quia nihil est quod ita relucet in principe sicut
+clemencia et maxime circa domesticos et subditos."]
+
+[Footnote 9: Gachard, _Doc. ined._, i., 216. The editor thinks that
+the speech was preserved in the register of Ypres just as it was
+delivered, untouched by chroniclers.]
+
+[Footnote 10: _Il sent la France_.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Middleburg, the 3d of June, 1470. "Madame's sign manual"
+on the copy is dated June 6th. (Plancher, _Histoire generale et
+particuliere de Bourgogne_, etc., iv., cclxxi).]
+
+[Footnote 12: Good Friday, April 20th.]
+
+[Footnote 13: Gachard, _Doc. ined_., i., 226.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Comines-Lenglet., "Preuves," iii., 124. Written at
+Amboise, May, 12, 1470.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Plancher, iv., cclxi., etc.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Duke Charles to the Council of the King at Rouen, May
+29th. (Plancher, iv., cclxix.)]
+
+[Footnote 17: _Memoires_, iii., ch. iv.]
+
+[Footnote 18: Duclos "Preuves," v., 296.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Chastellain, v., 453. These phrases are, to be sure,
+those of our literary and imaginative chronicler, but the substance is
+that of attested words from Charles. M, Petit-Dutaillis accepts it.
+(Lavisse, iv^{ii}., 363.)]
+
+[Footnote 20: _See_ Plancher, iv., cclxxxix.]
+
+[Footnote 21: Aujourd'hui avons fait le mariage de la reine
+d'Angleterre et de lui." Undoubtedly a half jocose way of stating the
+alliance of the children. The following item occurs in the King's
+accounts for December, 1470: "a maistre Jehan le prestre, la somme de
+xxvii l. x.s.t pour vingt escus d'or a lui donnee par le roy, pour le
+restituer de semblable somme que, par l'ordonnance d'icellui seigneur,
+il avait baillee du sien au vicaire de Bayeux auquel icellui seigneur
+en a fait don en faveur de ce qu' il estait venu espouser le prince de
+Galles a la fille du Comte de Warwick." This was a betrothal, not the
+actual marriage. In August, Louis was still asking for a dispensation.
+(Wavrin, Dupont ed., iii., 4I, note. See also _Lettres de Louis XI_.,
+iv., 131.)]
+
+[Footnote 22: A group of smaller seigniories was also involved,
+Quercy, Perigord, La Rochelle, etc. _See_ letter-patent,
+(Comines-Lenglet, "Preuves," iii., 97.)]
+
+[Footnote 23: Duclos, "Preuves" v., 302.]
+
+[Footnote 24: Comines-Lenglet, "Preuves," iii., 68; Lavisse, iv^{ii},
+364.]
+
+[Footnote 25: _See_ Lavisse iv^{ii}, 364. He states that the king
+named all the deputies that the towns were to appoint.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Duclos, "Preuves," v., 307.]
+
+[Footnote 27: Commines, iii., ch. v.]
+
+[Footnote 28: Commines, iii., ch. vi.]
+
+[Footnote 29: _See_ instructions given to him for this mission,
+Wavrin-Dupont, iii., 271.]
+
+[Footnote 30: Commines, iii., ch. vii.]
+
+[Footnote 31: As soon as Edward and his English exiles sailed, Charles
+published a proclamation forbidding his subjects to aid him.]
+
+[Footnote 32: _Letters_, iii., 4.]
+
+[Footnote 33: _See_ Gachard, _Etudes et Notices historiques concernant
+l'histoire des Pays-Bas,_ ii., 343, en approuvant et emologant toutes
+les choses deseurdittes et chascune d'icelles et a fin que plus grant
+foy soit adjoustee a tout ce que cy desus est escript, avant signe ce
+present instrument de nostre propre main et le fait sceller de nostre
+seau en signe de verite, l'an et jour desusdit. [This in French, the
+body in Latin.]
+
+"CHARLES."]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+NEGOTIATIONS AND TREACHERY
+
+1471
+
+
+All work had ceased at Paris for three days by the king's command,
+while praise was chanted to God, to the Virgin, and to all saints male
+and female, for the victory won by Henry of Lancaster, in 1470, over
+the base usurper Edward de la Marche. From Amboise, Louis made a
+special pilgrimage to Notre Dame de Celles at Poitiers to breathe in
+pious solitude his own prayers of thanksgiving for the happy event.
+The battle of Tewkesbury stemmed the course of this abundant stream of
+gratitude, and there were other thanksgivings.[1]
+
+In the spring of 1471, Edward IV. was dating complacent letters from
+Canterbury to his good friends at Bruges,[2] acknowledging their
+valuable assistance to his brother Charles,[3] recognising his part in
+restoring Britain's rightful sovereign to his throne. To his sister,
+the Duchess of Burgundy, the returned exile gave substantial proof
+of his gratitude in the shape of privileges in wool manufacture and
+trade.[4]
+
+Like one of the alternating figures in a Swiss weather vane the King
+of England had swung out into the open, pointing triumphantly to fair
+weather over his head, while Louis was forced back into solitary
+impotence. He seemed singularly isolated. His English friends were
+gone, his nobles were again forming a hostile camp around Charles of
+France, now Duke of Guienne, who had forgotten his late protestations
+of fraternal devotion, and there were many indications that the
+Anglo-Burgundian alliance might prove as serious a peril to France as
+it had in times gone by but not wholly forgotten.
+
+The two most important of the disputed towns on the Somme were,
+however, in Louis's possession, and Charles of Burgundy, ready to
+reduce Amiens by siege on March 10, 1471, consented to stay his
+proceedings by striking a truce which was renewed in July. This
+afforded a valuable respite to the king, and he busied himself in
+energetic efforts to detach his brother from the group of malcontents.
+Various disquieting rumours about the prince's marriage projects
+caused his royal brother deep anxiety, and induced him to despatch a
+special envoy to Guienne. To that envoy Louis wrote as follows[5]:
+
+ "MONSEIGNEUR DU BOUCHAGE:
+
+ "Guiot du Chesney[6] has brought me despatches from Monsg. de
+ Guienne and Mons. de Lescun and has, further, mentioned three
+ points to me: First, in behalf of Mme. de Savoy,[7] ... second, in
+ regard to M. d'Urse ... third, touching the mission of Mons. de
+ Lescun to marry Monsg. of Guienne to the daughter of Monsg. de
+ Foix.... The Urse matter I will leave to you, and will agree to
+ what you determine upon. On the spot you will be a better judge of
+ what I ought to say and what would be advantageous to me, than I
+ can here.
+
+ "In regard to the third point, the Foix marriage, you know what a
+ misfortune it would be to me. Use all your five senses to prevent
+ it. I am told that my brother does not really like the idea, and
+ it has occurred to me that Mons. de Lescun has brought him to
+ consent in order to further the marriage of the duchess,[8] so
+ that in taking the sister, the duke will be relieved of this sum,
+ a condition that would please him greatly because he has nothing
+ to pay it with. I would prefer to pay both it and all the
+ accompanying claims and then be through with it. In effect, I beg
+ you make him agree to another [bride] before you leave, and do not
+ be in any hurry to come to me. If this Aragon affair[9] can be
+ arranged you will place me in Paradise.
+
+ "_Item._ I have thought that Monsg. de Foix would not approve this
+ Aragon girl, because he himself has some hopes of the kingdom of
+ Aragon through his wife. If Monsg. of Guienne were advised of
+ this, I believe it would help along our case.
+
+ "_Item._ It seems to me that you have a splendid opportunity to be
+ very frank with my brother. For he has informed me through this
+ man that the duke [of Brittany] has paid no attention to the
+ representations made him in my behalf, through Corguilleray,
+ and since my brother himself confides this to me, you have an
+ opportunity to assure him that I thank him, and that I never
+ cherish him so highly as when he tells me the truth, and that I
+ now recognise that he does not desire to deceive me, since he
+ does not spare the duke [of Brittany] and that, since he sees him
+ opposed to me, he should return the seal that you know of and
+ refuse to take his sister [Eleanor de Foix, the sister of the
+ Duchess of Brittany], or to enter into any other league.
+
+ "If he will choose a wife quite above suspicion, as long as I live
+ I will harbour no misgiving of him and he shall be as puissant in
+ all the realm of France as I myself, as long as I live. In short,
+ Mons. du Bouchage my friend, if you can gain this point, you will
+ place me in Paradise. Stay where you are until Monseigneur de
+ Lescun has arrived, and a good piece afterwards, even if you have
+ to play the invalid, and before you depart put our affair in
+ surety if you can, I implore you. And may God, Monseigneur du
+ Bouchage my friend, to whom I pray, and may Nostre Dame de Behuart
+ aid your negotiations. The women[10] of Mme. de Burgundy have
+ all been ill with the _mal chault,_ and it is reported that the
+ daughter is seriously afflicted and bloated. Some say that she is
+ already dead. I am not sure of the death but I am quite certain of
+ the malady.
+
+ "Written at Lannoy, Aug. 18th.
+
+ "LOYS.
+
+ "TILHART."
+
+That the king's professed confidence in his brother did not remove all
+suspicions of that young man's steadfastness from his mind is shown
+by the following letter, written two days later than the above, to
+Lorenzo de' Medici:
+
+ "Dear and beloved cousin, we have learned that our brother of
+ Guienne has sent to Rome to ask a dispensation from the oath he
+ swore to us, of which we send you a duplicate. Since you are a
+ great favourite with our Holy Father pray use your influence with
+ his Holiness so that our brother may not obtain his dispensation,
+ and that his messenger may not be able to do any negotiating. In
+ this you will do us a singular and agreeable pleasure which we
+ will recognise in the future as we have in the past on fitting
+ occasion....
+
+ "Written at St. Michel sur Loire, August 20th.
+
+ "LOYS."
+
+Louis does not seem to have taken his own doubts as to the very
+existence of Mary of Burgundy very seriously. While he was infinitely
+anxious to prevent her alliance with his brother, he made overtures to
+betroth her to his baby son, while he reminded her father in touching
+phrases that he, Louis, was Mary's loving godfather and hence exactly
+the person to be her father-in-law.
+
+The winter of 1471-72 was filled with attempts to make terms between
+the king and the duke before the termination of the truce. The king
+was very hopeful of attaining this good result, and sweetly trustful
+of the duke's pacific and friendly intentions. He sternly refused to
+listen to suggestions that Charles meant to play him false and was
+very definite in his expressions of confidence. The following epistle
+to his envoys at the duke's court was an excellent document to fall by
+chance into Burgundian hands[11]:
+
+ "To MONSIEUR DE CRAON AND PIERRE D'ORIOLE:
+
+ "My cousin and monseigneur the general, I received your letters
+ this evening at the hostelry of Montbazon where I came because I
+ have not yet dared to go to Amboise.[12] When I imparted to you
+ the doubts that I had heard, it was not with the purpose of
+ delaying you in completing your business but only to advise you of
+ the dangers that were in the air. And to free you from all doubts
+ I assure you, that if Monseigneur of Burgundy is willing to
+ confirm, by writing or verbally, the terms which we arranged at
+ Orleans[13], I wish you to accept it and to clinch the matter and
+ I am quite determined to trust to it. As to your suspicion that
+ he may wish to make the chief promises in private letters without
+ putting it in a formal shape, you know that I agreed to it by a
+ pronotary, and when I have once accepted a thing I never withdraw
+ my decision.
+
+ "My cousin and you monseigneur the general, see to it that
+ Monseigneur of Burgundy gives you adequate assurance of the
+ letters that he is to issue. When I once have the letter such as
+ we agreed upon and he is bound, I do not doubt that he will keep
+ faith. If my life were at stake, I am resolved to trust him. Do
+ not send me any more of your suspicions for I assure you that my
+ greatest worldly desire is that the matter be finished, since he
+ has given verbal assurance that he wishes me well. You write that
+ the pronotary told you that I was negotiating in every direction.
+ By my faith, I have no ambassador but you, and by the words that
+ Monseigneur of Burgundy said to you you can easily solve the
+ question, for he has only offered you what he mentioned before
+ when the matters were discussed. It looks to me as though they
+ were not free from traitors since they have Abbe de Begars and
+ Master Ythier Marchant.[14]
+
+ "A herald of the King of England came here on his way to Monsg. of
+ Burgundy, who asked for a safe conduct to send a messenger to me
+ for this truce. Since your departure the council thought I ought
+ not to give any pass for more than forty days except to merchants.
+ If it please God and Our Lady that you may conclude your mission,
+ I assure you that as long as I live I will have no embassy either
+ large or small without immediately informing Monsg. of Burgundy
+ and I will only answer as if through him. I assure you that until
+ I hear from you whether Monsg. of Burgundy decides to conclude
+ this treaty or not as we agreed together, I will make no agreement
+ with any creature in the world and of that you may assure him.
+
+ "Written at Montbazon, December 11th (1471).
+
+ "Loys."
+
+At the same time Louis did not neglect friendly intercourse with the
+towns he proposed to cede.
+
+ "To the inhabitants of Amiens in behalf of the king: "Dear and
+ beloved, we have heard reports at length from Amiens and we are
+ well content with you.... Give credence to all my messengers say.
+ We thank you heartily for all that you and your deputies have done
+ in our cause."
+
+At the Burgundian court the duke's friends thought that he would play
+the part of wisdom did he keep an army within call, and refrain from
+implicitly trusting the king's promises. There was, moreover, an
+impression abroad that the latter was not in a position to be very
+formidable.
+
+ "Once [says Commines][15] I was present when the Seigneur d'Urse
+ [envoy from the Duke of Guienne] was talking in this wise and
+ urging the duke to mobilise his forces with all diligence. The
+ duke called me to a window and said, 'Here is the Seigneur d'Urse
+ urging me to make my army as big as possible, and tells me that we
+ would do well for the realm. Do you think that I should wage a war
+ of benefit if I should lead my troops thither?' Smiling I answered
+ that I thought not and he uttered these words: 'I love the welfare
+ of France more than Mons. d' Urse imagines, for instead of the one
+ king that there is I would fain see six.'"
+
+The animus of this expression is clear. It implies a wish to see the
+duke's friends, the French nobles, exalted, Burgundy at the head,
+until the titular monarch had no more power than half a dozen of his
+peers. Yet Commines states in unequivocal terms that Charles's next
+moves were to disregard his friendship for the peers, to discard their
+alliance, and to sign a treaty with Louis whose terms were wholly
+to his own advantage and implied complete desertion of the allied
+interest.
+
+ "This peace did the Duke of Burgundy swear and I was present[16]
+ and to it swore the Seigneur de Craon and the Chancellor of
+ France[17] in behalf of the king. When they departed they advised
+ the duke not to disband his army but to increase it, so that the
+ king their master might be the more inclined to cede promptly the
+ two places mentioned above. They took with them Simon de Quingey
+ to witness the king's oath and confirmation of his ambassadors'
+ work. The king delayed this confirmation for several days.
+ Meanwhile occurred the death of his brother, the Duke of Guienne
+ ... shortly afterwards the said Simon returned, dismissed by the
+ king with very meagre phrases and without any oath being taken.
+ The duke felt mocked and insulted by this treatment and was very
+ indignant about it."[18]
+
+This story involves so serious a charge against Charles of Burgundy
+that the fact of his setting his signature to the treaty has been
+indignantly denied. Certain authorities impugn the historian's
+truthfulness rather than accept the duke's betrayal of his friends. It
+is true that only a few months later than this negotiation, Commines
+himself forsook the duke's service for the king's, a change of base
+that might well throw suspicion on his estimate of his deserted
+master.
+
+Yet it must be remembered that he does not gloss over Louis's actions,
+even though he had an admiration for the success of his political
+methods, methods which Commines believed to be essential in dealing
+with national affairs. In many respects he gives more credit to the
+duke than to the king even while he prefers the cleverer chief. That
+there is no documentary evidence of such a treaty is mere negative
+evidence and of little importance.
+
+The fact seems fairly clear that Charles of Burgundy was at a parting
+of the ways, in character as in action. His natural bent was to tell
+the truth and to adhere strictly to his given word. He felt that he
+owed it to his own dignity. He felt, too, that he was a person to
+command obedience to a promise whether pledged to him by king or
+commoner. In the years 1469-1472 several severe shocks had been dealt
+him. He had lost all faith in Louis, a faith that had really been
+founded on the duke's own self-esteem, on a conviction that the weak
+king must respect the redoubtable cousin of Burgundy.
+
+The effect on Charles of his suspicions was to make him adopt the
+tools used by his rival, or at least to attempt to do so. At the
+moment of the negotiation of 1471-1472, the duke's preoccupation
+was to regain the towns on the Somme. That accomplished, it is not
+probable that he would have abandoned his friends, the French
+peers, whom he desired to see become petty monarchs each in his own
+territory. There seems no doubt that words were used with singular
+disregard of their meaning. It is surprising that time was wasted in
+concocting elaborate phrases that dropped into nothingness at the
+slightest touch. In citing the above passage from Commines referring
+to the treaty, the close of the negotiations has been anticipated.
+Whether or not any draft of a treaty received the duke's signature,
+the king's yearning for peace ceased abruptly when his brother's death
+freed him from the dread of dangerous alliance between Charles of
+France and Charles of Burgundy. As late as May 8th, he was still
+uncertain as to the decree of fate and wrote as follows to the
+Governor of Rousillon[19]:
+
+ "Keep cool for the present I implore you. If the Duke of Burgundy
+ declares war against me, I will set out immediately for that
+ quarter [Brittany], and in a week we will finish the matter. On
+ the other hand, if peace be made we shall have everything without
+ a blow or without any risk of restoration. However, if you can get
+ hold of anything by negotiating and manoeuvring, why do it. As
+ to the artillery, it is close by you, and when it is time, and I
+ shall have heard from my ambassador, you shall have it at once."
+
+Ten days later he is more hopeful.[20]
+
+ "Since my last letter to you I have had news that Monsieur de
+ Guienne is dying and that there is no remedy for his case. One
+ of the most confidential persons about him has advised me by a
+ special messenger that he does not believe he will be alive a
+ fortnight hence.... The person who gave me this information is
+ the monk who repeated his Hours with M. de G[uienne.] I am much
+ abashed at this and have crossed myself from head to foot.
+
+ "Written at Moutils-les-Tours, May 18th."
+
+This prognostic was correct. In less than a fortnight the Duke of
+Guienne lay dead, and the heavy suspicion rested upon his royal
+brother of having done more than acquiesce in the decree of fate.
+Whether or not there was any truth in this charge the king was
+certainly not heartbroken by the loss. Indeed, the event interested
+him less than the question of making the best use of the remainder of
+his truce with Charles. The following letters to Dammartin and the
+Duke of Milan belong to this time.
+
+ "Thank you for the pains you have taken but pray, as speedily as
+ you can, come here to draw up your ordinance for we only have
+ a fortnight more of the truce. I have sent the artillery and
+ soldiers to Angers. Monsg. the grand master, strengthen Odet's
+ forces, do not let one man go, and see to it that the seneschal of
+ Guienne enrols sufficient to fill his company. Then if there are
+ more at large, form them into a body and send them to me and I
+ will find them a captain and pay all those who are willing to
+ stay.
+
+ "As to him,[21] make him talk on the way and learn whether he
+ would like to enter into an agreement in his brother's name, and
+ work it so that the duke will leave the Burgundian in the lurch at
+ all points for ever, and make a good treaty, as you will know how,
+ for I do not believe that the Seigneur de Lescun left here for any
+ other reason than to attempt to make an arrangement of some kind.
+
+ "Now monseigneur the grand master, you are wiser than I and will
+ know how to act far better than I can instruct you, but, above
+ all, I implore you come in all haste for without you we cannot
+ make an ordinance.
+
+ "Written at Xaintes, May 28th.
+
+ "LOYS."[22]
+
+ "AMBOISE, June 7th.
+
+ "Loys, by the grace of God, King of France. Beloved brother and
+ cousin, we have received the letters you have written making
+ mention, as you have heard, that in the truce lately concluded
+ between us and the Duke of Burgundy up to April 1st next coming,
+ which will be the year 1473, the Duke of Burgundy has mentioned
+ you as his ally, which you do not like because you never asked the
+ Duke of Burgundy to do so, and you do not know whether he made
+ this statement on the advice of the Venetian ambassador who is
+ with him.
+
+ "Therefore, and because you do not mean to enter into alliance or
+ understanding with the Duke of Burgundy but wish to remain
+ our confederate and ally and have sworn to that effect before
+ notaries, and sealed your oath with your seal ... that you are no
+ ally of the Duke of Burgundy and that you renounce and repudiate
+ his nomination as such ... also you may be certain that on our
+ part we are determined to maintain all friendship between us and
+ you ... and if we make any treaty in the future we will expressly
+ include you in it and never will do otherwise."[23]
+
+
+ "Monseigneur the grand master, I am advised how while the truce is
+ still in being, the Duke of Burgundy has taken Nesle and slain all
+ whom he found within. I must be avenged for this. I wished you to
+ know so that if you can find means to do him a like injury in his
+ country you will do it there and anywhere that you can without
+ sparing anything. I have good hopes that God will aid in avenging
+ us, considering the murders for which he is responsible within the
+ church and elsewhere, and because by virtue of the terms of their
+ surrender [they thought] they had saved their lives.
+
+ "Done at Angers, June 19th.
+
+ "P.S.--If the said place had been destroyed and rased as I ordered
+ this never would have happened. Therefore, see to it that all such
+ places be rased to the ground, for if this be not done the people
+ will be ruined and there will be an increase of dishonour and
+ damage to me."[24]
+
+One fact stated by Louis in this letter was true. Charles of Burgundy
+broke the truce when it had but two weeks to run, and thus put
+himself in the wrong. The death of Guienne made him wild with anger.
+Apparently he had not believed in the imminence of the danger,
+although he had been constantly informed of the progress of the
+prince's illness. But to his mind, it was the hand of Louis, not the
+judgment of God, that ended the life of the prince.
+
+ "On the morrow, which was about May 15, 1472, so far as I remember
+ [says Commines] came letters from Simon de Quingey, the duke's
+ ambassador to the king, announcing the death of the Duke of
+ Guienne and that the king had recovered the majority of his
+ places. Messages from various localities followed headlong one on
+ the other, and every one had a different story of the death.
+
+ "The duke being in despair at the death, at the instigation of
+ other people as much concerned as himself, wrote letters full of
+ bitter accusations against the king to several towns--an action
+ that profited little for nothing was done about it.[25]... In this
+ violent passion the duke proceeded towards Nesle in Vermandois,
+ and commenced a kind of warfare such as he had never used before,
+ burning and destroying wherever he passed."
+
+It is interesting to note how smoothly Commines sails by the capital
+charges against the king. He neither accepts nor denies the king's
+crime, while frankly admitting that Guienne's decease was an opportune
+circumstance for Louis. He apologises for mentioning any evil report
+of either king or duke, but urges his duty as historian to tell the
+truth without palliation.
+
+Nesle was a little place on a tributary of the Somme which refused
+the duke's summons to surrender, sent to it on June 10th. It seems
+possible that there was a misunderstanding between the citizens
+and the garrison which resulted in the slaughter of the Burgundian
+heralds. Whereupon, the exasperated soldiers rushed headlong upon the
+ill-defended burghers and wreaked a terrible vengeance on the town.
+
+When the duke arrived on the spot, the carnage was over, but he was
+unreproving as he inspected the gruesome result. Into the great church
+itself he rode, and his horse's hoofs sank through the blood lying
+inches deep on the floor. The desecrated building was full of
+dead--men, women, and children--but the duke's only comment as he
+looked about was, "Here is a fine sight. Verily I have good butchers
+with me," and he crossed himself piously.
+
+ "Those who were taken alive were hanged, except some few suffered
+ to escape by the compassionate common soldiers. Quite a number had
+ their hands chopped off. I dislike to mention this cruelty but I
+ was on the spot and needs must give some account of it."[26]
+
+The story of the duke's treatment of the innocent little town of Nesle
+is painted in colours quite as lurid as the king's murder of his
+brother. There is some ground for the denunciations of Charles,
+but the gravest accusation, that the duke promised clemency to the
+citizens on surrender and then basely broke his word, does not deserve
+credence. He was in a state of exasperation and the horrors were
+committed in passion, not in cold blood.[27]
+
+[Illustration: BURGUNDIAN STANDARD PRESERVED AT BEAUVAIS]
+
+It is delightful to note the king's virtuous indignation at his
+cousin's proceedings, coupled with his regrets that he himself had not
+destroyed the town.
+
+With the terrible report of the events at Nesle flying before his
+advance guard, Charles went on towards Normandy. Roye he gained
+easily, and then, passing by Compiegne where "Monseigneur the grand
+master" had intrenched himself, and Amiens with the good burghers whom
+Louis delighted to honour, he marched on until he reached Beauvais, an
+old town on the Therain. Some of the garrison from the fallen Roye had
+taken refuge there, but the place was weak in its defences, not even
+having its usual garrison or cannon, as it happened.
+
+Disappointed in his first expectation of picking the town like a
+cherry, Charles sat down before it. The siege that followed won
+a reputation beyond the warrant of its real importance from the
+extraordinary tenacity and energy of the people in their own defence.
+Every missile that the ingenuity of man or woman could imagine was
+used to drive back the besiegers when the town was finally invested.
+
+From June 27th to July 9th Charles waited, then an assault was
+ordered. Charles laughed at the idea of any serious resistance. "He
+asked some of his people whether they thought the citizens would wait
+for the assault. It was answered yes, considering their number even if
+they had nothing before them but a hedge."[28] He took this as a joke
+and said, "To-morrow you will not find a person." He thought that
+there would be a simple repetition of his experience at Dinant and
+Liege, and that the garrison would simply succumb in terror. When the
+Burgundians rushed at the walls their reception showed not only that
+every point had a defender, but also that those same defenders were
+provided with huge stones, pots of boiling water, burning torches--all
+most unpleasant things when thrown in the faces of men trying to scale
+a wall. Three hours were sufficient to prove to the assailants the
+difficulty of the task. Twelve hundred were slain and maimed, and the
+strength of the place was proven.
+
+Charles was not inclined to relinquish his scheme, but the weather
+came to the aid of the besieged. Heavy rains forced the troops to
+change camp. More men were lost in skirmishes and mimic assaults,
+losses that Charles could ill afford at the moment. Finally at the end
+of three fruitless weeks, the siege was raised and the Burgundians
+marched on to try to redeem their reputation in Normandy. Had Beauvais
+fallen, it would have been possible to relieve the Duke of Brittany,
+against whom Louis had marched with all his forces and whom he had
+enveloped as in a net. This reverse was the first serious rebuff that
+had happened to Charles, and it marked a turn in his fortunes.
+
+Louis fully appreciated the enormous advantage to himself, and was not
+stinting in his reward to the plucky little town. Privileges and a
+reduction of taxes were bestowed on Beauvais. An annual procession
+was inaugurated in which women were to have precedence as a special
+recognition of their services with boiling water and other irregular
+weapons, while a special gift was bestowed on one particular girl,
+Jeanne Laisne, who had wrested a Burgundian standard from a soldier
+just as he was about to plant it on the wall. Not only was she endowed
+from the royal purse, but she and her husband and their descendants
+were declared tax free for ever.[29]
+
+_Charles to the Duke of Brittany_
+
+ "My good brother, I recommend myself to you with good heart. I
+ rather hoped to be able to march through Rouen, but the whole
+ strength of the foe was on the frontier, where was the _grand
+ master, of whose loyalty I have not the least doubt_, so that the
+ project could not be effected. I do not know what will happen.
+ Realising this, I have given subject for thought elsewhere and
+ I have pitched my camp between Rouen and Neufchatel, intending,
+ however, to return speedily. If not I will exploit the war in
+ another quarter more injurious to the enemy, and I will exert
+ myself to keep them from your route. My Burgundians and
+ Luxemburgers have done bravely in Champagne. I know, too, that you
+ have done well on your part, for which I rejoice. I have burned
+ the territory of Caux in a fashion so that it will not injure you,
+ nor us, nor others, and I will not lay down arms without you, as
+ I am certain you will not without me. I will pursue the work
+ commenced by your advice at the pleasure of Our Lord, may He give
+ you good and long life with a fruitful victory.
+
+ "Written at my camp near Boscise, September 4th.
+
+ "Your loyal brother,
+
+ "CHARLES."[30]
+
+The duke's course was marked by waste and devastation from the
+walls of Rouen to those of Dieppe, but nothing was gained from this
+desolation. By September, keen anxiety about his territories led him
+to fear staying so far from his own boundaries, and he decided to
+return. Through Picardy he marched eastward burning and laying waste
+as before.
+
+Hardly had he turned towards the Netherlands, when Louis marched into
+Brittany against his weakest foe. There was no fighting, but Francis
+found it wise to accept a truce. Odet d'Aydie, who had ridden in hot
+haste to Brittany, scattering from his saddle dire accusations of
+fratricide against Louis--this same Odet became silenced and took
+service with the king.[31] When reconcilations were effected, most
+kind to the returning ally or servant did Louis always show himself.
+
+On November 3d, a truce was struck between Louis and Charles, which,
+later, was renewed for a year. But never again did the two men come
+into actual conflict with each other, though they were on the eve of
+doing so in 1475.
+
+The period of the great coalitions among the nobles was at an end.
+Charles of France was dead and so, too, were others who were strong
+enough to work the king ill. The Duke of Brittany showed no more
+energy. When again within his own territories, Charles of Burgundy
+became absorbed in other projects which he wished to perfect before he
+again measured steel with Louis.
+
+ "The Duke of Berry, he is dead,
+ Brittany doth nod his head,
+ Burgundy doth sulky sit,
+ While Louis works with every wit."[32]
+
+Such was the tenor of a doggerel verse sung in France, a verse that
+probably never came to Charles's ears--though Louis might have
+listened to it cheerfully.
+
+Infinitely disastrous were the events of that summer to Charles of
+Burgundy. Not only had he lost in allies, not only had he squandered
+life and money uselessly in his reckless expedition over the north of
+France, but his own retinue was diminished and weakened by the men
+whom Louis had succeeded in luring from his service. The loss that
+Charles suffered was not only for the time but for posterity. Among
+those convinced that there was more scope for men of talent in France
+than in Burgundy was that clever observer of humanity who had been at
+Charles's side for eight years. In August of 1472, Philip de Commines
+took French leave of his master and betook himself to Louis, who
+evidently was not surprised at his advent.
+
+The historian's own words in regard to this change of base are
+laconic: "About this time I entered the king's service (and it was
+the year 1472), who had received the majority of the servitors of his
+brother the Duke of Guienne. And he was then at Pont de Ce."[33] This
+passing from one lord to another happened on the night between the 7th
+and 8th of August, when the Burgundian army lay near Eu.
+
+The suddenness of the departure was probably due to the duke's
+discovery of his servant's intentions not yet wholly ripe, and those
+intentions had undoubtedly been formed at Orleans, in 1471, when
+Commines made a secret journey to the king. On his way back to
+Burgundy, he deposited a large sum of money at Tours. Evidently he
+did not dare put this under his own name, or claim it when it was
+confiscated as the property of a notorious adherent of Louis's
+foe.[34]
+
+When the fugitive reached the French court, however, he was amply
+recompensed for all his losses.[35] For, naturally, at his flight, all
+his Burgundian estates were abandoned.[36] It was at six o'clock on
+the morning of August 8th that the deed was signed whereby the duke
+transferred to the Seigneur de Quievrain all the rights appertaining
+to Philip de Commines, "which rights together with all the property of
+whatever kind have escheated to us by virtue of confiscation because
+he has to-day, the date of this document, departed from our obedience
+and gone as a fugitive to the party opposed to us."[37]
+
+There are various surmises as to the cause of this precipitate
+departure. Not improbable is the suggestion that Charles often
+overstepped the bounds of courtesy towards his followers. Once, so
+runs one story, he found the historian sleeping on his bed where he
+had flung himself while awaiting his master. Charles pulled off one of
+his boots "to give him more ease" and struck him in the face with it.
+In derision the courtiers called Commines _tete bottee_, and their
+mocking sank deep into his soul.
+
+Contemporary writers make little of the chronicler's defection.
+These crossings from the peer's to the king's camp were accepted
+occurrences. But by Charles they were not accepted. There is
+a vindictive look about the hour when he disposes of his late
+confidant's possessions, only explicable by intense indignation not
+itemised in the deed approved by the court of Mons.[38]
+
+More loyal was that other chronicler, Olivier de la Marche, though to
+him, also, came intimations that he would find a pleasant welcome at
+the French court. He, too, had opportunities galore to make links with
+Louis. The accounts teem with references to his secret missions
+here and there, and with mention of the rewards paid, all carefully
+itemised. So zealous was this messenger on his master's commissions,
+that his hackneys were ruined by his fast riding and had to be sold
+for petty sums. The keen eye of Louis XI. was not blind to the quality
+of La Marche's services, and he thought that they, too, might be
+diverted to his use.[39]
+
+ "Monsieur du Bouchage, Guillaume de Thouars has told me that
+ Messire Olivier de la Marche is willing to enter my service and
+ I am afraid that there may be some deception. However, there is
+ nothing that I would like better than to have the said Sieur
+ de Cimay, as you know. Therefore, pray find out how the matter
+ stands, and if you see that it is in good earnest work for it with
+ all diligence. Whatever you pledge I will hold to. Advise me of
+ everything.
+
+ "Written at Clery, October 16th [1472].
+
+ "To our beloved and faithful councillor and chancellor, Sire du
+ Bouchage."[40]
+
+But La Marche was not tempted, and was rewarded for his fidelity
+by high office in a duchy which, shortly after these events, was
+"annexed" to his master's domain.
+
+[Footnote 1: _Journal de Jean de Roye_, i., 258.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Commynes-Dupont, iii., 202.]
+
+[Footnote 3: Plancher, iv., cccvi., May 28th.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Rymer, _Foedera_, xi., 735. _Pro Ducissa Burgundiae super
+Lana claccanda_.]
+
+[Footnote 5: _Lettres de Louis XI._, iv., 256.]
+
+[Footnote 6: One of Guienne's retinue who, later, passed to Louis's
+service.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Louis's sister Yolande.]
+
+[Footnote 8: The Duke of Brittany had married the third daughter of
+the Count de Foix.]
+
+[Footnote 9: This was an allusion to a proposed marriage between
+Guienne and Jeanne, reputed daughter of Henry IV. of Castile. Vaesen
+cannot explain the use of Aragon. Various documents relating to this
+negotiation are given. (Comines-Lenglet, iii., 156.)]
+
+[Footnote 10: Vaesen gives _femmes_, Duclos _filles_. The king was
+above all afraid that his brother might marry Mary of Burgundy.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Lettres de Louis XI._., iv., 286.]
+
+[Footnote 12: There was a pestilence raging at Amboise.]
+
+[Footnote 13: At Orleans, in the last days of October and the first of
+November, there was a conference wherein the king apparently promised
+to restore St. Quentin and Amiens to Charles, if he would renounce his
+alliance with the dukes of Brittany and Guienne and would betroth his
+daughter to the dauphin.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Ythier Marchant negotiated the proposed marriage between
+Guienne and Mary of Burgundy. He had received "signed and sealed
+blanks" from the two princes in order to enable him to hasten matters.
+(_Lettres de Louis XI._, iv., 289.)]
+
+[Footnote 15: III., ch. viii.]
+
+[Footnote 16: "Cette paix jura le Due de Bourgogne et y estois
+present."]
+
+[Footnote 17: The king's envoys who had spent the winter in the
+Burgundian court. _See_ letter to them in December.]
+
+[Footnote 18: _See_ Kervyn, _Bulletin de l'Academie royale de
+Belgique_, p. 256. _Also_ Kirk, ii., 160; Commynes-Mandrot, i., 234.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Louis to the Vicomte de la Belliere, _Lettres_, etc.,
+iv., 319.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Louis to Dammartin, _Ibid_., 325. _Mars_ was written
+first and then replaced by _Mai_.]
+
+[Footnote 21: Odet d'Aydie, younger brother of the Seigneur de
+Lescun.]
+
+[Footnote 22: _Lettres, XI_., iv., 328. Louis to Dammartin, 1472.]
+
+[Footnote 23: _Lettres_, iv., 331. Louis to the Duke of Milan.]
+
+[Footnote 24: _Lettres_, etc., v., 4. Louis to Dammartin. _See also_
+Duclos, v., 331. There are slight discrepancies between the two texts,
+but the differences do not affect the narrative.]
+
+[Footnote 25: Odet d'Aydie, whom Louis had hoped to have converted to
+his cause, was the man to spread the charge against Louis broadcast
+over the land. The truth of the death is not proven. Frequent mentions
+of Guienne's condition occur through the letters of the winter '71-72.
+The story was that the poison, administered subtly by the king's
+orders, caused the illness of both the prince and his mistress, Mme.
+de Thouan. She died after two months of suffering, December 14th,
+while he resisted the poison longer, though his health was completely
+shattered and his months of longer life were unutterably wretched and
+painful, a constant torture until death mercifully released him in
+May. Accusations of poisoning are often repeated in history. In this
+case, there was certainly a wide-spread belief in Louis's guilt. In
+his manifestos, (Lenglet, ii., 198) Charles declares that the king's
+tools in compassing his brother's death were a friar, Jourdain Favre,
+and Henri de la Roche, esquire of his kitchen.
+
+The story told by Brantome _(OEuvres Completes_ de Pierre de
+Bourdeille, Seigneur de Brantome, ii., 329. "Grands Capitaines
+Francois." There is nothing too severe for Brantome to say about Louis
+XI.) is very detailed. A fool passed to Louis's service from that of
+the dead prince. While this man was attending his new master in the
+church of Notre Dame de Clery, he heard him make this prayer to the
+Virgin: "Ah! my good Lady, my little mistress, my great friend in whom
+I have always put my trust, I pray thee be a suppliant to God in my
+behalf, be my advocate with Him so that He may pardon me for the death
+of my brother whom I had poisoned by this wicked Abbe of St. John. I
+confess it to thee as to my good patron and mistress. But what was to
+be done? He was a torment to my realm. Get me pardoned and I know well
+what I will give thee."
+
+Brantome tells further that the fool, using the privilege of free
+speech accorded to his class, talked about Guienne's death at dinner
+in public and after that day was never seen again. On the other hand,
+the young duke's will was all to his brother's favour. Louis was
+made executor and legatee, "and if we have ever offended our beloved
+brother," dictated the dying man, "we implore him to pardon us as we
+with _debonnaire_ affection pardon him." Mandrot, editor of Commynes
+(1901), i., 230, considers the whole story a malicious fabrication of
+Odet d'Aydie, and other authorities refer the cause to disease. The
+very date of the death varies from May 12th to May 24th.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Commines, iii., ch. ix.]
+
+[Footnote 27: There is a curious document in existence (see _Bulletins
+de L'Hist. de France_, 1833-34) dated fifty years after the event. It
+is the deposition of several old people who had been just old enough
+to remember that awful experience of their youth. Fifty years of
+repetition gave time for the growth of the story.]
+
+[Footnote 28: Commines, iii., ch. x.]
+
+[Footnote 29: Legend makes it that Jeanne Laisne, called _Fouquet_,
+chopped off the hands of the standard-bearer with a hatchet. Hence
+her name was changed to _La Hachette_, and she is represented with a
+hatchet.]
+
+[Footnote 30: Barante, vii., 333.]
+
+[Footnote 31: _See_ Lavisse, iv^{ii.}, 368.]
+
+[Footnote 32:
+
+ "Berri est mort,
+ Bretagne dort,
+ Bourgogne hongne,
+ Le Roy besogne."
+
+Le Roux de Lincy, _Chants historiques et populaires du temps de Louis
+XI_.]
+
+[Footnote 33: Commines also mentions here "the confessor of the Duke
+of Guienne and a knight to whom is imputed the death of the Duke of
+Guienne." (iii., ch. xi.)]
+
+[Footnote 34: Kirk (ii., 156) thinks that this confiscation was only
+Louis's way of prodding him up to act.]
+
+[Footnote 35: Dupont (Commynes, iii., xxxvi). The fugitive did not
+enter immediately into his new possessions. The king's gift of the
+principality of Talmont, dated October, 1472, was not registered in
+_Parlement_ until December 13, 1473, and in the court of records May
+2, 1474. Prince of Talmont did Commines become at last, and as such he
+married Helen de Chambes, January 27, 1473.]
+
+[Footnote 36: It is strange that La Marche does not mention this
+defection.]
+
+[Footnote 37: See document quoted by Gachard, _Etudes et Notices_,
+etc. ii., 344. The original is in the Croy family archives preserved
+in the chateau of Beaumont.]
+
+[Footnote 38: _See also_ Comines-Lenglet, i., xcj., for discussion of
+this event. He asserts that the court of Burgundy was too corrupt for
+honest men to endure it.]
+
+[Footnote 39: _See_ Stein. _Etude_, etc., _sur Olivier de la _Marche_.
+(Mem. Couronnes) xlix.]
+
+[Footnote 40: Letter of Louis XI. in Bibl. Nat.: _Ibid._, p. 179.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+GUELDERS
+
+1473
+
+
+The affairs of the little duchy of Guelders were among the matters
+urgently demanding the attention of the Duke of Burgundy at the close
+of his campaign in France. The circumstances of the long-standing
+quarrel between Duke Arnold and his unscrupulous son Adolf were a
+scandal throughout Europe. In 1463, a seeming reconciliation of the
+parties had not only been effected but celebrated in the town of Grave
+by a pleasant family festival, from whose gaieties the elder duke,
+fatigued, retired at an early hour. Scarcely was he in bed, when he
+was aroused rudely, and carried off half clad to a dungeon in the
+castle of Buren, by the order of his son, who superintended the
+abduction in person and then became duke regnant. For over six years
+the old man languished in prison, actually taunted, from time to time,
+it is said, by Duke Adolf himself.
+
+Indignant remonstrances against this conduct were heard from various
+quarters, and were all alike unheeded by the young duke until Charles
+of Burgundy interfered and ordered him to bring his father to his
+presence, and to submit the dispute to his arbitration. Charles was
+too near and too powerful a neighbour to be disregarded, and his
+peremptory invitation was accepted. Pending the decision, the
+two dukes were forced to be guests in his court, under a strict
+surveillance which amounted to an arrest.
+
+The first suggestion made by Charles was for a compromise between
+father and son. "Let Duke Arnold retain the nominal sovereignty in
+Guelders, actual possession of one town, and a fair income, while
+to Adolf be ceded the full power of administration." The latter was
+emphatic in his refusal to consider the proposition. "Rather would I
+prefer to see my father thrown into a well and to follow him thither
+than to agree to such terms. He has been sovereign duke for forty-four
+years; it is my turn now to reign." Arnold thought it would be a
+simple feat to fight out the dispute. "I saw them both several times
+in the duke's apartment and in the council chamber when they pleaded,
+each his own cause. I saw the old man offer a gage of battle to his
+son."[1] The senior belonged to the disappearing age of chivalry. A
+trial of arms seemed to him an easy and knightly fashion of ending his
+differences with his importunate heir.
+
+No settlement was effected before the French expedition, but Charles
+was not disposed to let the matter slip from his control, and when
+he proceeded to Amiens, the two dukes, still under restraint, were
+obliged to follow in his train. At a leisure moment Charles intended
+to force them to accept his arbitration as final. Before that moment
+arrived, the more agile of the two plaintiffs, Adolf, succeeded in
+eluding surveillance and escaping from the camp at Wailly. He made his
+way successfully to Namur disguised as a Franciscan monk. Then, at
+the ferry, he gave a florin when a penny would have sufficed. The
+liberality, inconsistent with his assumed role, aroused suspicion and
+led to the detection of his rank and identity. He was stayed in his
+flight and imprisoned in the castle of Namur to await a decision on
+his case by his self-constituted judge. This was not pronounced until
+the summer of 1473.
+
+By that time, Charles was resolved on another course of action than
+that of adjusting a family dispute in the capacity of puissant,
+impartial, and friendly neighbour. Adolf's behaviour towards his
+father had been extraordinarily brutal and outrageous. Public comment
+had been excited to a wide degree. It was not an affair to be dealt
+with lightly by Duke Charles. The young Duchess of Guelders was
+Catharine of Bourbon, sister to the late Duchess of Burgundy, and
+Adolf himself was chevalier of the Golden Fleece. In consideration of
+these links of family and knightly brotherhood, Charles desired that
+the case should be tried with all formality.
+
+[Illustration: ARNOLD, DUKE OF GUELDERS (FROM THE ENGRAVING BY
+PINSSIO, AFTER THE DRAWING BY J. ROBERT)]
+
+On May 3, 1473, an assembly of the Order was held at Valenciennes,[2]
+and the knights were asked to pass upon the conduct of their
+delinquent fellow, who was permitted to present his own brief through
+an attorney, but was detained in his own person at Namur. The
+innocence or guilt of his prisoner was no longer the chief point of
+interest as far as the Duke of Burgundy was concerned. The latter had
+made an excellent bargain on his own behalf with the moribund Duke of
+Guelders, who had signed (December, 1472) a document wherein he sold
+to Charles all his administrative rights in Guelders and Zutphen for
+ninety-two thousand florins,[3] in consideration of Arnold's enjoying
+a life interest in half of the revenue of his ancient duchy. That
+clause soon lost its significance. The old man's life ceased in March,
+1473, and, by virtue of the contract, Charles proposed to enter into
+full possession of his estates, setting aside not only Adolf, whom he
+was ready to pronounce an outlawed criminal, quite beyond the pale of
+society, but that Adolf's innocent eight-year-old heir, Charles, whose
+hereditary claims had also been ignored by his grandfather.
+
+Before the knights of the Order as a final court, were rehearsed all
+the circumstances of the old family quarrel and of the late commercial
+transaction. Their verdict was the one desired by their chief. It was
+proven to their entire satisfaction that Arnold's sale of the duchy of
+Guelders and Zutphen was a legitimate proceeding, and that the deed
+executed by him was a perfect and valid instrument, whereby Charles of
+Burgundy was duly empowered to enjoy all the revenues of, and to exert
+authority in, his new duchy at his pleasure. As to Duke Adolf, he
+was condemned by this tribunal of his peers to life imprisonment as
+punishment for his unfilial and unjustifiable cruelty towards Arnold,
+late Duke of Guelders.
+
+Adolf's protests were stifled by his prison bars, but the people of
+Guelders were by no means disposed to accept unquestioned this deed
+of transfer, made when the two parties to the conveyance were in
+very unequal conditions of freedom. In order to convince them of the
+justice of his pretensions, Charles levied a force almost as efficient
+as his army of the preceding summer, and fell upon Guelders. A truce,
+a triple compact with France and England, had recently been renewed,
+so that for the moment his hands were free from complications, an
+event commented upon by Sir John Paston, as follows:
+
+ "April 16, 1473, CANTERBURY.
+
+ "As for tydings ther was a truce taken at Brusslys about the xxvi
+ day off March last, betwyn the Duke of Burgoyn and the Frense
+ Kings inbassators and Master William Atclyff ffor the king heer,
+ whiche is a pese be londe and be water tyll the ffyrst daye off
+ Apryll nowe next comyng betweyn Fraunce and Ingeland, and also the
+ Dukys londes. God holde it ffor ever."
+
+The writer had recently been in Charles's court. Writing from Calais
+in February, he says:
+
+ "As ffor tydyngs heer ther bee but few saff that the Duke of
+ Burgoyen and my Lady hys wyffe fareth well. I was with them on
+ Thorysdaye last past at Gaunt."[4]
+
+The Duke of Burgundy was not the only pretender to the vacated
+sovereignty of Guelders. The Duke of Juliers was also inclined to
+urge his cause, were Adolf's family to be set aside. At the sight
+of Burgundian puissance, however, he was ready to be convinced, and
+accepted 24,000 florins for his acquiescence in the righteousness of
+the accession. Several of the cities manifested opposition to Charles,
+but yielded one after another. In Nimwegen--long hostile to Duke
+Arnold--there was a determined effort to support little Charles of
+Guelders who, with his sister, was in that city. The child made a
+pretty show on his little pony, and there were many declarations of
+devotion to his cause as he was put forward to excite sympathy. For
+three weeks, the town held out in his name. The resistance to the
+Burgundian troops was sturdy. When the gates gave way before their
+attacks the burghers defended the broken walls. Six hundred English
+archers were repulsed from an assault with such sudden energy that
+they left their banners sticking in the very breaches they thought
+they had won, fine prizes for the triumphant citizens. But the game
+was unequal, and the combatants, convinced that discretion was the
+better part of valour, at last accepted the Duke of Cleves as a
+mediator with their would-be sovereign.
+
+On July 19th, a long civic procession headed by the burgomasters,
+wearing neither hats nor shoes, marched to the Duke of Burgundy with a
+prayer for pardon on their lips. The leaders of the opposition to his
+accession were delivered over to the mercy of the victor. The garrison
+were accorded their lives and a tax was imposed on the city to
+indemnify the duke for his needless trouble, and Guelders was added
+_de facto_ to the list of Burgundian ducal titles. In the various
+state papers presently issued by the new ruler, the mention of the
+circumstance of his accession to the sovereignty was simple and
+straightforward, as in a certain document appointing Olivier de la
+Marche to be treasurer. The patent bears the date of August 18th and
+was one of the earliest issued by Charles in this new capacity.
+
+ "As by the death of the late Messire Arnold, in his life Duke of
+ Guelderland, these counties and duchy have lapsed to me, and by
+ the same token the offices of the land have escheated to our
+ disposition, and among others the office of master of the moneys
+ of those countships ... using the rights, etc., escheated to me,
+ and in consideration of the good and agreeable services already
+ rendered and continually rendered by our knight, etc., Olivier de
+ la Marche, having full confidence in his sense, loyalty, probity,
+ and good diligence--for these causes and others we entrust the
+ office of master and overseer of moneys of the land of Guelders
+ to him, with all the rights, duties, and privileges thereto
+ pertaining. In testimony of this we have set our seal to these
+ papers. Done in our city of Nimwegen, August 18, 1473. Thus signed
+ by M. le duc."
+
+On the back of this document was written:
+
+ "To-day, November 3, 1473, Messire Olivier de la Marche ... took
+ the oath of office of master and overseer of the land and duchy of
+ Guelders."[5]
+
+The charge of the ducal children, Charles and Philippa, was entrusted
+to the duke who, in his turn, deputed Margaret of York to supervise
+their education. In a comparatively brief time agitation in behalf
+of the disinherited heir ceased, and imperial ratification alone was
+required to stamp the territory as a legal fraction of the Burgundian
+domains. Under the circumstances the minor heirs were the emperor's
+wards, and it was his express duty to look to their interests, but
+Frederic III. showed no disposition to assert himself as their
+champion. On the contrary, the embassy that arrived from his court on
+August 14th was charged with felicitations to his dear friend, Charles
+of Burgundy, for his acquisition, and with assurances that the
+requisite investiture into his dignities should be given by his
+imperial hand at the duke's pleasure.[6]
+
+Communication between Frederic and Charles had been intermittently
+frequent during the past three years, and one subject of their letters
+was probably a reason why Charles had been willing to abandon a losing
+game in France to give another bias to his thoughts. He was lured
+on by the bait of certain prospects, varying in their definite form
+indeed, but full of promise that he might be enabled, eventually, to
+confer with Louis XI. from a better vantage ground than his position
+as first peer of France. The story of these hopes now becomes the
+story of Charles of Burgundy.
+
+When Sigismund of Austria completed his mortgage, in 1469, at St.
+Omer, and returned home, as already stated, he was fired with zeal to
+divert some of the dazzling Burgundian wealth into the empty imperial
+coffers. An alliance between Mary of Burgundy and the young Archduke
+Maximilian seemed to him the most advantageous matrimonial bargain
+possible for the emperor's heir. He urged it upon his cousin with
+all the eloquence he possessed, and was lavish in his offers to be
+mediator between him and his new friend Charles.
+
+Frederic was impressed by Sigismund's enthusiastic exposition of the
+advantages of the match, and little time elapsed before his ambassador
+brought formal proposals to Charles for the alliance. The duke
+received the advances complacently and returned propositions
+significant of his personal ambitions. As early as May, 1470, his
+instructions to certain envoys sent to the intermediary, Sigismund,
+are plain. In unequivocal terms, his daughter's hand is made
+contingent on his own election as King of the Romans, that shadowy
+royalty which veiled the approach to the imperial throne.
+
+ "_Item_--And in regard to the said marriage, the ambassadors shall
+ inform Monseigneur of Austria that, since his departure from
+ Hesdin, certain people have talked to Monseigneur about this
+ marriage and mentioned that, in return, the emperor would be
+ willing to grant to Monseigneur the crown and the government of
+ the Kingdom of the Romans, with the stipulation that Monseigneur,
+ _arrived at the empire by the good pleasure of the emperor_ or
+ by his death, would, in his turn, procure the said crown of the
+ Romans for his son-in-law. The result will be that the empire
+ will be continued in the person of the emperor's son and his
+ descendants.
+
+ "_Item_--They shall tell him about a meeting between the imperial
+ and ducal ambassadors, at which meeting there was some talk of
+ making a kingdom out of certain lands of Monseigneur and
+ joining these to an _imperial_ vicariate of all the lands and
+ principalities lying along the Rhine."
+
+In the following paragraphs of this instruction,[7] Charles directs
+his envoys to make it clear to Monseigneur of Austria (Sigismund)
+that the duke's interest in the plan does not spring from avarice or
+ambition. He is purely actuated by a yearning to employ his time and
+his strength for God's service and for the defence of the Faith, while
+still in his prime.
+
+Should the emperor refuse to approve the duke's nomination as King of
+the Romans, the ambassadors are instructed to say that they are not
+empowered to proceed with the marriage negotiations without first
+referring to their chief. They must ask leave to return with their
+report. If Sigismund should take it on himself to sound the emperor
+again about his sentiments, the envoys might await the result of his
+investigations. He was to be assured that while Charles was resolved
+to hold back until he was fully satisfied on this point, if it were
+once ceded, he would interpose no further delay in the celebration of
+the nuptials. He must know, however, just what power and revenue the
+emperor would attach to the proposed title. He was not willing to
+accept it without emoluments. His present financial burdens were
+already heavy, etc. The concluding items of the instructions had
+reference to the marriage settlements.
+
+A kingdom of his own was not the duke's dream at this stage of
+Burgundo-Austrian negotiations. The title that Charles desired
+primarily was King of the Romans, one empty of substantial sovereign
+power, but rich with promise of the all-embracing imperial dignity.
+Significant is the intimation that after this preliminary title was
+conferred, its wearer would be glad to have Frederic step aside
+voluntarily. A resignation would be as efficient as death in making
+room for his appointed successor.
+
+Frederic III. had, indeed, intimated occasionally that a life of
+meditation would suit his tastes better than the imperial throne, but
+he seems in no wise to have been tempted by the offer made by Charles
+to relieve him of his onerous duties, and then to pass on the office
+to his son. At any rate, the emperor rejected the opportunity to enjoy
+an irresponsible ease. His answer to the duke was that he did not
+exercise sufficient influence over his electors to ensure their
+accepting his nominee as successor to the _imperium_.
+
+There was, however, one honour that lay wholly within his gift. If
+Charles desired higher rank, the emperor would be quite willing to
+erect his territories into a realm and to create him monarch of
+his own agglomerated possessions, welded into a new unity. This
+proposition wounded Charles keenly. He assured Sigismund[8] (January
+15, 1471) that his nomination as King of the Romans would never have
+occurred to him spontaneously. He had been assured that it was a
+darling project of the emperor, and he had simply been willing
+to please him, etc. As to a kingdom of his own, he refused the
+proposition with actual disdain.
+
+Then various suitors for the hand of Mary of Burgundy appeared on
+the scene successively. To Nicholas of Calabria, Duke of Lorraine,
+grandson of old King Rene of Anjou, she was formally betrothed.[9]
+
+"My cousin, since it is the pleasure of my very redoubtable seigneur
+and father, I promise you that, you being alive, I will take none
+other than you and I promise to take you when God permits it." So
+wrote Mary with her own hand on June 13, 1472, at Mons. On December
+3d, she declared all such pledges revoked as though they never had
+been made, and Nicholas, too, formally renounced his pretensions to
+her hand.
+
+There were several moments when Charles of France had appeared to be
+very near acceptance as Mary's husband, and several other princes
+seemed eligible suitors. Doubtless her father found his daughter very
+valuable as a means of attracting friendship. Doubtless, too, as
+Commines says, he was not anxious to introduce any son-in-law into his
+family. His fortieth year was only completed in 1473, and he was by no
+means ready to range himself as an ancestor.
+
+At successive times the negotiations between Charles and Frederic were
+ruptured only to be renewed on some slightly different basis. Threaded
+together they made a story fraught with interest for Louis XI., and
+one that, very probably, he had an opportunity to hear. Up to August,
+1472, it is a safe inference that Philip de Commines was fully
+cognisant of the propositions and counter-propositions, the
+understandings and misunderstandings, the private letters of, as well
+as the interviews with, the accredited Austrian envoys that appeared
+at one Burgundian camp after another. Probably there was nothing more]
+valuable in the store of learning carried by the astute historian from
+his first patron to his second than all this fund of confidential
+miscellany.
+
+It seems a fair surmise that Louis XI. enjoyed immensely the
+delightful private view into his rival's dreams, the disappointments
+and rehabilitation of his shattered visions. The relation would have
+made him not only fully aware of the reasons why Charles was diverted
+from his hot pursuit of the Somme towns, but thoroughly informed as to
+the great obstacles lying in the path which the duke hoped to travel.
+Naturally, the king was quite willing to rest assured that ruin was
+inevitable. If his rival were disposed to wreck himself rashly on
+German shoals, the king was equally disposed to be an acquiescent
+onlooker and to spare his own powder.
+
+On his part, Charles was wholly unconscious of the extent of his loss
+of prestige within the French realm in 1472. There had been other
+periods when the king had appeared triumphant over his aspiring nobles
+only to be again checked by their alliance. In the radical change
+undergone by the feudatories after Guienne's death and Brittany's
+reconciliation, there was, however, no opening left for the Duke
+of Burgundy's re-entry as a French political leader. It was this
+definitive cessation of his importance that Charles failed to
+recognise. Confident that his star was rising in the east he did
+not note the significance of its setting in the west. Thereupon the
+situation was,--Charles, believing that his plans were his own
+secret, _versus_ Louis, fully advised of those plans and alert to all
+incidents of the past, present, and future in a fashion impossible to
+the duke in his absorbed contemplation of his own prospects, blocking
+the scope of his view.
+
+With the emperor's congratulations at the duke's accession to
+Guelders, and his offers to invest him with the title, were coupled
+intimations that it was an opportune moment to resume consideration of
+an alliance between the Archduke Maximilian and Mary of Burgundy. The
+duke accepted the new overtures, and Rudolf de Soulz and Peter
+von Hagenbach proceeded to the Burgundian and Austrian courts
+respectively, as confidential envoys to discuss the marriage.[10]
+
+Charles was far more gracious to De Soulz than he had been to the
+last imperial messenger, the Abbe de Casanova, who had restricted his
+proposals to Mary's fortunes and ignored her father's. The duke had no
+intention of permitting any conference to proceed on that line. He was
+explicit as to his requisitions. De Soulz was surprised by a gift of
+ten thousand florins, explained by the phrase, "because Monseigneur
+recognised the love and affection borne him by the said count." That
+was a simple retainer. Other benefits, offices, and estates were
+conferred, to take effect on the day when Monseigneur was named King
+of the Romans.
+
+The instructions to Hagenbach were definite, covering the ground
+of those previously mentioned, issued in 1470. He was, however,
+especially enjoined to assure Frederic that the duke did not require
+his abdication. He would be content to step into the shoes naturally
+vacated by his death.
+
+The final suggestion resulting from these parleyings was that an
+interview between the two principals would be far more satisfactory
+than any further interchange of messages. It was not only a propitious
+time for a conference, but it was necessary. The ceremony of
+investiture of the duke into his latest acquired fief made it
+evidently imperative that he should visit the emperor. And to
+preparations for that event, Charles turned his attention, now
+absolutely confident that the outcome must be to his satisfaction. He
+had as little comprehension of the character of the man with whom he
+was to deal as he had of Louis XI. The choice of a place caused some
+difficulty, each prince preferring a locality near his own frontier.
+Metz was selected and abandoned on account of an epidemic. Finally
+Treves was appointed for the important occasion, and Frederic sent
+official invitations to the princes of the empire to follow him
+thither in October.
+
+Illustration: MARY OF BURGUNDY (AFTER THE DESIGN BY C. LAPLANTE)]
+
+Before Charles arrived at the rendezvous, another event had occurred
+that had an important bearing on his fortunes. Nicholas, Duke of
+Lorraine, died (July 27th), leaving no direct heir. He had been
+relinquished as a son-in-law, but the geographical position of his
+duchy made the question of its sovereignty all important to Charles of
+Burgundy. If it could be under his own control, how convenient for
+the passage of his troops from Luxemburg to the south! The taste for
+duchies like many another can grow by what it feeds upon.
+
+Prepared to set out for his journey to Treves, Charles hastened his
+movements and proceeded to Metz with an escort so large that it had a
+formidable aspect to the city fathers. Whether they feared that their
+free city was too tempting a base for attack on Lorraine or not, the
+magistrates yet found it expedient to keep the Burgundian thousands
+without their walls. The emperor, too, was on his way to Treves. Many
+of his suite were occupying quarters in Metz. Room might be found for
+Charles and his immediate retainers, indeed, but the troops must make
+themselves as comfortable as possible outside the gates. So said the
+burgomaster, and Charles was forced to yield and he made a splendid
+entry into the town under the prescribed conditions.
+
+His own paraphernalia had been forwarded from Antwerp, so that
+there should be an abundance of plate, tapestry, etc., to grace his
+temporary quarters, and the forests of Luxemburg had been scoured to
+secure game for the banquets.
+
+It was all very fine, but Charles was not in a humour to be pleased.
+He was annoyed about his troops; very probably he had intended leaving
+a portion at Metz, ready to be available in Lorraine if occasion
+offered. He cut short his stay in the town and marched on with his
+imposing escort to Treves, whence he hoped to march out again a
+greater personage than any Duke of Burgundy had ever been.[11]
+
+
+[Footnote 1: Commines, iv., ch. i.]
+
+[Footnote 2: _Hist. de l'Ordre,_ etc., p. 64. One of the places to be
+filled at this session was that of Frank van Borselen, the widower
+of Jacqueline, Countess of Holland. Thus the last faint trace of the
+ancient family disappeared. It is expressly stated in the minutes of
+the session that Adolf of Guelders was asked to nominate candidates
+from his prison, but he would not do it. Striking is Charles's remark
+on the nomination of the son of the King of Naples. Considering that
+the Order was already decorated and honoured by four kings, very
+excellent, he judged it more _a propos_ to distribute the five empty
+collars within his own states. Nevertheless the infant was elected, as
+was also Engelbert of Nassau.
+
+Various members are criticised as permitted by the rules of the Order.
+There was reproach for Anthony the Bastard for taking a gift of 20,000
+crowns from Louis XI. Payable as it was in terms, it savoured of a
+pension. Had Henry van Borselen done all he could to prevent Warwick's
+landing in England? etc.
+
+Among the minor pieces of business discussed was the disposition of
+the scarlet mantles now discarded by the chevaliers. It was decided
+after deliberation that they should be sold and the proceeds applied
+to the purchase of tapestries for the chapel of Dijon, and the
+treasurer was deputed to see about it. Perhaps it was in this
+connection that the discussion turned on the wide-spread use, or
+rather abuse of gold and velvet. It tended to depreciate the Order and
+the state of chivalry. But the sovereign thought it best to defer this
+point until his return from his proposed journey to Guelders. Lengthy,
+too, were the discussions upon the exact usage in respect to wearing
+the collar and insignia of the Order.]
+
+[Footnote 3: The first sum named was three hundred thousand.]
+
+[Footnote 4: _The Paston Letters, iii., 79._.]
+
+[Footnote 5: See _Memoires Couronnes_, xlix., 180.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Toutey, p. 42; Lenglet, ii., 207. August 14th the Duke
+of Burgundy crossed the Rhine and made his way to Nimwegen where the
+ambassador of the emperor visited him.]
+
+[Footnote 7: This instruction, printed by Lenglet (iii., 238) from the
+Godefroy edition of Commines, has no date and has been referred to
+1472. From internal evidence it seems fair to conclude that it belongs
+rather to 1470. The question of the marriage comes in at the end of
+the paper, the first part being devoted to Swiss affairs.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Toutey, p. 36.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Lenglet, iii., 192.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Toutey, p. 44; Chmel, _Monumenta Habsburgica, I, 3._]
+
+[Footnote 11: Toutey, p. 46.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+THE MEETING AT TREVES
+
+1473
+
+
+On Wednesday, September 28th, Emperor Frederic made his entry into the
+old Roman city on the dancing Moselle. Two days later, the Duke of
+Burgundy arrived and was welcomed most pompously outside of Treves, by
+his suzerain.
+
+After the first greetings, ensued an argument about the etiquette
+proper for the occasion, an argument similar to those which had
+absorbed the punctilious in the Burgundian court, when the dauphin
+made his famous visit to Duke Philip. For thirty minutes, the emperor
+argued with his guest before feudal scruples were overcome and the
+vassal was induced to ride by his chief's side into the city.
+
+The entry was a grand sight, and crowds thronged the streets, more
+curious about the duke than about the emperor. Charles was then in the
+very prime of life. His personality commanded attention, but there
+were some among the onlookers who found it more striking than
+attractive. One bystander thought that the very splendour of his
+dress, wherein cloth of gold and pearls played a part, only brought
+into high relief the severity of his features. His great black eyes,
+his proud and determined air failed to cast into oblivion a certain
+effect of insignificance given by his square figure, broad shoulders,
+excessively stout limbs, and legs rather bowed from continuous
+riding.[l]
+
+There is, however, another word portrait of the duke as he looked in
+the year 1473, whose trend is more sympathetic.[2] "His stature was
+small and nervous, his complexion pale, hair dark chestnut, eyes black
+and brilliant, his presence majestic but stern. He was high-spirited,
+magnanimous, courageous, intrepid, and impetuous. Capable of action,
+he lacked nothing but prudence to attain success."
+
+From the two descriptions emerges a fairly clear picture of an
+energetic man, somewhat undersized, and sometimes inclined to assert
+his dignity in a fashion that did not quite comport with his physical
+characteristics. The conviction that he was a very important personage
+with greater importance awaiting him, and his total lack of a sense of
+humour, combined with his inability to feel the pulse of a situation,
+undoubtedly affected his bearing and made it seem more pompous.
+
+[Illustration: CHARLES THE BOLD IDEALISED BY RUBENS. IN THE IMPERIAL
+GALLERY AT VIENNA BY PERMISSION OF J.J. LOWY, VIENNA]
+
+The emperor was not an heroic figure in appearance any more than he
+was in the records of his reign, distinguished for being the feeblest
+as well as the longest in the annals of the empire. He was indolent,
+timid, irresolute, and incapable. His features and manners were
+vulgar, his intellect sluggish. Peasant-like in his petty economies,
+he was shrewder at a bargain than in wielding his imperial sceptre.
+At Treves he was accompanied by his son, the Archduke Maximilian, a
+fairly intelligent youth of eighteen, very ready to be fascinated by
+his proposed father-in-law, who was a striking contrast to his own
+languid and irresolute father, in energy and strenuous love of action.
+
+As the two princes rode together into the city, Charles's
+accoutrements attracted all eyes. The polished steel of his armour
+shone like silver. Over it hung a short mantle actually embroidered
+with diamonds and other precious stones to the value of two hundred
+thousand gold crowns. His velvet hat, graciously held in his hand out
+of compliment to the emperor, was ornamented with a diamond whose
+price no man could tell. Before him walked a page carrying his helmet
+studded with gems, while his magnificent black steed was heavily
+weighted down with its rich caparisons.
+
+Frederic III., very simple in his ordinary dress, had exerted himself
+to appear well to his great vassal. His robe of cloth of gold
+was fine, though it may have looked something like a luxurious
+dressing-gown, as it was made after the Turkish fashion and bordered
+with pearls. The emperor was lame in one foot, injured, so ran the
+tradition, by his habit of kicking, not his servants, but innocent
+doors that chanced to impede his way.
+
+The Archduke Maximilian, gay in crimson and silver, walked by the side
+of an Ottoman prince, prisoner of war, and converted to Christianity
+by the pope himself. And then there was a host of nobles, great and
+small. Among them were Engelbert of Nassau[3] and the representative
+of the House of Orange-Chalons, whose titles were destined to be
+united in one person within the next half-century.
+
+The magnificence remained unrivalled in the history of royal
+conferences. The very troopers wore habits of cloth of gold over their
+steel, while their embroidered saddle-cloths were fringed with silver
+bells. Surpassing all others, were the heralds-at-arms of the various
+individual states which acknowledged Charles as their sovereign,
+seigneur, count, or duke as the case might be. They preceded their
+liege lord, clad in their distinctive armorial coats, ablaze with
+colour. Before them were the trumpeters in white and blue, their very
+instruments silvered, while first of all rode one hundred golden
+haired boys, "an angel throng."
+
+It was so difficult to decide as to the requisite etiquette of escort,
+that the emperor and duke agreed to separate on the fairly neutral
+ground of the market-place. Each proceeded with his own suite to his
+lodgings, Frederic to the archbishop's palace, and Charles to
+the abbey of St. Maximin, which had conferred on him, some years
+previously, the honorary title of "Protector." His army was quartered
+within and without the city. Two days for repose and then the first
+official interview took place, which is described as follows, by an
+unknown correspondent, evidently in the ducal suite:[4]
+
+ "Yesterday, which was Sunday, Monseigneur waited upon the emperor
+ and escorted him to his own lodging which is in the abbey of St.
+ Maximin. My said lord was clad in ducal array except for his hat.
+ The emperor wore a rich robe of cloth of gold of cramoisy, and his
+ son was in a robe of green damask. As to their people, both suites
+ were very brave, jewelry and cloth of gold being as common as
+ satin or taffeta. Monseigneur received the emperor in a little
+ chamber decorated with hangings from Holland that many recognised.
+
+ "The emperor made the Bishop of Mayence his mouthpiece to describe
+ the stress of Christianity and to urge Charles to lend his
+ assistance. Having listened to this address, Monseigneur requested
+ the emperor to please come into a larger place where more people
+ could hear his answer. Accordingly they entered a hall decorated
+ with the tapestry of Alexander, while the very ceiling was covered
+ with cloth of gold. There was a dais whereon stood a double row of
+ seats. Benches and steps were spread over with tapestry wrought
+ with my lord's arms. Thither came the emperor and mounted the dais
+ with difficulty.... Mons., the chancellor, clad in velvet over
+ velvet cramoisy, first pronounced a discourse in beautiful Latin
+ as a response to what had been said by the seigneur of Mayence.
+ Then, showing how the affairs of my said lord were affected by
+ the king, he began with an account of the king's reception by
+ Monseigneur, whom God absolve [evidently the late duke], in his
+ own residence, and he continued down to the present day, dilating
+ upon the great benefits, services, and honour by him [Louis]
+ received in the domains of Burgundy, and the extortions he had
+ made since and desires to make. Never a word was forgotten, but
+ all was well stated, especially the case of M. de Guienne.[5]
+ Finally, Monseigneur declared that if his lands were in security,
+ there was nothing he would like better than to give aid to
+ Christianity.
+
+ "After this statement, which was marvellously honest, the emperor
+ arose from the throne, wine and spices were brought, and then
+ Monseigneur escorted the emperor to his quarters with grand
+ display of torches. This is the outline of what happened on
+ October 4th, in the said year lxxiii. And as to the future, next
+ Thursday the emperor will dine where Monseigneur lodges, _et la
+ fera les grants du roy_,[6] and there will be novelties. In regard
+ to the fashion of the said emperor and his estate, he is a very
+ fine prince and attractive, very robust, very human, and benign.
+ I do not know with whom to compare his figure better than
+ Monseigneur de Croy, as he was eight or ten years ago, except that
+ his flesh is whiter than that of the Sr. de Croy. The emperor has
+ seven or eight hundred horse as an escort, but the major part
+ of the nobles present come from this locality. In regard to
+ Monseigneur's departure, there is no news, and they make great
+ cheer--this is all for this time."
+
+ The German scholars in the imperial party listened most
+ attentively to the style of the Netherlander's speech as well as
+ to his subject-matter. "More abundant in vocabulary than elegant
+ in Latinity," was their comment, a fault they considered marking
+ all French Latin. The audience found time to note the style for
+ the subject of the address did not interest them greatly. The
+ least observant onlooker knew that the main purpose of this
+ interview was not the plan of a Turkish campaign, though Frederic
+ appointed a committee to discuss that, whose members, Burgundian
+ and German in equal numbers, were instructed to study the Eastern
+ question while emperor and duke were absorbed in other matters.[7]
+ In their very first session, this committee decided that the
+ chief obstacle to a Turkish expedition was the Franco-Burgundian
+ quarrel. This point was also raised by Charles in his first
+ conference with Frederic. No campaign was feasible until the
+ European powers were ready to act in concert. Louis XI. was aiding
+ and abetting the heathen by being a disturbing element which
+ rendered this desired unity impossible. So Frederic appointed a
+ fresh commission to discuss European peace. And this insolvable
+ problem was a convenient blind for other discussions.
+
+ On October 5th, a Burgundian fete gave new occasion for a display
+ of wealth; "vulgar ostentation," sneered the less opulent German
+ nobles who tried to show that their pride was not wounded by the
+ sharp contrasts between imperial habits and those of a mere duke.
+ On their side, the Burgundians remarked that it was a pity to
+ waste good things on boors so little accustomed to elegantly
+ equipped apartments that they used silken bedspreads to polish up
+ their boots!
+
+ A running commentary of international criticism, fine feasts,
+ ostensible negotiations about projects that probably no one
+ expected would come to pass, and an undercurrent, persistent
+ and mandatory, of demands emphatically made on one side, feebly
+ accepted by the other while the two principals were together, and
+ petulantly disliked by the emperor as soon as he was alone again
+ --such was the course of the conference.
+
+ Frederic III. had one simple desire--to marry his son to the
+ Burgundian heiress. Charles desired many things, some of which are
+ clear and others obscure. The very fact that the emperor did not
+ at once refuse his demands, gave him confidence that all were
+ obtainable. Very probably he hoped to overawe his feudal chief
+ by a display of his resources, and by showing the high esteem in
+ which he was held by all nations. There at Treves, embassies came
+ to him from England, from various Italian and German states, and
+ from Hungary.
+
+ On October 15th, a treaty was signed that made the new Duke of
+ Lorraine virtually a vassal to Charles, an important step towards
+ Burgundian expansion. There was time and to spare for these many
+ comings and goings during the eight weeks of the sojourn at
+ Treves, and the duke was not idle. That his own business hung
+ fire, he thought was due to the machinations of Louis XI. He had
+ no desire to prolong his visit, for he was well aware of the
+ risk involved in keeping his troops in Treves.[8] At first the
+ magnificence of his equipage had amused the quiet old town, but
+ little by little, in spite of the duke's strict discipline, the
+ presence of idle soldiers became very onerous. Charles did not
+ hesitate to hang on the nearest tree a man caught in an illicit
+ act, but much lawlessness passed without his knowledge. Provisions
+ became very dear; there was some danger of an epidemic due to the
+ unsanitary conditions of the place, ill fitted to harbour so many
+ strangers. The precautions instituted by the Roman founders in
+ regard to their water supply had long since fallen into disuse.
+
+ Weary of delays, the duke demanded a definite answer from the
+ emperor as to the proposed kingdom, the matrimonial alliance, and
+ his own status. Frederic appeared about to acquiesce, and then
+ substituted vague promises for present assent to the demands. But
+ when Charles, indignant, broke off negotiations on October 31st,
+ and began to prepare for immediate departure, Frederic became
+ anxious, renewed his overtures, and a new conference took place,
+ in which he consented to fulfil the duke's wishes, with the
+ proviso the sanction of his election should be obtained.
+
+ Charles promised to go against the Turk in person, and to place
+ a thousand men at Frederic's disposal, so soon as all points at
+ issue between him and Louis XI. were settled, and provided that
+ his estates were erected into a kingdom, which should also
+ comprise the bishoprics of Liege, Utrecht, Toul, Verdun, and the
+ duchies of Lorraine, Savoy, and Cleves. This realm was to be
+ a fief of the empire like Hungary, Bohemia, and Poland, and
+ transmissible by heredity in the male and female line--a necessary
+ recognition of a woman's right, approved by both parties, for Mary
+ of Burgundy was to marry Maximilian.
+
+ Electoral confirmation alone was wanting, and in regard to that
+ there was much voluminous correspondence and much shuffling of
+ responsibility. The electors of Mayence and of Treves were the
+ only ones present to speak for themselves, and they declared
+ that the matter ought to be referred to a full conclave of the
+ electoral college.[9] Let the candidate for royalty await the
+ decision of the next diet, appointed for November at Augsburg.
+
+ Never loth to delay, the emperor proposed this solution to
+ Charles, who replied haughtily that if his request were not
+ complied with he would join Louis XI. in a league hostile to the
+ empire. This was on November 6th. The Archbishop of Treves then
+ suggested that if the question could not wait for a diet, at
+ least the electors should be summoned, especially the elector of
+ Brandenburg, whom he knew to be influential with the emperor, and
+ who was a leader in the anti-Burgundian and anti-Bohemian German
+ party. This seemed fair, but the emperor suddenly put on a show of
+ authority and declared, with an injured air, that he was perfectly
+ free to act on his own initiative without confirmation. In the
+ interests of Christianity and of the empire he would appoint
+ Charles of Burgundy chief of the crusade, and he would crown him
+ king.
+
+ The organised opposition to his plan came to the duke's ears and
+ made him very angry. Yet, at the same time, he had no desire
+ to dispense with electoral consent. Possibly he felt that the
+ imperial staff alone was too feeble to conjure his kingdom into
+ permanent existence. It was finally decided that Frederic III.
+ should display his power to the extent of investing Charles
+ at once with the duchy of Guelders, while the more important
+ investiture should be postponed.
+
+ Very imposing was the ceremony enacted in the market-place.
+ Frederic was exalted upon a high platform ascended by a flight
+ of steps. Charles, clad in complete steel but bareheaded and
+ unattended, rode slowly around the platform three times, "which
+ they say was the custom in such solemnities of investiture," adds
+ an eyewitness,[10] as though he considered the ceremony somewhat
+ archaic. Then the candidate dismounted, received the mantle of the
+ empire from an attendant, and slowly ascended the steps to the
+ emperor's feet, while a new escutcheon, displaying the insignia of
+ the freshly acquired fiefs, quartered on the Burgundian arms, was
+ carried before him. Kneeling at the emperor's feet, the duke laid
+ two fingers on his sword hilt and repeated the oath of fealty and
+ service in low but distinct tones. Other rites followed, and then
+ Charles was proclaimed Duke of Guelders.
+
+ [Illustration: MAXIMILIAN OF AUSTRIA, MEDAL]
+
+ Thus one object of the conference was attained, and all the
+ world thought it was only a question of time when the greater
+ investiture would be celebrated. Charles's star was in the
+ ascendant. There seemed no limit to the power he had acquired
+ over his suzerain, who apparently graciously nodded assent to his
+ requests, while the duke, too, withdrawing from his alliance with
+ the King of Hungary, appeared very conciliatory in all doubtful
+ issues. At the same time, his confidence in Frederic was by no
+ means perfect.
+
+ "The emperor is acting with perfect imperial authority and thinks
+ that no one has a right to dispute it, nevertheless the duke
+ yearns for the sanction of the electors and is set upon obtaining
+ it."[11] The tone taken by Charles was that of humble ignorance.
+ "Little instructed as I am in imperial German law, I am anxious to
+ have your opinion on the legal ability of the emperor to erect a
+ kingdom." On November 8th, in the evening, the electors present in
+ Treves declared that they were not exactly sure about the imperial
+ authority, but they were sure that it was not their duty to
+ discuss the legal attributes of imperial puissance.
+
+ Under these circumstances what remained to hinder the attainment
+ of Charles's desire? The emperor consented, and the only people
+ who could have stayed his consent expressly stated that his was
+ the final word, not theirs. It was easy for onlookers to conclude
+ not only that the coronation was certain but that it was done.
+
+ "Know that our lord the emperor has made the Duke of Burgundy a
+ king of the lands hereafter mentioned and has assured the royal
+ title to him and his heirs, male and female; all the territories
+ that he holds from the empire together with Guelderland lately
+ conquered, and the land of Lorraine, lately lapsed to the empire
+ in fief, besides the duchy of Burgundy that formerly was held from
+ the crown of France; also the bishoprics of Liege, Utrecht, Dolen,
+ and others belonging to the empire, besides a few seigniories,
+ also imperial fiefs. All this, royalty and principalities, he
+ receives from a Roman emperor."
+
+So wrote Albert of Brandenburg on November 13th, trusting to the
+word of an envoy who had left matters in so advanced a state when he
+departed from Treves that he felt safe in concluding that achievement
+had been reached.[12]
+
+Various letters from the citizens of Berne, too, were filled with
+rumours from Treves. Most extraordinary is one of November 29th,
+intended to go the rounds of the Swiss confederacy, containing _exact
+details of the coronation of Charles as it had taken place five days
+previously_. The boundaries of the new kingdom were specified.[13]
+Venice, in hot haste to please the monarch, had instantly shown
+exceptional honour to the Burgundian resident. How exact it all
+sounded! Yet there was no truth in it.
+
+The vacillating emperor was affected by the attitude of his suite, and
+by their varying representations. There is no actual proof of French
+interference, but French agents had been seen in the city, and might
+have had private audiences with the emperor. Gradually, relations
+changed between Charles and Frederic. There was a cloud, not
+dissipated by a three days' fete given by the duke (November
+19th-22d), evidently in farewell. Was Charles too exigeant with his
+demands, too chary of his daughter? Probably.
+
+On November 23d, instead of a definitive treaty a simple convention
+was signed, postponing the coronation until February. Emperor and
+regal candidate were to meet again at Besancon, Cologne, or Basel. In
+the interval, Charles was to come to a satisfactory understanding with
+the electors and obtain their official endorsement for the imperial
+grant.
+
+November 25th was appointed, _not_ for the regal investiture, but for
+Frederic's departure. On the evening of the 24th, he gave audience to
+his councillors and princes. The electors present were urged by the
+Burgundians to give their own conditional approval at least, and to
+consent to a reduction of the military obligations to be incurred
+by Charles. It was a crisis, however, where nobody wished to pledge
+anything definitely. There was an evident disposition to await some
+further issue before final action.
+
+The leave-taking between the bargain makers was expected to be as
+pompous as had been the entry into Treves. It was far into the night
+of November 24th when the audience broke up. Little rest was there for
+the imperial suite, for when the tardy November sun arose above the
+eastern horizon, its rays met Frederic sailing down the Moselle. Not
+only had no imperial adieux been uttered, but no imperial debts had
+been settled. This was the news that was awaiting Charles when he
+awoke. Baffled he was, but not in his hope of being a king that day.
+No, only in his expectation of a stately pageant.[14] In all haste he
+sent Peter von Hagenbach to ride more swiftly along the bank than the
+boat could sail, so as to overtake the traveller and urge him to wait
+for a few more words on divers topics. In one account it is reported
+that Frederic, though annoyed at the interruption, still assented to
+Hagenbach's request. No sooner was the latter away, however, than he
+changed his mind and continued his course.
+
+Rumour was busy, in regard to this strange exit of the emperor from
+the scene. The general belief among contemporaries was that it was on
+the eve of the intended coronation that Frederic turned his back on
+the scene. Take first the words of Thomas Basin, whose statement that
+he was in the very midst of the events can hardly be doubted:[15]
+
+ "But alas how easily and instantly human desires change, and how
+ fragile are the alliances and friendships of men, especially of
+ princes, which are not joined and confirmed by the glue of Christ
+ ... as the sacred Psalm sings, 'Put not your trust in princes
+ nor in the sons of men in whom there is no safety.' Suddenly,
+ forsooth, when they were thought to be harmonious in charity,
+ benevolence, and friendship, when they offered each other such
+ splendid entertainment, when they feasted together in regal luxury
+ in all unity and friendship, when all things, as has been said,
+ needed for the magnificence of such a great honour were made
+ ready and prepared, so that on the third day should occur the
+ celebration of that regal dignity _[fastigii],_ and the
+ _[provectio]_ promotion of a new king and the erection of a new
+ kingdom or the restoration and renovation of an ancient one,
+ now obsolete from antiquity, were expected by all with great
+ attention;--something occurred. I do not know what; hesitation or
+ suspicion, fancied or justified, unexpectedly affected the emperor
+ ... and embarking on his ship in the very early morning he sailed
+ down the river Moselle to the Rhine. And thus was frustrated the
+ hope of the duke and of all the Burgundians who believed that
+ he was to be elevated to a king. In a moment this hope was
+ extinguished like a candle.
+
+ "We were present there in the city of Treves, attached to the
+ suite of neither prince, not serving or pretending to serve either
+ of them. But we ascertained nothing either then or later, although
+ we made many inquiries, about the cause of this sudden departure
+ and we are still ignorant of the truth. When the day broke after
+ the emperor's departure, and the duke was informed of the fact, he
+ was also assured that the vessel in which the emperor sailed was
+ opposite the monastery of St. Mary Blessed to the Martyrs. So he
+ sent messengers hastily to beg the emperor to stay for a very
+ brief interview with the duke, assuring him that the very least
+ delay possible should occur if he did the favour. But no attention
+ was paid to the signals from the shore and the course was
+ continued."
+
+The bishop wrote these words some time after the event. There are
+other accounts preserved, actual letters written within a few days or
+weeks of November 25th, wherein is evinced similar ignorance of what
+had actually passed. The following gives several suggestions of
+difficulties not mentioned elsewhere. A certain Balthasar Cesner,
+secretary, writes to Master Johannes Gelthauss and others in
+Frankfort, from Cologne, on December 6th.[16] He was attached to
+the imperial service, and possibly was one of the few attendants on
+Frederic in the hasty journey from Treves. After touching on Cologne
+affairs he proceeds:
+
+ "I must inform your excellencies how the Duke of Burgundy came
+ with all pomp for his coronation as king of the kingdom of
+ Burgundy and Friesland with twenty-six standards besides a
+ magnificent sceptre and crown. He also wished to take his duchy
+ and territories in Savoy[17] and Guelders and others in fief from
+ him [the emperor] and not from the empire.[18] This and other
+ extraordinary demands his imperial grace did not wish to grant,
+ and on that account he has broken off the interview and gone away.
+ Everything was prepared for the coronation, the chair for the
+ taking.[19] It is said that he is to be crowned in Aix. It may be
+ hoped not [_non speratur_]. You can understand me as well as your
+ faithful servant.
+
+ "Dear Master Hans I hope that you will not laugh at me. I can
+ please my gracious lord and be worthy of praise if you will only
+ trust me.
+
+ "Despatched from Cologne on St. Nicholas Day itself.
+
+ "To the Jurisconsult Master Johannes Gelthauss, Distinguished
+ advocate, master, preceptor of the city of Frankfort."
+
+The two kingdoms are also mentioned by Snoy:
+
+ "Two realms, namely Burgundy and Frisia; in the second, Holland,
+ Zealand, Guelders, Brabant, Limburg, Namur, Hainaut, and the
+ dioceses of Liege, Cambray, and Utrecht; in the first, Burgundy,
+ Luxemburg, Artois, Flanders, and three bishoprics."
+
+The chronicler adds that this plan was discussed in secret
+conference.[20]
+
+Again the rumour that the final straw that broke the emperor's
+resolution was the duke's desire to take Savoy and Guelders from
+his hand alone, is suggestive. On the duke's part, this wish might
+indicate an attempt to separate a portion of territory from the empire
+in a way to deceive his contemporaries into thinking that his kingdom
+was an imperial fief, while, in reality, it was an independent realm,
+as he or his successors could declare at a convenient moment. But this
+seems at variance with his attested desire for electoral support.
+
+It was a curious tangle and never fully unravelled. Yet, considering
+the emperor's personal characteristics, his last action does not
+seem inexplicable. As his visitor showed the intensity of his will,
+Frederic became restive. Phlegmatic, obstinate, yet conscious of his
+own weakness, personal conflicts with a nature equally obstinate and
+much more vigorous were exceedingly unpleasant. The collision made him
+writhe uneasily and prefer to slip out of his embarrassment as quietly
+as he could.
+
+The proposed leave-taking was to be very magnificent, and the
+magnificence again was significant of Burgundian wealth. Whether the
+duke would surely keep his pledge of sharing that wealth with the
+archduke if the emperor went so far that he could not draw back, was a
+consideration that undoubtedly may have affected Frederic. Had Mary of
+Burgundy accompanied her father, had the wedding of the daughter and
+investiture of the new king been planned for the same day, had the
+promises been exchanged simultaneously, the leave-taking might have
+passed, indeed, as a third ceremonial in all stateliness.
+
+If Frederic doubted the surety of his bargain, it is not surprising.
+It was notorious how the duke had played fast and loose with his
+daughter's hand, withdrawing it from the grasp of a suitor as the
+greater advantages of another alliance were presented to him, or as
+the mere disadvantage of any marriage at all became unpleasantly near.
+Vigorous man of forty that he was, Charles had no personal desire to
+see a son-in-law, _in propria persona_, waiting for his shoes--a fact
+perfectly patent to the emperor, as it was to the rest of the world.
+
+The task of making the imperial adieux was entrusted to the imperial
+chamberlain, Ulrich von Montfort, who duly presented his master's
+formal excuses to the duke, on the morning of November 25th.
+"Important and urgent affairs had necessitated his presence elsewhere.
+The arrangement discussed between them was not broken but simply
+postponed until a more convenient occasion rendered its execution
+possible," etc.
+
+The Strasburg chronicles report that Charles was in a towering rage on
+receiving this communication. He clinched his fists, ground his teeth,
+and kicked the furniture about the room in which he had locked himself
+up.[21] But by the time these words were penned, these authors
+were better informed than Charles about the ultimate result of the
+emperor's intentions. The duke may have been angry, but he certainly
+controlled himself sufficiently to give several audiences in the
+course of the day--to envoys from Lorraine among others--and was ready
+to take his own departure by evening, not doubting that the crown and
+sceptre, carefully packed with the mountain of his valuable treasure,
+would assuredly fulfil their destiny in the near future. Treves was
+left to its pristine repose, and Charles was the last man to realise
+that in its silence were entombed for ever his chances of wearing the
+prematurely prepared insignia.
+
+
+[Footnote 1: This comment of the Strasburg chronicler, Trausch, is
+quoted by De Bussiere in his _Histoire de la Ligue contre Charles le
+Temeraire_, p. 64. Kirk (ii., 222) points out that this contemporary
+had a peculiar hostility towards Charles.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Guillaume Faret or Farrel. His _Hist. de Rene II._ is
+lost. This citation from it is found in _La Guerre de Rene II. contre
+Charles le Hardi_, by P. Aubert Roland.]
+
+[Footnote 3: He had been made knight of the Golden Fleece at the
+May meeting. From this time on some member of the Nassau family was
+prominent in Burgundian affairs.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Gachard, _Doc. inedits_, i., 232. Letter from Treves,
+October 4, 1473.]
+
+[Footnote 5: About this time Louis XI. made strenuous efforts to
+unravel the mystery of his brother's death. (Letter to the chancellor
+of Brittany, _Lettres de Louis XI_., v., 190.)]
+
+[Footnote 6: Gachard could not explain this phrase. It might easily
+refer to the desired investiture.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Chmel, _Mon. Habs_., i., lxxvii., 50, 51: Toutey, p. 50.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Toutey, p. 53.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Toutey bases this statement on three letters (October
+30, 31, and November 7, 1473) written by the envoys of the elector of
+Brandenburg, Ludwig von Eyb and Hertnid von Stein.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Basin, _Histoire des regnes de Charles VII. et de Louis
+XI._, ii., 323. Between Nov. 6th and this ceremony there had been
+new ruptures. Hugonet had gone back and forth many times between the
+chiefs and "all the world had wondered."]
+
+[Footnote 11: Albert of Brandenburg to the Duke of Saxony. (Muller,
+_Reichstag Theatrum_, p. 598.]
+
+[Footnote 12: Toutey, p. 57.]
+
+[Footnote 13: Toutey, p. 60, note.]
+
+[Footnote 14: In this account, differing from the current
+tradition, Toutey has followed Bachmann's conclusions (_Deutsche
+Reichsgeschichte,_ ii., 435).]
+
+[Footnote 15: Basin, ii., 325.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Preserved in the municipal archives in Frankfort (nr.
+5808 or ch. lit. clausa c. sig in verso impr.). This is published by
+Karl Schellhass in _Deutsche Zeitschrift fuer Geschichtewissenschaft,_
+(1891) pp. 80-85. The language is a queer mixture of German and
+Latin.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Charles asked on October 23d, through his chancellor,
+for investiture into Savoy. (Note by Schellhass.)]
+
+[Footnote 18: Under this head is meant Lorraine, which he alleged had
+lapsed to the emperor at the death of Nicholas of Calabria.]
+
+[Footnote 19: This means the throne from which Charles was to step
+down to receive the fief.]
+
+[Footnote 20: "Loquitur etiam ferunt de regnis Frisiae et Burgundiae
+sibi constituendes quae audissimis auribus accepta visus non tam negare
+imperator quam dissimulare.
+
+"Nam et ad eam [majestatem regiam] aspirare et ditiones suas velle
+in duo regna partiri visue Burgundiae et Frisiae: in hoc Hollandia,
+Zelandia, Gelria, Brabantia, Limburgum, Namureum, Hannonia et dioceses
+Leodiensis, Cameracensis et Trajectina: altero Burgundia, Luxemburgum,
+Arthesia, Flandria, ecclesaeque cathedrales Sadunensis, Tullensis
+Verdunensis essent." (P. 1131.)
+
+Renier Snoy was born the year of Charles's death, so that his
+statement is tradition but founded on what he might have heard from
+eye-witnesses.]
+
+[Footnote 21: Chmel, i., 49-51; Toutey, p. 59.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+COLOGNE, LORRAINE, AND ALSACE
+
+1473-1474
+
+
+Late as it was in November, the weather was still very mild, and as
+the emperor and duke travelled in opposite directions, neither the
+former as he went down to Cologne, nor the latter as he passed up
+the valley of the Moselle to that of the Ell, was hindered by autumn
+storms. The summer of 1473 had been marked by unprecedented heat and
+a prolonged drouth.[1] Forest fires raged unchecked on account of the
+dearth of water and, for the same reason, the mills stood still.
+The grape crops, indeed, were prodigious, but the vintage was not
+profitable because the wine had a tendency to sour. Gentle rains
+in September prepared the ground for an untimely fertility. Trees
+blossomed and, though some fruits withered prematurely, cherries
+actually ripened. Thus the Rhinelands presented a pleasant appearance
+as Charles rode to Lorraine.
+
+His first pause was at Thionville in Luxemburg, where he stayed about
+a fortnight and received ambassadors from Hungary, Poland, Venice,
+England, Denmark, Brittany, Ferrara, the Palatinate, and Cologne.[2]
+The result of his conference with the last named was a declaration
+on the duke's part which seriously affected his later career. The
+condition of Cologne must be touched on as an essential part of this
+narrative.
+
+The late Duke of Burgundy had attempted to pursue a line of policy in
+regard to the ecclesiastical elections in the diocese of Cologne that
+had succeeded in Liege and in Utrecht. In 1463, he had tried to force
+the chapter to elect his candidate. They had refused to follow
+his leading, but their own choice, Robert, brother of the
+elector-palatine, did not prove a congenial chief, and the new prelate
+turned to Philip for aid when he found his chapter disposed to
+restrict both his revenues and his temporal authority. Later, in 1467,
+as the audacity of his opponents increased, the archbishop appealed to
+his brother, the elector, and to Charles of Burgundy. The latter
+was busy in France, but he wrote a sententious letter to Cologne,
+exhorting both chapter and city to be obedient to their chosen
+spiritual and lay lord. This intervention was resented. The breach
+widened between Robert and his people, culminating in actual
+hostilities. The chapter took possession of the town of Neuss,
+accepted Hermann of Hesse as their protector, and sent an embassy to
+Rome to state their grievances. The elector aided his brother and the
+belligerent parties grew in strength.
+
+The city of Cologne wavered for a space, undecided which cause to
+espouse, and finally chose the chapter's side, signing a five years'
+alliance with that body, which had officially renounced allegiance to
+Robert, pending the judgment of pope and emperor on the dissension.
+Such was the state of affairs when Charles entered into possession of
+Guelders and manifested a disposition to interest himself in Cologne.
+He informed the chapter that he was greatly displeased with their
+contumely. To Cologne he said, "Be neutral," but the burghers showed
+so little inclination to heed his neighbourly advice that he tried
+harsher measures and permitted Cologne merchants to be molested in his
+domains.
+
+In 1473, all hostilities were suspended in the hopes of imperial
+intervention.[3] While Charles was still in Guelders, Robert paid
+him a visit, held long conferences with him, and probably received
+promises of future aid, for he had an air of arrogance when he
+returned from the interview. During the sojourn of duke and emperor at
+Treves, a papal legate, the Bishop of Fossombrone, arrived from Rome
+with plenary powers to settle Cologne affairs, and his measures were
+endorsed by Charles in a letter from Treves.
+
+For a time Frederic III. seemed inclined to refrain from interference,
+then something influenced him in another direction. When he arrived
+at Cologne in November, he received a warm welcome and costly gifts,
+which he repaid by conferring a mass of privileges on his "good
+city,"--cheap and easy benefits,--but he did not prove an efficient
+arbitrator, simply postponing any decision from day to day, though he
+was begged to settle all difficulties before Charles should attempt to
+relieve him of the trouble.
+
+True, Charles was detained elsewhere. But he no longer felt the need
+of conciliating the emperor, and at Thionville, on December 11, 1473,
+he issued a manifesto declaring that his friend Robert was entirely in
+the right, his opponents in the wrong.[4] As these latter defied papal
+legate and arbitrator duly authorised to settle the points of dispute,
+he, Charles of Burgundy, would constitute himself defender of the
+insulted archbishop. At the same time, he despatched Etienne de Lavin
+to check the encroachments of the insolent rebels. The declaration
+emboldened Robert to defy the emperor's summons to meet him and the
+papal legate. They both declared that they would take measures to
+bring him to obedience, but Frederic did not wish to tarry longer at
+Cologne. In January he took his departure, having directed Hermann of
+Hesse to protect that see against all aggression.
+
+Apparently, at that time, in spite of the manifesto, there was no
+formal treaty between Charles and Robert, but there are two drafts for
+such a treaty in existence,[5] wherein the former pledged himself to
+force chapter, nobles, and city to submission, in consideration of the
+sum of 200,000 florins, while the archbishop gave permission to his
+ally to garrison all strongholds, including Cologne. Pending his
+autumn sojourn in the upper Rhinelands, Charles had, therefore, plans
+regarding Cologne definitely in mind.
+
+
+
+_Lorraine_
+
+This duchy was even more interesting to Charles than Cologne, and
+there were many matters in its regard which demanded his urgent
+attention in 1473. It, too, was a pleasant territory, and conveniently
+adjacent to Burgundian lands. A natural means of annexation had been
+considered by Charles in the proposed marriage between Nicholas, Duke
+of Lorraine, and Mary of Burgundy. When that project was abandoned to
+suit Charles's pleasure, he retained the friendship of his rejected
+son-in-law until the latter's death in the spring of 1473. So
+unexpected was this event, that there was the usual suspicion of
+poisoning, and this crime, too, was charged to the account of Louis
+XI., apparently without foundation. Certainly that monarch reaped
+no immediate advantage from the death, for the family to whom the
+succession passed was more friendly to Burgundy than to France.
+
+The heir to the childless Nicholas was his aunt Yolande of Anjou,
+daughter of old King Rene of Anjou, sister to the unfortunate
+Margaret, late Queen of England, and widow of the Duke of Vaudemont.
+The council of Lorraine lost no time in acknowledging Yolande as their
+duchess. She hastened to Nancy, the capital, with her son Rene, aged
+twenty-two, where they were received hospitably, and then Yolande
+formally abdicated in favour of the young man, who was duly accepted
+as Duke of Lorraine.
+
+Now there was a large party of Burgundian sympathisers in Nancy, and
+it was probably owing to their pressure that very strong links were at
+once forged between Charles and the new sovereign of the duchy. The
+apprehension lest the former should protect the land as he had the
+heritage of his namesake, little Charles of Guelders, was expressed by
+the timorous, but their counsels were overweighted, and, on October
+15th, Rene accepted a treaty whose terms were very favourable to
+Burgundy. In exchange for being "protector,"--an office that the
+emperor had already been asked to change into suzerainty,--Rene
+cemented an alliance, offensive and defensive, with Charles, giving
+the latter full permission to march his forces across Lorraine.
+Further, he pledged himself to appoint as officials in all important
+places on the route "men bound by oath to the Duke of Burgundy." Yes,
+more, these were discharged from fidelity to Rene in case he abandoned
+Burgundian interests.
+
+Yolande of Vaudemont endorsed these articles by adding her signature
+to that of her son. Charles feared, however, that the provisions
+might not be adhered to by the Lorrainers--so humiliating were the
+terms--and exacted in addition the signatures of the chief nobles. On
+November 18th, seventy-four of these gentlemen attested their
+approval of an act that practically delivered their land to a
+stranger,--evidence that they doubted the ability of their hereditary
+chief, and preferred Burgundy to France.
+
+There is a story that Charles tried other methods than diplomacy,
+before he got the better of the young duke in this bargain, that he
+actually had him stolen away from the castle of Joinville where he was
+staying with his mother.[6] Louis promptly came forward and arrested a
+nephew of the emperor, a student in the University of Paris, and kept
+him as a hostage until the release of Rene. Rumour, too, asserts that
+there was a treaty of Joinville, wherein Rene asserted his friendship
+with Louis, which was intermitted by his relations with Charles, to be
+resumed later. That also seems to be improbable. The formal alliance
+with Louis did not come then, though the king took immediate care
+to build up a party in his behalf in Lorraine, and to keep himself
+informed of the progress of the new regime.
+
+From Thionville, Charles journeyed on to Nancy, where he was welcomed
+by his protege, outside the city walls, and the two rode in together
+as the duke and the emperor had entered Treves. Charles had been so
+long keeping up a show of obsequiousness which he did not feel that,
+undoubtedly, he enjoyed again being the first personage.[7] He
+refused, however, to accept the young man's hospitality, and spent the
+two days of his sojourn in the house of a certain Malhortie, where
+he felt more at ease in his conferences with Lorrainers willing to
+proceed further to the disadvantage of their new sovereign.
+
+The ally certainly became more exigeant. In various towns on the
+Moselle, Epinal, Charmes, Dompaire, etc., the Lorraine soldiers were
+replaced by Burgundians. This immediate and arrogant use of the rights
+he had wrested from the Duke of Lorraine alienated many who had been
+warm for Burgundy. Rene himself admired Charles as Maximilian had
+done. The strong man exercised a fascination over both youths, but
+the duke did not turn this admiration into real friendship,
+underestimating the character of his protege. His measures, too, were
+taken without the slightest consideration for local feeling. Garrison
+after garrison was installed and commanded to obey his officers alone,
+while the soldiers were allowed to levy their own rations, equivalent
+to raids on a friendly country. As always, the agglomeration of
+mercenary companies was difficult to control. The duke did not succeed
+in having those remote from his jurisdiction kept in due restraint.
+Complaints began to pour into his headquarters. Public sentiment
+shifted day by day. The Burgundian became the personification of a
+public foe. Before Charles proceeded on his way to Alsace, Rene had
+begun to lose his admiration and it was not long before he impatiently
+awaited an opportunity to break with his too doughty protector.
+
+
+
+_Alsace_
+
+During the four years that Charles had delayed in coming to look at
+the result of the bargain of 1469 in the Rhine valley, his lieutenant,
+Peter von Hagenbach, had given the inhabitants reason to regret
+the easy-going absentee Austrian seigneurs. Much had been done,
+undoubtedly, in restraining the lawlessness of the robber barons. The
+roads were well policed, and safety was assured to travellers. "I
+spy," was the motto blazoned on the livery of the forces led by
+Hagenbach up and down the land, until he had unearthed lurking
+vagabonds. It was acknowledged that gold and silver could be carried
+openly from place to place, and that night journeys were as safe as
+day. Still, this advantageous change had not won popularity for the
+man who wrought it. Perhaps the people thought it less burdensome to
+make their own little bargains with highwaymen or petty nobles,[8] a
+law unto themselves, than to meet the rigorous requisitions of the
+Burgundian tax collector.
+
+It was the country that had profited most by the new administration.
+The small towns had long enjoyed great independence, and had shown
+ability in managing their own affairs. They wanted no interference.
+Not liked by those whom he had really protected, Hagenbach was
+absolutely hated by the burghers who felt his iron hand, without
+acknowledging that its pressure had more good than evil in it.
+
+Then there were the neighbours to be considered. The Swiss had hated
+Sigismund and all Austrians, and had been prepared to prefer Burgundy
+as a power in the Rhinelands. But Hagenbach took no pains to win their
+friendship. His insolent fashion of referring to them as "fellows" or
+"rascals," added to acts of aggression, unchecked if not condoned by
+him, aroused bitter dislike to him in the confederated cantons,[9] and
+in their allies, Berne, Mulhouse, etc. By 1473, there was a growing
+sentiment in Helvetia that they would be happier if Austria had her
+own again, while the uneasiness in the cities that stood alone had
+greatly increased.
+
+Within Hagenbach's immediate jurisdiction, the opposition to his
+measures took a definite form long before the duke's arrival there.
+The various commissioners sent by Charles to inspect the quality of
+his bargain had all agreed in an urgent recommendation to the duke to
+redeem, at the earliest possible moment, all the troublesome mortgages
+honeycombing his authority. Hagenbach, too, was fully convinced of the
+necessity for this measure, but he was not provided with sufficient
+money to accomplish it.
+
+In the spring of 1473, therefore, he resolved to lay a new tax on
+wine. This impost, called the "Bad Penny," was bitterly resented for
+two reasons. The burden was oppressive to the vintners and it was an
+illegal measure, as no sanction had been given by the local estates.
+Three towns, Thann, Ensisheim, and Brisac, declared that they were
+determined to refuse payment.
+
+Hagenbach marched a force into the Engelburg, a stronghold dominating
+Thann, bombarded the town, and took it easily. Thirty citizens were
+condemned to death as leaders in an iniquitous rebellion against the
+just orders of their lawful governor. Some of these, indeed, were
+pardoned, though their estates were confiscated, but five or six
+were publicly executed, and their bodies hung exposed to view on the
+market-place, as a hideous object-lesson of the cost of resisting
+Burgundian orders.
+
+One execution sufficed to render Ensisheim submissive, but Brisac
+proved more obstinate. The magistrates there did not resort to force.
+They declared there was no need, for they were fully protected by the
+article in the treaty of St. Omer, which forbade arbitrary imposition
+of any tax on the part of the suzerain. Their determined refusal made
+the lieutenant consent to refer the question to the Duke of Burgundy,
+and messengers were despatched to Treves to represent the respective
+grievances of governor and governed. The collection of the tax was
+postponed until Charles could examine the situation.
+
+A determined effort to bring the independent town of Mulhouse under
+Burgundian sway was another act of 1473, fanning opposition to a white
+heat that forged organised resistance to any extension of Burgundian
+authority. For three years, Hagenbach had endeavoured to convince the
+burghers of that imperial city that they would be wise to accept the
+duke's protection and have their debts paid. The latter were, indeed,
+oppressive, but there was fear lest "protection" might be more so, and
+conference after conference failed to produce the acquiescence desired
+by Hagenbach.
+
+In 1473, that zealous servant of Burgundy declared that if the
+burghers persisted in their refusal he would resort to force. Their
+reply was that Mulhouse could not take such an important step without
+consulting her friends, the Swiss. "Are the cantons going to help you
+pay your debts?" was the sneering comment of Hagenbach. "Mulhouse is
+a bad weed in a rose garden, a plant that must be extirpated. Its
+submission would make a charming pleasure ground out of the Sundgau,
+Alsace, and Breisgau. The duke knew no city which he would prefer to
+Mulhouse for a sojourn," were his further statements.[10]
+
+Two days were given to the town council for an answer. Hagenbach
+remarked that it was useless to think that time could be gained until
+the mortgaged territories should return to Austria. "Far from planning
+redemption, Duke Sigismund is now preparing to cede to _Charles le
+temeraire_ as much again of his domain and vassals." Still Mulhouse
+was not convinced that the only course open to her was to let Charles
+pay her debts and receive her homage. No answer was forthcoming in the
+two days, but ready scribes had prepared many copies of Hagenbach's
+letter, which were sent to all who might be interested in checking
+these proposals of Burgundy.
+
+On February 24, 1473, a Swiss diet met at Lausanne and there the
+matter was weighed. Hagenbach's letter was shown to those who had
+not seen it, and methods of rescuing Mulhouse from her dilemma were
+carefully considered. Years ago a union had existed between the forest
+cantons and the Alsatian cities. There were propositions to renew
+this alliance so as to present a strong front to their Burgundian
+neighbour. The cantons had enough to do with their own affairs, but
+the result of the discussion was that, on March 14th, a ten-year
+Alsatian confederation was formed in imitation of the Swiss.
+
+The chief members were Basel, Colmar, Mulhouse, Schlestadt, and two
+dioceses, and it is referred to as the _Basse-Union_ or the Lower
+Union, the purposes being to guarantee mutually the rights of the
+contracting parties, to meet for discussion on various questions, and,
+specifically, to help Mulhouse pay her debts. A few days later, March
+19th, there was a fresh proposition to make an alliance between
+this _Basse-Union_ and the Swiss confederation. This required a
+_referendum_. Each Swiss delegate received a copy of the articles to
+take back to his constituents for their consideration. No bond between
+the confederation and the union was, however, in existence at the time
+when Charles was approaching Alsace. Various conciliatory measures
+on his part had somewhat lessened immediate opposition to him, but,
+nevertheless, there were frequent conferences about affairs. Diets
+were almost continuous and there were strenuous efforts to raise money
+to free Mulhouse from her hampering financial embarrassments.
+
+Hagenbach had not followed up his threats of immediate war measures,
+but it was known that he had obtained imperial authorisation to
+assume the jurisdiction of Mulhouse, a step which her allies hoped to
+forestall by settling her debts. Strasburg offered to contribute six
+hundred florins, Berne and Soleure seven hundred, Basel four hundred,
+while Colmar, Schlestadt, Obernai, and Kaisersberg together hoped to
+raise another four hundred. A diet was called at Basel for December
+11th, and Zuerich and Lucerne were expected to enter into the union.
+The tidings of the duke's approach were undoubtedly a stimulus to
+these renewed efforts to make the league strong enough to withstand
+him. The sentiment expressed by the pious Knebel, "May God protect us
+from his mighty hand," voiced probably a wide-spread dread.
+
+When Charles entered Alsace, his escort was large enough to
+inspire fear, but there was no opposition to his advance, though
+consultations, now at one city, now at another, were frequent. The
+duke paid little heed to their deliberations, under-estimating their
+importance, while he was gracious to any words of welcome offered to
+him. Strasburg sent him greetings while he rested at Chatenois, and so
+did Colmar. The latter town expressed her willingness to receive him
+and an escort of one or two hundred, but was firm in her refusal to
+admit a larger force within her walls. By this precaution, Charles was
+baffled in his plot to gain possession of the town, and so passed on
+his way.
+
+On Christmas eve, the traveller made a formal entry into Brisac, where
+a temporary court was established, and where audience was given to
+various embassies with the customary Burgundian pomp. Meanwhile the
+troops, forced to camp without the walls, were a burden to the land,
+and seem to have been more odious than usual to their unwilling hosts.
+
+The citizens of Brisac offered homage on their knees and had their
+hopes raised high by their suzerain's pleasant greeting, but they
+failed to obtain the hoped for assurance that the treaty of St. Omer
+should be observed in all respects. Among the envoys were many who
+undertook to remonstrate in a friendly fashion about the imposition
+of the "Bad Penny" tax on the Alsatians, and the over-severity of
+Hagenbach's administration. The cause of Mulhouse, too, was urged,
+notably by Berne. The representations of these last envoys were
+received most courteously. The duke rather thought that the city could
+be detached from the league, and therefore gave himself some trouble
+to establish friendly relations.
+
+To Mulhouse, too, his tone was conciliatory. He wrote a pleasant
+letter to the town and despatched a councillor thither, who would, he
+assured them, arrange matters to their satisfaction. But an abortive
+_coup d'etat_ on the part of the Burgundians, which would have given
+them possession of Basel, destroyed the effect of these reassuring
+phrases. The burghers were warned in time, looked to their defences,
+and banished from their midst every individual suspected of Burgundian
+sympathies. Every newcomer was carefully scrutinised before he was
+admitted within the walls, and the Rhine was guarded most rigidly. The
+propriety of these precautions was soon proven.
+
+Charles ordered a review at Ensisheim, the official capital of the
+landgraviate. Thither marched his troops from every quarter. Those
+from Saeckingen, Lauffen, and Waldshut found their shortest route over
+the bridge at Basel, and there they appeared and begged to be allowed
+to cross. Their sincerity was doubted, and the least foothold on the
+city's territory was sternly refused then and a week later, when the
+request was renewed. The method of introducing friendly troops into a
+town and then seizing it by a sudden _coup de main_ was what Charles
+had been suspected of plotting for Metz, and later for Colmar, and
+there seems to be no doubt that a third essay of this rather stupid
+stratagem was planned, only to fail again, and this time to be
+peculiarly disastrous in its reflex action.
+
+The review took place and the strength of the Burgundian mercenaries
+was duly displayed to the Alsatians, but no satisfactory assurances
+were given to Brisac and the other towns that their suzerain
+would restrict his measures of taxation and administration to the
+stipulations of the contract of St. Omer. On the contrary, when
+Charles passed on to Burgundy it was plain to all that he had _not_
+restricted the powers of his lieutenant in any respect, but rather had
+endorsed his general method of procedure.
+
+One night was spent at Thann[11] and then the duke took his leave of
+the annexed region whose people had hoped so much from his visit to
+them. In mid-January he arrived at Besancon, his winter journeying
+being wonderfully easy in the unprecedentedly mild weather.
+
+Hagenbach lost no time in proceeding to the levying of the impost now
+approved by the duke, who had at the same time expressly ordered that
+the people were to be treated mildly, and that summary punishment
+was to check all excesses on the part of the eight hundred Picards
+employed by Hagenbach to aid the tax collector. The governor, however,
+saw no further need for gentle treatment or for respect to privileges.
+In Brisac, municipal elections were arbitrarily set aside, and
+officers appointed by the governor. The corporation was curtailed
+of power, and the burghers were forced to prepare to march against
+Mulhouse.
+
+Having accomplished his duty to his own satisfaction, Hagenbach
+proceeded to give himself some relaxation. His own marriage took place
+on January 24th, and he celebrated the occasion with great fetes. It
+is of this period in Hagenbach's life that the stories of gross excess
+are told.[12] It seems as though, having once abandoned restraint
+towards the city, his personal passions, too, were permitted to run
+riot, and he spared no wife nor maid to whom he took a fancy.
+
+As he had succeeded in impressing the "Bad Penny" on the little
+independent landowners, he tried to extend it to the territory of the
+Bishop of Basel. Vehement was the opposition which was reported to the
+duke, who promptly ordered his lieutenant to restore the prisoners he
+had taken and to cease his aggressions. Charles was not ready to
+meet the Swiss, and was willing to defer an issue, but he was wholly
+ignorant of the real strength of the confederation. Hagenbach then
+proceeded to make a stronghold of Brisac and waited for further
+action.
+
+
+[Footnote 1: De Roye, p. 105.]
+
+[Footnote 2: He also issued administrative orders. It was at this time
+that he instituted a high court of justice and a chamber of accounts
+at Mechlin, both designed to serve for all the Netherland provinces.
+This measure was bitterly resented by the local authorities.
+(Fredericq. _Le role politique et social des ducs de Bourgogne_, p.
+183.)]
+
+[Footnote 3: Letters are preserved in the Cologne archives. (Toutey,
+p. 64.)]
+
+[Footnote 4: Toutey, p. 66. This document is in the Cologne archives.]
+
+[Footnote 5:_See_ Toutey, p. 66. These are printed in Lacomblet,
+_Urkunden_, iv., 468, 470.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Jean de Roye is the only contemporary to tell this story.
+Both Toutey and Kirk reject it. (_See_ Toutey, p. 76; Kirk, ii.,
+271.)]
+
+[Footnote 7: Toutey's suggestion.]
+
+[Footnote 8: All sons inherited their father's title, so that there
+were many landless lords.]
+
+[Footnote 9: At this period there were eight in the confederation,
+which was a loose structure in which each member preserved her
+individuality.]
+
+[Footnote 10: _See_ Toutey, p. 82, who quotes from the _Cartulaire de
+Mulhouse_, iv., _et passim_. This last furnishes the details for these
+passages.]
+
+[Footnote 11: In this account Toutey's conclusions are accepted. There
+are discrepancies as to dates among the various chroniclers. The
+duke's itinerary as given in Comines-Lenglet (ii., 211) does not agree
+with that of Knebel and others. But the facts of the narrative are
+little affected by the variations. The following is the itinerary
+accepted by Toutey:
+
+Dep. from Ensisheim Jan. 8
+Stay at Thann " 9-10
+Dep. from Belfort " 11
+Besancon " 17
+Auxonne, slept " 18
+Dijon, a " 23
+Dijon, d Feb. 19, 1474
+Auxonne, slept " 20
+Dole " 21-March 8
+(Invested with the Franche Comte of Burgundy.)
+Besancon March 12 or 15
+Vesoul and Luxeuil March 23-28
+Lorraine " 28
+Luxemburg Apr. 4-June 9
+Easter fetes " 10
+Fete of the Order of the Garter " 23
+Brussels June 27]
+
+[Footnote 12: Kirk considers that they are well founded and too
+indecent to repeat.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+THE FIRST REVERSES
+
+1474-1475
+
+
+"Who is this that cometh, this that is glorious in his apparel,
+travelling in the greatness of his strength?" These words in Latin,
+on scrolls fluttering from the hands of living angels, met the eyes
+of Charles of Burgundy at his retarded arrival in Dijon. And the
+confident duke had no wish to disclaim the subtle flattery of the
+implied comparison between him and the subject of the words of the
+prophet.[1]
+
+The traveller had slept at Perigny, about a league from the capital
+of Burgundy, so as to make the last stage of his journey thither in
+leisurely state. Unpropitious weather on Saturday, January 22d, the
+appointed day, made postponement of the ducal parade necessary, out
+of consideration for the precious hangings and costly ecclesiastical
+robes that were to grace the ceremonies of reception and investiture.
+Fortunately, Sunday, January 23d, dawned fair, and heralds rode
+through the city streets at an early hour, proclaiming the duke's
+gracious intention to make his entry on that day. Immediately,
+tapestries were spread and every one was alert with the last
+preparations.
+
+[Illustration: A FORTIFIED CHURCH IN BURGUNDY - XVth Century]
+
+Lavish was the display of biblical phrases, like that cited, which
+were planted along the ducal way and on a succession of stagings
+erected for various exhibits. On the great city square, the platform
+was capacious and many actors played out divers roles. Here stood the
+scroll-bearing angels on either side of a living representation of
+Christ. In the background clustered three separate groups of people
+representing, respectively, the three Estates. Above their heads more
+inscriptions were to be read.[2] "All the nations desire to see the
+face of Solomon," "Behold him desired by all races," "Master, look on
+us, thy people," were among the legends.
+
+The stately pageant, in which dignitaries, lay and ecclesiastical,
+from other parts of the duke's domains participated, proceeded past
+all these soothing insinuations that Charles of Burgundy resembled
+Solomon in more ways than one, to the church of St. Benigne. Here
+pledges of mutual fidelity were exchanged between the Burgundians and
+their ruler. The Abbe of Citeaux placed the ducal ring solemnly
+upon Charles's finger as a symbol, and he was invested with all the
+prerogatives of his predecessors.
+
+From the church, the train wound its way to the Ste. Chapelle, past
+more stages decorated with more flowers of scriptural phrase such as
+"A lion which is strongest among beasts and turneth not away for any,"
+"The lion hath roared, who will not fear?" "The righteous are as bold
+as a lion," etc.
+
+Two days later, the concluding ceremonies of investiture were
+performed, and followed by a banquet. Charles was arrayed in royal
+robes, and his hat was in truth a crown, gorgeous with gold, pearls,
+and precious stones. After a repast, prelates, nobles, and civic
+deputies were convened in a room adjoining the dining-hall, where
+first they listened to a speech from the chancellor. When he had
+finished, the duke himself delivered an harangue wherein he expatiated
+on the splendours of the ancient kingdom of Burgundy. Wrongfully
+usurped by the French kings, it had been belittled into a duchy, a
+measure much to be regretted by the Burgundians. Then the speaker
+broke off abruptly with an ambiguous intimation "that he had in
+reserve certain things that none might know but himself."[3]
+
+What was the significance of these veiled allusions? It could not have
+been the simple scheme to erect a kingdom, because that was certainly
+known to many. Charles had, doubtless, an ostrich-like quality of
+mind which made him oblivious to the world's vision but even he could
+hardly have ignored the prevalence of the rumours regarding the
+interview of Treves, rumours flying north, east, south, and west.
+Might not this suggestion of secrets yet untold have had reference to
+the ripening intentions of Edward IV. and himself to divide France
+between them?
+
+When his own induction into his heritage was accomplished, Charles was
+ready to pay the last earthly tribute to his parents. A cortege had
+been coming slowly from Bruges bearing the bodies of Philip and
+Isabella to their final resting-place in the tomb at Dijon, to which
+they were at last consigned.[4]
+
+A few weeks more Charles tarried in the city of his birth, and then
+went to Dole where he was invested with the sovereignty of the
+Franche-Comte and confirmed the privileges. Thus after seven years of
+possession _de facto_, he first actually completed the formalities
+needful for the legal acquisition of his paternal heritage. The
+expansion of that heritage had been steady for over half a century.
+Every inch of territory that had come under the shadow of the family's
+administration had remained there, quickly losing its ephemeral
+character, so that temporary holdings were regarded in the same light
+as the estates actually inherited. At least, Charles, sovereign duke,
+count, overlord, mortgagee, made no distinction in the natures of his
+tenures. But just as the last link was legally riveted in his own
+chain of lands, he was to learn that there were other points of view.
+
+The statement is made and repeated, that the report of the duke's
+after-dinner speech at Dijon was a fresh factor in alarming the people
+in Alsace and Switzerland about his intentions, and making them hasten
+to shake off every tie that connected them with Charles and his
+ambitious projects of territorial expansion.[5] As a matter of fact,
+there had been for months constant agitation in the councils of the
+Swiss Confederation and the Lower Union as to the next action.
+
+Opposition to Sigismund had been long existent, antipathy to Austria
+was so deeply rooted that the idea of restoring that suzerainty in the
+Rhine valley was slow to gain adherents. Probably the arguments that
+came from France were what carried conviction. It was a time when
+Louis spared no expense to attain the end he desired, while he posed
+as a benevolent neutral.[6] His servants worked underground. Their
+open work was very cautious. It was French envoys, however, who
+announced to the Swiss Diet, convened at Lucerne, that Sigismund was
+quite ready to come to an understanding in regard to an alliance and
+the redemption of his mortgaged lands.
+
+That was on January 21, 1474, the very day when the mortgagee was
+preparing to ride into Dijon and read the agreeable assurances of his
+wisdom, strength, and puissance. Yet a month and Sigismund's envoys
+were seated on the official benches at the Basel diet, ranking with
+the delegates from the cantons and the emissaries from France. On
+March 27th, the diet met at Constance, and for three days a debate
+went on which resulted in the drafting of the _Ewige Richtung_,
+the _Reglement definitif_, a document which contained a definite
+resolution that the mortgaged lands were to be completely withdrawn
+from Burgundy, and all financial claims settled. This resolution was
+subscribed to by Sigismund and the Swiss cantons. Further, it was
+decided to ignore one or two of the stipulations made at St. Omer and
+to offer payment to Charles at Basel instead of Besancon.
+
+Meantime that creditor, perfectly convinced in his own mind that
+the legends of his birthplace were correct in their rating of his
+character and his qualities, again crossed Lorraine and entered
+Luxemburg, where he celebrated Easter. It was shortly after that
+festival, on April 17th, that a letter from Sigismund was delivered to
+him announcing in rather casual and off-hand terms that he was now in
+a position to repay the loan of 1469, made on the security of those
+Rhinelands. Therefore the Austrian would hand over at Basel 80,000
+florins, 40,000 the sum received by him, 10,000 paid in his behalf to
+the Swiss, and 30,000 which he understood that Charles had expended
+during his temporary incumbency,[7] and he, Sigismund, would resume
+the sovereignty in Alsace.
+
+It was all very simple, at least Sigismund's wish was. The expressions
+employed in the paper were, however, so ambiguous, the language so
+involved, that Charles expended severe criticism on his cousin's style
+before he proceeded to answer his subject-matter. To that he replied
+that the bargain between him and Sigismund was none of his seeking.
+The latter had implored his protection from the Swiss, had begged
+relief in his financial straits. Touched by his petitions, Charles
+had acceded to his prayers and the lands had enjoyed security under
+Burgundian protection as they never had under Austrian. Charles had
+duly acquitted himself of his obligations, he had done nothing to
+forfeit his title. The conditions of redemption offered by Sigismund
+were not those expressly stipulated. If a commission were sent to
+Besancon, the duke would see to it that the merits of the case were
+properly examined.
+
+"If, on the contrary, you shall adhere to the purpose you have
+declared, in violation of the terms of the contract and of your
+princely word, we shall make resistance, trusting with God's help that
+our ability in defence shall not prove inferior to what we have used
+to repulse the attacks of the Swiss--those attacks from which you
+sought and received our protection."
+
+Before this letter reached its destination, the duke's deputy in the
+mortgaged lands had already found his resources wholly inadequate to
+maintain his master's authority. After Charles departed from Alsace,
+Hagenbach's increased insolence and abandonment of all the restraint
+that he had shown while awaiting the duke's visit soon became
+unbearable. The deliberations in Switzerland concerning their return
+to Austrian domination also naturally affected the Alsatians and made
+them bolder in resenting Hagenbach's aggressions.
+
+Thann and Ensisheim were both firm in refusing admission to his
+garrisons. Brisac was in his hands already, and her fortifications
+held by mercenaries, but an order to the citizens to work, one and
+all, upon the defences, produced a sudden disturbance with very
+serious results. It was at Eastertide, and the command to desecrate a
+hallowed festival, one especially cherished in the Rhinelands, proved
+the final provocation to rebellion.
+
+There is a black story in the Strasburg chronicle, moreover, that this
+misuse of Easter Day was not Hagenbach's real crime. He simply
+wished to get all combatants out of the city before butchering the
+inhabitants and his purpose was discovered in time. That charge does
+not, however, seem substantiated by other evidence. But there is no
+doubt that the citizens lashed themselves into a state of fury, fell
+upon the mercenaries, and killed many of them in spite of their own
+unarmed condition. Hagenbach, driven back into his lodgings, appeared
+at the window and offered various concessions, being actually humbled
+and intimidated by the unexpected turning of the submissive folk
+against him.
+
+But the revolutionary spirit raged beyond the reach of conciliatory
+words. Some of the more intelligent burghers endeavoured to give a
+show of propriety to events, by promptly re-establishing their own
+ancient council, arbitrarily abolished by Hagenbach, while taking a
+new oath to the Duke of Burgundy, according to the formula of 1469.
+They also despatched envoys to the duke with explanations of their
+proceedings, stating further that it was Hagenbach's misrule alone to
+which protest was made; that they were not in revolt against Charles.
+The latter answered, "Send Hagenbach to me," but the provisional
+government, by the time they received this order, felt strong enough
+to disregard it and to continue to act on their own initiative.
+
+Hagenbach was cast not only into prison but into irons. All fear of
+and respect for his authority was thrown to the winds, his offer of
+fourteen thousand florins as ransom being sternly refused.
+
+Deputations came from the confederation to congratulate the officials
+_de facto_ and to promise aid. The next step gave the lie direct to
+the message sent to Charles upholding his authority while protesting
+against his lieutenant. Sigismund was urged to return to his own
+without further delay for legal formalities with his creditor. He
+assented. On April 30th, accordingly, the Austrian duke arrived in
+Brisac and picked up the reins of authority which he had joyfully
+dropped four years previously.
+
+The rabble welcomed his coming with effusion, singing a ready parody
+of an Easter hymn:[8]
+
+ "Christ is arisen, the _landvogt_ is in prison,
+ Let us all rejoice, Sigismund is our choice.
+ Kyrie Eleison!
+ Had he not been snared, evil had it fared,
+ But now that he is ta'en, his craft is all in vain.
+ Kyrie Eleison!"
+
+Thus it was under Sigismund's auspices that the late governor was
+brought to trial. Instruments of torture sent from Basel were employed
+to make Hagenbach confess his crimes. But there was nothing to
+confess. As a matter of fact the charges against him were for
+well-known deeds the character of which depended on the point of view.
+What the Alsatians declared were infringements of their rights, the
+duke's deputy stoutly asserted were acts justified by the terms of the
+treaty. In regard to his private career the prisoner persisted in
+his statement that he was no worse than other men and that all his
+so-called victims had been willing and well rewarded for their
+submission to him.
+
+On May 9th, the preliminaries were declared over and the trial began
+before a tribunal whose composition is not perfectly well known,
+but which certainly included delegates from the chief cities of the
+landgraviate, and from Strasburg, Basel, and Berne.[9]
+
+The trial was practically lynch law in spite of the cloak of legality
+thrown over it. Charles alone was Hagenbach's principal and he alone
+was responsible for his lieutenant's acts. The intrinsic incompetence
+of the court was hotly urged by Jean Irma of Basel, Hagenbach's
+self-appointed advocate, but his defence was rejected. Public opinion
+insisted upon extreme measures, and the sentence of capital punishment
+was promptly followed by execution.
+
+Petitions from the prisoner that he might die by the sword and be
+permitted to bequeath a portion of his property to the church of
+St. Etienne at Brisac were granted. The remainder of his wealth was
+confiscated by Sigismund, who had withdrawn to Fribourg during the
+progress of the trial. Even Hagenbach's bitterest foes acknowledged
+that the late governor made a dignified and Christian exit from the
+life he had not graced.
+
+Charles is said to have beaten well the messenger who brought him the
+news of this trial and execution, in the very presence of Sigismund
+who had not yet bought back his rights in the landgraviate, where he
+had appointed Oswald von Thierstein as governor, and where he was thus
+presuming to use sovereign power. This was not sufficient, however,
+to make the duke change his own plans. Stephen von Hagenbach was
+entrusted with the commission of punishing the Alsatians for his
+brother's ignominious deposition, and he did his task grimly.
+According to the Strasburg chronicler, this Hagenbach, at the north,
+and his colleague, the Count of Blamont, at the south, did not have
+more than six or eight thousand men apiece, but they left Hun-like
+reputations behind them. Devastation, slaughter, pillage in houses and
+churches, all in the name of the duke, contributed to the zeal with
+which the Austrian's return was ratified by popular acclamation, and
+with which the contingents sent to Alsace by the confederates were
+received.
+
+Sigismund's letter to Charles is casual in tone and obscure in
+phraseology. A statement presented somewhat later to the emperor by
+the _Basse Union_ is more precise in the justification offered for the
+events and in the grievances rehearsed.[10] That is, Sigismund treats
+the transaction as a purely financial one, naturally completed between
+him and his creditor by the offer to liquidate his debt. The plea made
+by the Alsatians and their friends is, that Charles had failed to keep
+his solemn engagements and that his appointed lieutenant had been
+peculiarly odious and had broken the laws of God and man, and that the
+mercenaries employed by him, the Burgundians, Lombardians, and their
+fellows, had pitilessly ravaged the county of Ferrette, the Sundgau,
+and the diocese of Basel. The charges are itemised.[11]
+
+ "All this, well-known to the Duke of Burgundy, has neither been
+ checked nor punished by him. In consequence, our gracious Seigneur
+ of Austria has been obliged to restore the land and people to his
+ sovereignty and that of the House of Austria, which he has done
+ with God's aid to prevent the complete annihilation and total
+ destruction of land and people."
+
+Charles did not hasten to Alsace to settle matters in person, but
+pursued his intention of reducing Cologne to the archbishop's control,
+undoubtedly thinking that the base which would then be open to the
+archbishop's protector on the lower Rhine would facilitate his
+operations in the upper valleys. Meanwhile the Emperor Frederic had
+emphatically declared that he alone was the Defender of the Diocese,
+and that the unholy alliance between Robert and Charles was a menace
+to the empire. His letters to Charles exhorted him to abandon the
+enterprise and to accept mediation; those to the electors, princes,
+and cities of the empire urged them to defend Cologne against Burgundy
+until he himself arrived on the scene. There was a hot correspondence
+between all parties concerned, from which nothing resulted. Charles
+had various reasons for delay. There was trouble in other quarters of
+his domain. Flanders was in a state of ferment at his requisitions
+for money, and the Franche-Comte was on the point of making active
+resistance to the imposition of the _gabelle_.
+
+In view of all these complications, Charles decided to prolong his
+truce with Louis XI., to May 1, 1475. That monarch was well pleased
+to continue to pursue his own plans under cover of neutrality. The
+determination of the anti-Burgundian coalition in Germany to keep
+Charles within the limits of his own estates was a pleasant sight to
+the French king, and he felt that he could afford to wait.
+
+In June an edict was sent forth from Luxemburg, forbidding all owing
+allegiance to the Duke of Burgundy to have any commercial relations
+with the rebels of Cologne, or of Alsace, or with the cities of the
+_Basse Union_, and declaring the duke's intention to take the field
+at once, to reinstate the archbishop in his rightful see. This was a
+declaration of war and was speedily followed by the duke's advance
+to Maestricht, where he spent a few days in July, collecting a force
+which finally amounted to about twenty thousand men.
+
+On the 29th he sat down before Neuss, which had again emphatically
+refused entry to him and his troops. Three days the duke gave himself
+for the reduction of the town, but there he remained encamped for
+nearly a whole year! Neuss was resolved to resist to the last
+extremity, while Bonn, Andernach, and Cologne contributed their
+assistance by worrying and harassing the besiegers to the best of
+their ability. It was a period when Charles seemed to have only one
+sure ally, and that was Edward of England, whose own plans were
+forming for a mighty enterprise--no less than a new invasion of
+France.
+
+On July 25th, the very day that Charles was on his march up to Neuss,
+his envoys signed at London a treaty wherein the duke promised Edward
+six thousand men to aid him to "reconquer his realm of France."
+Nothing loth to dispose of his future chickens, Edward, in his turn,
+pledged himself to cede to Charles and his heirs, without any lien
+of vassalage, the duchy of Bar, the countships of Champagne, Nevers,
+Rethel, Eu, and Guise, all the towns on the Somme, and all the estates
+of the Count of St. Pol. Other territories of Charles were to be
+exempt from homage. Yes, and by June 1, 1475, Edward would land in
+France and set about his conquests. Nor were commercial interests
+forgotten; "to the duchess his sister (to the Flemings) is accorded
+permission, to take from England wool, woollen goods, brass, lead, and
+to carry thither foreign merchandise."
+
+The year when Charles was waiting before the gates of Neuss was full
+of many abortive diplomatic efforts on the part of both the duke and
+Louis XI, and it was the latter who managed to save something even
+from broken bargains. The Swiss not only counted on his friendship,
+but were constantly encouraged by his money, which emboldened them to
+send a letter of open defiance to Charles: "We declare to your most
+serene highness and to all of your people, in behalf of ourselves
+and our friends, an honourable and an open war." To the herald who
+delivered this document Charles answered: "O Berne, Berne!"[12] He
+felt that he had been betrayed.
+
+This was on October 26th. The defiance was followed by a descent of
+the mountaineers upon Alsace, which Charles had not yet released
+from his grasp. Stephen von Hagenbach prepared to defend Burgundian
+interests at Hericourt, a good strategic position on the tiny Luzine.
+Here, the Swiss were about to besiege him, when the Count of Blamont
+arrived with two bodies of Italian mercenaries, aggregating more than
+twelve thousand men, and attempted to draw off the besieging force.
+His plan failed--the tables were turned. It was the Burgundians who
+were fiercely attacked and who lost the day. Hagenbach was forced to
+surrender, obtaining honourable terms, however, and Sigismund put a
+garrison into Hericourt on November 16th.
+
+This was a tremendous surprise to Charles. That cowherds could repulse
+his well-trained troops was a thought as bitter as it was unexpected.
+But he put aside all idea of punishing them for the moment, and
+continued to "reduce Neuss to the obedience of the good archbishop,"
+and Hermann of Hesse continued to aid the town in its determined
+resistance.
+
+The opprobrious names applied to the would-be and baffled conqueror at
+this time are curiously similar to the epithets hurled at Napoleon
+a few centuries later. He was compared to Anti-Christ himself, with
+demoniac attributes added, when Alexander was felt to be too mild a
+comparison. There was still a terrible fear of the duke's ambition,
+even though, in the face of all Europe, the Swiss had repulsed his
+men, and Neuss obstinately refused to open her gates, while the world
+wondered at the duke's obstinacy displayed in the wrong place. The
+belief expressed several times by Commines that God troubled Charles's
+understanding out of very pity for France, was a current rumour.
+
+At the end of April an English embassy arrived at the camp, which was
+kept in a marvellous state of luxury, even though disease was not
+successfully curbed in the ranks. The urgent entreaty of the embassy
+was that Charles should raise this useless siege, fruitless as it
+promised to be, owing to the difficulty of cutting off the town's
+supplies. Edward IV was almost ready to despatch his invading army.
+He implored his dear brother to send him transports and to prepare to
+receive him when he landed. A letter from John Paston gives a glimpse
+into the situation[13]:
+
+ "For ffor tydyngs here ther be but ffewe saffe that the assege
+ lastyth stylle by the Duke off Burgoyn affoor Nuse, and the
+ Emperor hath besyged also not fferr from there a castill and
+ another town in lykewyse wherin the Duke's men ben. And also, the
+ Frenshe Kynge, men seye, is comen right to the water off Somme
+ with 4000 spers; and sum men have that he woll, at the daye off
+ brekyng off trewse, or else beffoor, sette uppon the Duks contreys
+ heer. When I heer moor, I shall sende yowe moor tydyngs.
+
+ "The Kyngs imbassators, Sir Thomas Mongomere and the Master off
+ the Rolls be comyng homwards ffrom Nuse; and as ffor me, I thynke
+ I sholde be sek but iff I see it....
+
+ "For it is so that to morrow I purpose to ryde in to Flaundyrs
+ to purveye me off horse and herneys and percase I shall see the
+ essege at Nwse er I come ageyn."
+
+There was more reason for Charles to be heartsick at the sight than
+for John Paston, and he did grow weary of the further waiting and
+anxious, for his truce with Louis was drawing to a close. On May 22d,
+there was a skirmish between his troops and the imperial forces,
+wherein Charles claimed the victory. In reality, there was none on
+either side, but the semblance was sufficient to soothe his _amour
+propre_, and to convince him that an accommodation with Frederic would
+not detract from his dignity.
+
+A large fleet of Dutch flatboats had been despatched to help convey
+the English army, thirsting for conquest, across the sea. Six thousand
+men in the duke's pay, too, were to be ready to meet Edward IV., and
+swell his escort as he marched to Rheims for his coronation. Other
+matters also demanded Charles's personal attention. Months had elapsed
+and Hericourt was unpunished--Berne had not been reproved.
+
+Rene of Lorraine was formally admitted to the League of Constance on
+April 18, 1475, and was now ready openly to abjure the "protection" he
+had once accepted from Burgundy. There was a touch of old King Rene's
+theatrical taste in his grandson's method of despatching the herald
+who rode up to the duke's gorgeous tent of red velvet on May 10th. The
+man was, however, so overcome at the first view of _le Temeraire_ that
+he hastily delivered up his letter, and threw down the blood-stained
+gauntlet, which he carried as a gage of war, without uttering a word.
+Then he fell on his knees, imploring the duke's pardon.[14] Charles
+was so little displeased at the signs of the impression his presence
+made that, instead of being angry with the man, he gave him twelve
+florins for his good news. The terms of the declaration of war carried
+by the herald were as follows:
+
+ "To thee, Charles of Burgundy, in behalf of the very high, etc.,
+ Duke of Lorraine, my seigneur, I announce defiance with fire and
+ blood against thee, thy countries, thy subjects, thy allies, and
+ other charge further have I not."[15]
+
+The reply was straightforward:
+
+ "Herald, I have heard the exposition of thy charge, whereby thou
+ hast given me subject for joy, and, to show you how matters are,
+ thou shalt wear my robe with this gift, and shalt tell thy master
+ that I will find myself briefly in his land, and my greatest fear
+ is that I may not find him. In order that thou mayst not be afraid
+ to return, I desire my marshal and the king-at-arms of the Toison
+ d'Or to convoy thee in perfect safety, for I should be sorry if
+ thou didst not make thy report to thy master as befits a good and
+ loyal officer."
+
+Thus was Charles pressed from the south and lured to the north.
+Excellent reason for obeying the order of the pope's legate that duke
+and emperor must lay down arms under pain of excommunication did
+either belligerent refuse! The armistice accepted on May 28th was
+followed by a nine months' truce signed on June 12th. It was a truce
+strictly to the advantage of Frederic and Charles. The Rhine cities,
+Louis XI., Rene of Lorraine, were alike ignored and disappointed in
+the expectations they had based on Frederic.
+
+
+[Footnote 1: Plancher, _Histoire generale et particuliere de
+Bourgogne, avec des notes et des preuves justificatives_, iv.,
+cccxxviii.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Preparations for the duke's visit to Dijon had been set
+on foot almost immediately after Philip's death in 1467. One Frere
+Gilles had devoted many hours to searching the Scriptures for
+appropriate texts to figure in the reception. Every phrase indicating
+leonine strength was noted down. The good brother died before the
+anticipated event came to pass but the result of his patient labour
+was preserved.]
+
+[Footnote 3: _Dit qu'il avoit en soi des choses qui n'appartenoient de
+scavoir a nuls que a lui_ (Plancher, _Preuves_, iv., cccxxxiii.).]
+
+[Footnote 4: Plancher, _Preuves_, iv., cccxxxiii. The document
+describing this ceremony gives February 28th as the date, but that is
+evidently an error and not accepted.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Toutey, p. 117.]
+
+[Footnote 6: There are many records in the_Bibl. nat._. of the sums
+paid out to the Swiss at this time.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Chmel, i., 92 et seq.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Kirk, ii., 488.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Toutey, p. 141.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Text given by Toutey, _Pieces justificatives_, p. 442.]
+
+[Footnote 11: The details are very brutal and untranslatable.]
+
+[Footnote 12: Toutey, p. 182.]
+
+[Footnote 13: _Paston Letters_, iii., 122.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Toutey, p. 244.]
+
+[Footnote 15: _Bulletin de l'acad. royale de Belgique_, 1887.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+THE CAMPAIGNS OF 1475
+
+
+ "Monseigneur the chancellor, I do not know what to write to you of
+ the English, for thus far they have done nothing but dance at St.
+ Omer and we are not sure whether the King of England has landed.
+ If he has, it must be with so small a force that it makes no
+ noise, nor do the prisoners captured at Abbeville know anything,
+ nor do they believe that there will be any English here in XL
+ days. Tell the news to Monsg. de Comminge, and recommend my
+ interests to him as I have confidence in him, and in Mons. de
+ Thierry and Mons. the vice-admiral."[1]
+
+Thus wrote Louis XI in June. Two days later and he has heard of the
+truce. He seizes the occasion to express to the Privy Council of Berne
+his real opinion of the emperor: "So Frederic has deserted us all!"[2]
+Well, it was not the first time! Thirty years previous, when Louis was
+dauphin, the emperor had tried to turn the Swiss against him. Had not
+God, knowing the hearts of men, inspired the brave mountaineers, Louis
+would have been a victim of execrable treachery. The outcome had been
+wonderful, for an eternal friendship had sprung up between him and the
+Swiss which must be preserved.
+
+Meantime, Charles has made his own definite plan of the campaign which
+was to introduce Edward into Rheims for the coronation. The following
+letter from him to Edward IV. bears no date, but it was evidently
+written at about the time of the truce[3]:
+
+ "Honoured seigneur and brother, I recommend myself to you. I have
+ listened carefully to your declaration through the pronotary, and
+ understand that you do not wish to land without my advice, for
+ which I thank you. I understand that some of your counsellors
+ think you had better land in Guienne, others in Normandy, others
+ again at Calais. If you choose Guienne you will be far from my
+ assistance but my brother of Brittany could help you. Still it
+ would be a long time before we could meet before Paris. As to
+ Calais, you could not get enough provisions for your people nor I
+ for mine. Nor could the two forces make juncture without attack,
+ and my brother of Brittany would be very far from both. To my
+ mind, your best landing is Normandy, either at the mouth of the
+ Seine or at La Hogue. I do not doubt that you will soon gain
+ possession of cities and places, and you will be at the right hand
+ of my brother of Brittany and of me. Tell me how many ships you
+ want and where you wish me to send them and I will do it."
+
+On hearing further rumours of the actual arrival of the English, Louis
+hastened to Normandy to inspect the situation for himself. There he
+learned that his own naval forces stationed in the Channel to ward off
+the invaders had landed on the very day before his arrival, abandoning
+the task.
+
+ "When I heard that we took no action, I decided that my best plan
+ would be to turn my people loose in Picardy and let them lay
+ waste the country whence they [the English] expected to get their
+ supplies."[4]
+
+At the same time, the rumour that was permitted to be current in
+France was, that Charles of Burgundy had been utterly defeated at
+Neuss, and that there was nothing whatsoever to apprehend from him.
+He, meanwhile, was continuing his own preparations by strenuous
+endeavours to levy more troops and to obtain fresh supplies. After
+the signing of the convention with the emperor, the duke proceeded to
+Bruges to meet the Estates of Flanders. The answer to his demand for
+subsidies was a respectful refusal to furnish funds, on the plea that
+his expansion policy was ruining his lands. Counter reproaches burst
+from Charles. He accused the deputies of leaving him in the lurch and
+thus causing his failure at Neuss. Neither money, nor provisions, nor
+soldiers had they sent him as loyal subjects should.
+
+[Illustration: KING RUHMREICH AND HIS DAUGHTER EHRENREICH
+
+CHARACTERS REPRESENTING CHARLES AND MARY OF BURGUNDY IN WOODCUT IN
+EARLY EDITION OF TEMDANK. POEM BY MAXIMILIAN I.]
+
+ "For whom does your prince labour? Is it for himself or for you,
+ for your defence? You slumber, he watches. You nestle in warmth,
+ he is cold. You are snug in your houses while he is beaten by the
+ wind and rain. He fasts, you gorge at your ease.... Henceforth you
+ shall be nothing more than subjects under a sovereign. I am and I
+ will be master, bearding those who oppose me."[5]
+
+Then turning to the prelates he continued: "Do you obey diligently and
+without poor excuses or your temporal goods shall be confiscated."
+To the nobles: "Obey or you shall lose your heads and your fiefs."
+Finally, he addressed the deputies of the third estate in a tone full
+of bitterness: "And you, you eaters of good cities, if you do not obey
+my orders literally as my chancellor will explain them to you, you
+shall forfeit privileges, property, and life."
+
+All the fervency of this adjuration failed to convince the deputies of
+their duty, as conceived by the orator. They declared that they had
+levied troops and would levy more, for defence, but that the four
+members of Flanders were agreed that they would contribute nothing to
+offensive measures. Charles must accept their decision as his sainted
+father had done. The details of all the aid they had given him, 2500
+men for Neuss and many other contributions, were recapitulated.
+Flanders had been generous indeed. The concluding phrases of their
+answer were as follows:
+
+ "As to your last letters, requiring that within fifteen days every
+ man capable of bearing arms report at Ath, these were orders
+ impossible of execution, and unprofitable for you yourself. Your
+ subjects are merchants, artisans, labourers, unfitted for arms.
+ Strangers would quit the land. Commerce, in which your noble
+ ancestors have for four hundred years maintained the land,
+ commerce, most redoubtable seigneur, is irreconcilable with war."
+
+This answer gave the true key to the situation. The Estates of
+Flanders were determined to be bled no further for schemes in which
+they did not sympathise. When this memorial was presented to Charles
+he broke out into fresh invective about the base ingratitude of the
+Flemish: "Take back your paper," were his last words. "Make your own
+answer. _Talk_ as you wish, but _do_ your duty." This was on July
+12th. Charles had no further time to waste in argument. He was still
+convinced that the burghers would, in the end, yield to his demands.
+
+With a small escort Charles left Bruges, and reached Calais on July
+14th, where he had been preceded by the duchess, eager to greet her
+brother, who had actually landed on July 4th, with the best equipped
+army--about twenty-four thousand men--that had ever left the shores of
+England, and the latest inventions in besieging engines.
+
+The expedition proved a wretched failure--a miserable disappointment
+to the English at home, who had been lavish in their contributions.
+Charles seems to have been put out by the place of landing. His own
+plan is clear from the letter quoted. He wished the two armies of
+Edward and himself to sweep a large stretch of territory as they
+marched toward each other. The one thing that he objected to was a
+consolidation of the two forces. Incapacity to turn an unexpected or
+an unwelcome situation to account was one of the duke's most
+deeply ingrained characteristics. He showed no inventiveness or
+resourcefulness. He held his own army at a distance from the English,
+much to the invader's chagrin, who was forced to march unaided over
+regions rendered inhospitable by Louis's stern orders, and outside
+of cities ready to hold him at bay. "If you do not put yourself in a
+state of security, it will be necessary to destroy the city, to our
+regret," was the king's message to Rheims, and the most skilful of
+French engineers was fully prepared to make good the words.
+
+Open hostilities were avoided. Edward camped on the field of
+Agincourt, where perhaps he dreamed of his ancestor's success, but
+no fresh blaze of old English glory illumined his path. He did not
+proceed to Paris, there was no coronation at Rheims, no comfortable
+reception within any gates at all, for Charles was as chary as Louis
+himself of giving the English a foothold, though he advised Edward to
+accept an invitation from St. Pol to visit St. Quentin. This, however,
+proved another disappointment. Just as Edward was ready to enter,
+the gates opened to let out a troop which effectually repulsed the
+advancing foreigners. The Count of St. Pol had changed his mind.
+
+"It is a miserable existence this of ours when we take toil and
+trouble enough to shorten our life, writing and saying things exactly
+opposite to our thoughts," writes the keenest observer of this
+elaborate network of pompous falsehoods[6] wherein every action was
+entangled. Louis XI trusted no one but himself, while he played
+with the trust of all, and his game was the safest. His fear of the
+invaders was soon allayed. "These English are of different metal from
+those whom you used to know. They keep close, they attempt nothing,"
+he wrote to the veteran Dammartin.
+
+It was, indeed, a patent fact that Edward was not a foe to be feared.
+Baffled and discouraged, he readily opened his ears to his French
+brother, and Louis heaped grateful recognition on every Englishman who
+helped incline his sovereign to peaceful negotiations. Velvet and
+coin did their work. Edward was easily led into the path of least
+resistance, and an interview between the rival kings was appointed
+for August 29th. Great preparations were made for their meeting on a
+bridge at Picquigny, across which a grating was erected. Like Pyramus
+and Thisbe, the two princes kissed each other through the barriers,
+and exchanged assurances of friendship. Edward was, indeed, so easy to
+convince that Louis was in absolute terror lest his English brother
+would accept his invitation to show him Paris before his return. No
+wonder Edward was deceived, for Louis was definite in his hospitable
+offers, suggesting that he would provide a confessor willing to give
+absolution for pleasant sins.
+
+The duke was duly forewarned of this colloquy. On August 18th, he was
+staying at Peronne, whence he paid a visit to the English camp. It was
+ended without any intimation of Edward's change of heart towards the
+French king whom he had come to depose, though his plan was then ripe.
+On the 20th, Charles received a written communication with the news
+which Edward had disliked broaching orally, and was officially
+informed that the king had yielded to the wishes of his army, and was
+considering a treaty with Louis XI., wherein Edward's dear brother of
+Burgundy should receive honourable mention did he desire it.
+
+On hearing these most unwelcome tidings, Charles set off for the
+English camp in hot haste, attended by a small escort, and nursing
+his wrath as he rode.[7] King Edward was rather alarmed at the duke's
+aspect when the latter appeared, and asked whether he would not like a
+private interview. Charles disregarded his question. "Is it true? Have
+you made peace?" he demanded. Edward's attempt at smooth explanations
+was blocked by a flood of invectives poured out by Charles, who
+remembered himself sufficiently to speak in English so that the
+bystanders might have the full benefit of his passionate reproaches.
+He spared nothing, comparing the lazy, sensual, pleasure-loving
+monarch, whose easeful ways were rapidly increasing his weight of
+flesh, with the heroism of other English Edwards with whom he was
+proud to claim kin. As to the offers to remember his interests in
+the perfidious peace that perfidious Albion was about to swear
+with equally perfidious France, his rejection was scornful indeed.
+"Negotiate for _me_! Arbitrate for _me_! Is it I who wanted the French
+crown? Leave _me_ to make my own truce. I will wait until you have
+been three months over sea." Among those who witnessed the scene were
+several Englishmen who sympathised with Charles--if we may believe
+Commines. "The Duke of Burgundy has said the truth," declared the Duke
+of Gloucester, and many agreed with him." Having given vent to his
+sentiments, Charles hurried away from his disappointing ally and
+reached Namur on the 22d, where he spent the night.
+
+Edward troubled himself little about his brother-in-law's summary of
+his character. He was tired of camp hardships, and both he and his men
+found it very refreshing to have Amiens open her gates to them at the
+order of Louis XI. Food and wine were lavished upon all alike. It
+was a delightful experience for the English soldiers to see tables
+groaning with good things spread in the very streets, and to be bidden
+to order what they would at the taverns with no consideration for the
+reckoning. They enjoyed good French fare, free of charge, until their
+host intimated to King Edward that his men were very intoxicated and
+that there were limits in all things. But Louis did not spare his
+money or his pains until he was sure that a bloodless victory had been
+won. He fully realised the importance of extravagant expenditure in
+order to reach the goal he had set himself.
+
+ "We must have the whole sum at Amiens before Friday evening,
+ besides what will be wanted for private gratifications to my Lord
+ Howard, and others who have had part in the arrangement.... Do not
+ fail in this that there may be no pretext for a rupture of what
+ has been already settled."
+
+Though they had now no rood of land, the English returned richer than
+they came, and they eased their _amour propre_ by calling the sums
+that had changed hands, "tribute money."[8]
+
+ "Ryght reverend and my most tender and kynd Moodre, I recommende
+ me to youw. Pleas it yow to weete that blessyd be God, this vyage
+ of the kynges is fynnysshyd for thys tyme and alle the kynges ost
+ is comen to Caleys as on Mondaye last past, that is to seye the
+ iiij daye of Septembre, and at thys daye many of hys host be
+ passyd the see in to Ingland ageyn, and in especiall my Lorde off
+ Norfolk, and my bretheryn ....I also mysselyke somewhat the heyr
+ heer; for by my trowte I was in goode heele whan I come hyddre and
+ all hooll and to my wetyng I hadde never a better stomake in my
+ lyffe and now in viij dayes I am crasyd ageyn."[9]
+
+Thus wrote one Englishman from Calais and doubtless many others found
+the air more wholesome at home.
+
+Charles of Burgundy was now ready to consider the affairs of Lorraine.
+He advised Rene of his intentions, in a manifesto which reached him
+on September 5th. The preamble contained a long list of the manifold
+benefits conferred upon Lorraine by the House of Burgundy. Then Rene
+was admonished to observe in every particular the terms of his own
+treaty with Charles, which he, Rene, had signed voluntarily, or the
+former would "make him know the difference between his friendship and
+his enmity."
+
+This menace was ominous to the poor Duke of Lorraine. For on September
+13th, his friend Louis XI. had signed a fresh treaty with Charles
+of Burgundy at Soleure, and Campobasso was marching mercenaries in
+Burgundian pay towards the unfortunate duchy. In other words, the
+French king abandoned the young protege whom he had spared no pains
+to alienate from Burgundian protection. It was a moment when his one
+interest apparently was to settle accounts with the Count of St.
+Pol, who had been equally treacherous in his dealings with England,
+Burgundy, and France.[10]
+
+Having rested during the summer, the Burgundian troops were in fine
+trim when Charles marched to Nancy, taking towns on the way, and sat
+down before the capital in the last week of October. From his camp he
+wrote to the Duke of Milan:
+
+ "Very dear brother, I recommend myself to you. I have just
+ accepted a truce with the king for nine years to come, in the form
+ and manner contained at length in the copy of the articles which
+ I have given to your ambassador, resident with me . . . . And be
+ sure, _fratello mio_, that nothing would have induced me to accept
+ the truce, had you not been comprised therein. And, similarly, you
+ must be satisfied in all the pacts between the king and myself,
+ just as you were comprised in the convention lately made at Neuss.
+
+ "For the rest, I have heard from your ambassador about the troops
+ that can be furnished me, for which I am well content, praying you
+ to continue to serve me in accordance with the promises of your
+ ambassador. As to the coming of your brother to me [Sforza, Duc de
+ Bari], I should be very glad. He has no reason now for delay as he
+ can travel in Lorraine as safely as in Lombardy, as I have said
+ to your ambassador. Pray the Lord to give you the desires of your
+ heart.
+
+
+ "Written in my camp at Nancy the penultimate day of October, 1475.
+
+ "CHARLES."[11]
+
+
+Some trifling assistance was offered to Rene by Strasburg and other
+foes to Burgundy, but it was wholly insufficient to rescue him from
+his difficulties, and he was finally obliged to order the capitulation
+of Nancy on November 19th. The magistrates desired to hold out, but
+were forced by the populace to submit, and on November 30, 1475,
+Charles of Burgundy marched triumphantly through the gate of Craffe
+into the capital of Lorraine where he was received as the sovereign
+duke.[12]
+
+This time Charles acted the role of a merciful and diplomatic
+conqueror. There was no cruelty permitted, and every evidence of
+conciliation was shown. The majority of the Lorrainers accepted the
+new order of things without further protest. At the end of December,
+Charles convened the Estates of Lorraine in the ducal palace,
+addressed them as his subjects of Burgundy, promised to be a good
+prince, demanded their attachment, confided his plans of expansion,
+and announced his intention of making Nancy the capital of his states.
+Again the duke's star rose. This acquisition seemed a sign of the
+reality of his dreams. Even before the fall of Nancy, his approaching
+success bore fruit, inasmuch as the emperor changed the late
+convention into a firmer treaty signed on November 17th. Indeed had
+Charles died at that moment, there would have been little doubt that
+his dreamed-of kingdom had been simply prevented by a mere accident.
+
+The detailed story of all that had happened in the Swiss Confederation
+and the Lower Union, since their formal declaration of war against
+Charles, is too complicated to relate. At the begining of 1476, the
+situation was, briefly, that Sigismund held the debated mortgaged
+lands, while the Swiss allies, with Berne as the most militant member
+of the league, had continued to carry on offensive operations against
+the duke and his allies, notably the Duchess of Savoy. The conquest
+of Lorraine caused a panic, especially in the face of the fresh
+agreements between the duke and the emperor and the king.
+
+There was a short period of hesitation, marked by a truce till January
+1, 1476, between Charles and the confederates, a period when the timid
+among the allies urged their counsel of reconciliation at all hazards.
+Charles, too, seems to have desired an accord rather than hostilities,
+even though he still bore the Swiss a bitter grudge for Hericourt. It
+was probably appeals from Yolande of Savoy that decided him to open a
+campaign in midwinter.
+
+ "The prince has been so busy for a week past [wrote the Milanese
+ ambassador] in the reorganisation of his army according to new
+ ordinances, and in the regulation of his receipts and outlays that
+ he has scarcely given himself time to eat once in twenty-four
+ hours. He is importuned by the Duchess of Savoy and the Count of
+ Romont for aid against the Swiss who respect no treaty, and do
+ not cease increasing their forces. In consequence, Duke Charles
+ intends leaving Nancy in six days to go towards the Jura. He
+ expects to take with him 2300 lances and 10,000 ordnance, which,
+ joined to the feudal militia of Burgundy and Savoy, will swell his
+ army to the number of 25,000 combatants. His operations are so
+ planned that he will have more to gain than to lose."[13]
+
+
+When Charles left Nancy on January 11th, he issued one of his
+grandiloquent manifestoes declaring that he was acting in behalf of
+all princes and seigneurs who had suffered wrong at the hands of the
+Swiss, and that he was ready to punish all who had provoked his just
+wrath by ravaging his province of Burgundy. It was rather a curious
+act on his part, to let his chief mercenary captain go off to make a
+pilgrimage just as he was on the eve of a campaign, but so he did,
+granting Campobasso leave of absence to visit the shrine of St. James
+at Compostella, a leave possibly utilised by the Italian to further
+the understanding with Louis XI., at which he arrived later.
+
+On across the Jura marched the Burgundian army, while the Swiss diet
+came to a slow and confused decision to prepare to meet him. He did
+not take the route generally expected, directly towards Berne, his
+chief antagonist, but turned aside and attacked the little fortress of
+Granson. The castle was not over strong. Efforts to provision it by
+water failed, and, finally, on February 28th, after a brief siege, the
+captain of the garrison, Hans Wyler, capitulated to the duke's German
+forces, who represented to them that Charles was as generous as he was
+magnificent.
+
+If the Milan ambassador can be trusted, the surrender was
+unconditional. Charles was soon on the spot. The four hundred and
+twelve soldiers, who had succeeded in holding the Burgundian army at
+bay for ten whole days, were made to march past his tent with bowed
+heads. Then he ordered one and all to be hanged, reserving two to
+help in the executions. Four hours were occupied in fulfilling these
+pitiless orders. Panigarola arrived at the camp on the 29th,--it was
+leap year, 1476,--and found this accomplished and saw the bodies
+hanging on the trees, but he asserts that no word was broken.[14]
+Charles was now absolutely confident of complete success. "_Bellorum
+eventus dubii sunt_," remarked the prudent Milanese, however, and he
+was proved right.
+
+When the allied forces of the mountaineers finally arrived in the
+duke's neighbourhood a hot pitched battle ensued. The Burgundians,
+led by the duke in person, were thrown into utter confusion. The
+mercenaries, terrified by the uncouth yells and battle-cries of Uri
+and Unterwalden, simply lost their heads and did nothing. Charles was
+pushed on as far as Jougne. It was not only a defeat, but a complete
+rout. When the Swiss came in sight of the late garrison hanged to
+the trees, their rage knew no bounds. In their turn they massacred,
+hanged, and drowned every one in Burgundian pay whom they could lay
+hands upon. The Burgundians saved their lives when they could, but
+their valuable artillery and their baggage, the mass of riches that
+Charles carried with him were ruthlessly sacrificed, and gathered
+up contemptuously as booty by the Swiss, who cared little for the
+tapestries and jewels though they prized the gold. Such was the battle
+of Granson, on the 2nd of March.
+
+The fatal mistake committed by Charles was that he despised his enemy
+and underestimated his quality as well as his strength. Just before
+engaging in battle, the whole Swiss army fell upon their knees in
+prayer that the issue might be successful. This action deceived
+Charles into thinking that they were cowardly and his opinion was
+shared by his men. A contemptuous laugh broke out from the Burgundian
+ranks.[15]
+
+Olivier de la Marche ends a meagre account of Granson with the
+following rather barren words[16]:
+
+ "In short the Duke of Burgundy lost the day and was pushed back as
+ far as Jougne, where he stopped, and it is meet that I tell how
+ the duke's bodyguard saved themselves ... and reached Salins where
+ I saw them arrive for I was not present at the battle on account
+ of a malady I suffered. From Jougne the duke went to Noseret, and
+ you can understand that he was very sad and melancholy at having
+ lost the battle, where his rich baggage was stolen and his army
+ shattered."
+
+On March 21, 1476, Sir John Paston writes to Margaret Paston from
+Calais:
+
+ "As ffor tydyngs heer we her ffrom alle the worlde. ... Item, the
+ Duke of Burgoyne hath conqueryd Lorreyn and Queen Margreet shall
+ nott nowe be lykelyhod have it; wherffer the Frenshe kynge
+ cheryssheth hyr butt easelye; but afftr thys conquest off Loreyn
+ the Duke toke grete corage to goo upon the londe off the Swechys
+ [Swiss] to conquer them butt the berded hym att an onsett place
+ and hathe dystrussyd hym and hathe slayne the most part of his
+ vanwarde and wonne all hys ordynnaunce and artylrye and mor ovyr
+ all stuffe thatt he hade in hys ost with hym; exceppte men and
+ horse ffledde nott but they roode that nyght xx myle; and so the
+ ryche saletts, heulmetts garters, nowchys[17] gelt and all is
+ goone with tente pavylons and all and soo men deme hys pryde is
+ abatyd. Men tolde hym that they were ffrowarde karlys butte he
+ wolde nott beleve it and yitt men seye that he woll to them ageyn.
+ Gode spede them bothe."
+
+Many of the rumours that were current represented Charles as
+completely prostrated by his disaster. This was only half true.
+His efforts to retrieve himself were immediate but, physically, he
+certainly showed the effects of this campaign. He was attacked by a
+low fever, his stomach rejected food, insomnia afflicted his nights,
+and dropsical swellings appeared on his legs. This condition was
+attributed to his fatigues and exposure in a hard climate, and to his
+habit of drinking warm barley-water in the morning. He was urged to
+use a soft feather-bed instead of his hard couch, while Yolande's own
+physician and one Angelo Catto watched anxiously over him. The latter
+claimed the credit of saving his life. Charles was not, however, fully
+recovered when he resumed his activities and held a review on May 9th.
+With all his efforts exerted in every quarter likely to yield results,
+the whole number of troops was but twenty thousand men. Every onlooker
+felt that the duke was now trying to accomplish something quite beyond
+his resources.
+
+ "Illustrious prince [wrote the King of Hungary[18]], we cannot
+ sufficiently wonder that you should have been so gravely deceived
+ and that, after having once found that you were lured into loss
+ and disgrace, again you let yourself be snared in a labyrinth from
+ which you will either never escape, or escape only with damage and
+ shame.... Without risk to himself [your foe] has precipitated you
+ into an abyss and tied you where you are exposed to the loss of
+ your possessions and your life.... We exhort you to pause before
+ incurring heavier losses and greater dangers. If fortune smiles
+ upon you in your attack on that people, you will have the whole
+ empire against you. In the opposite event--which God avert--it
+ will be turned into a common tale how a mighty prince was overcome
+ by rustics whom there would have been no honour in conquering,
+ while to be conquered by them would be an eternal disgrace."
+
+This plain-spoken epistle failed to reach its destination until after
+the prophecy had been fulfilled. Its warning would probably have been
+futile had Charles read it before he marched on towards Berne, on June
+8th. On the road that he chose lay the town of Morat, which had made
+ready for his approach. A few days to reduce it, and then on to Berne
+was his plan. His force succeeded in holding the ground and cutting
+off communication with Berne for three days. On the 14th, a messenger
+made his way through from the beleaguered city to Berne, and all the
+allies were then urged to do their best. The result was encouraging.
+"There are three times as many as at Granson, but let no one be
+dismayed, with God's help we will kill them all," wrote a leader of
+Berne.
+
+The encounter came on June 23d. The force was really a formidable one.
+Rene of Lorraine was among the commanders on the side of the Swiss.
+It was a tremendous fight, brief as it was savage; at two o'clock the
+assault was made and within an hour Charles was repulsed. Almost all
+the infantry perished. The slain is estimated variously from ten
+to twenty-two thousand. Charles did not keep his vow to perish if
+defeated. To his assured allies he clung closely, and none had more
+reason to be faithful to him than Yolande of Savoy. After Granson he
+hastened to give the duchess his own view of the disaster:
+
+ "It has given me a singular pleasure to hear of your calmness and
+ constancy of soul; for the thought of your affliction weighed more
+ heavily upon me than what has befallen me ... every day diminishes
+ the inconvenience and proves that the loss in men is less than we
+ thought. _Such as it is it came from a mere skirmish_. The bulk
+ of the armies did not engage, to my great displeasure. Had they
+ fought the victory would have been mine. There has been none on
+ either side. God, I trust, reserves it for you and for me ... the
+ hope you have placed in me shall not be vain."
+
+Thus he wrote on March 7th to encourage his anxious protegee.
+
+[Illustration: A PLAN OF THE BATTLE OF MORAT]
+
+After the second defeat it was to her that the duke turned again. In
+the very early morning after the battle of Morat, Charles paused at
+Morges on the Lake of Geneva, having ridden hard through the night.
+There he heard mass, breakfasted, rested awhile, and then rode on,
+reaching the castle of Gex at six o'clock in the evening, where
+Yolande of Savoy was awaiting his coming in full knowledge of the
+second disaster he had suffered.
+
+At the foot of the staircase, attended by her ladies, Yolande was
+waiting to greet her disappointed friend. Charles dismounted and
+kissed each member of the family in order of precedence, the little
+duke, his brother, then the duchess, her daughter, and the ladies
+in waiting. Yolande had had time to move out of her own suite of
+apartments and have them prepared for her guest's use, and there the
+two talked together confidentially, while their attendants waited
+patiently just out of earshot.
+
+Then Charles formally escorted his hostess to her son's room,
+returning to his own, showing signs of extreme fatigue. Panigarola
+was absent, but another Milanese was among her suite, and he pressed
+forward as the duke re-entered the apartment, offering to carry any
+message to the Duke of Milan, to be cut short with, "It is well. That
+is enough." Shortly afterwards, Olivier de la Marche and the Sire de
+Givry, commander of the Burgundians dedicated to Yolande's service,
+were summoned and had a long conference with Charles.
+
+Yolande was, apparently, more communicative to the Milanese Appiano
+than to Charles, but he saw that she was not frank with him. "She must
+throw herself on the protection of France or of Milan," he wrote to
+his master.[20] She was, however, clear in her own mind that she would
+not accept Sforza's protection any more than that of Charles. She
+absolutely refused to identify her fortunes with the latter. She was
+determined to go to Geneva, but no farther. The duke remained at Gex
+until the 27th, and renewed his arguments to persuade her to cross
+the Jura with him. She was firm in adhering to her own plan. The
+two parties set out from the castle together, their roads lying in
+opposite directions, but Charles escorted his hostess about half-way
+to Geneva, riding beside her carriage, and continuing his persuasions
+in a low voice. At last he drew up his rein, gave her a farewell kiss,
+and rode off. He was much displeased at her determination, and he
+speedily resolved upon other methods of making sure of her fidelity to
+him. La Marche thus relates the story:[21]
+
+ "After the duke had been discomfited the second time by the Swiss
+ before Morat, believing that he could do the thing secretly, he
+ made a plan to kidnap Mme. of Savoy and her children and take them
+ to Burgundy, and he ordered me, I being at Geneva, on my head to
+ capture Mme. of Savoy and her children and bring them to him. In
+ order to obey my prince and master I did his behest quite against
+ my heart, and I took madame and her children near the gate of
+ Geneva. But the Duke of Savoy was stolen away from me (for it was
+ two o'clock in the night) by the means of some of our own company
+ who were subjects of the Duke of Savoy, and, assuredly, they did
+ no more than their duty. What I did was simply to save my life,
+ for the duke, my master, was the kind that insisted on having his
+ will done under penalty of losing one's head. So I took my way,
+ and carried Mme. of Savoy behind me, and her two daughters
+ followed and two or three of her maids, and we took the road over
+ the mountain to reach St. Claude. I was well assured of the second
+ son, and had him carried by a gentleman. I thought I was assured
+ of the Duke of Savoy, but he was stolen from me as I said. As
+ soon as we were at a distance, the people of the duchess, and
+ especially the seigneur de Manton, had torches brought and took
+ the duke back to Geneva, in which they had great joy. And I with
+ Mme. of Savoy and the little boy (who was not the duke), crossed
+ the mountain in the black night and came to a place called Mijoux,
+ and thence to St. Claude.
+
+ "You must know that the duke gave very bad cheer to the company,
+ and chiefly to me. I was in danger of my life because I had not
+ brought the Duke of Savoy. Then the duke went on to Salins without
+ speaking to me or giving me any orders. However, I escorted Mme.
+ of Savoy after him, and he ordered me to take her to the castle of
+ Rochefort. Thence she was taken to Rouvre in Burgundy. After that
+ I had nothing more to do with her or her affairs."
+
+This queer story is undoubtedly true, and the tone in which La Marche
+relates it indicates that he, too, was alienated by the duke's manner,
+and might have been more willing to lend an ear to Louis's suggestions
+than he had been five years previously.
+
+It is not evident that he played his master false or that he was
+cognisant of the recapture of the little duke, but he says himself
+that he thought the attendants were absolutely justified in it.
+
+It is after this incident that the astute Panigarola returns and joins
+the duke's suite at Salins. He finds Charles a changed man, indulging
+in strange fits of hilarity, expressing the wish that a couple of
+thousand more of his troops had been killed, "French at heart" as they
+were. He refused to see Yolande, after thus forcibly obtaining the
+means of so doing, and sent her to the castle of the Sire of Rochefort
+for safe-keeping. Abstemious as he had been all his life, never taking
+wine without water, the strong Burgundy in which he now suddenly
+indulged went to his head.
+
+Rumours went abroad that his mental balance was shaken. That does
+not seem to have been true to the extent of insanity. He was only
+infinitely chagrined but he certainly put on a brave front and
+retained his self-confidence and declared
+
+ "They are wrong if they believe me defeated. Providence has
+ provided me with so many people and estates with such abundant
+ resources, that many such defeats would be needed to ruin them. At
+ the moment when the world imagines that I am annihilated, I will
+ reopen the campaign with an army of 150,000 men."[22]
+
+
+[Footnote 1: _Lettres de Louis XI_., v., 368.]
+
+[Footnote 2: _Nos omnes relinquens, Ibid_., 371.]
+
+[Footnote 3: Commynes-Dupont, i., 336.]
+
+[Footnote 4: _Lettres_, v., 363. Louis to Dammartin.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Gachard, _Doc. ined_., i., 249.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Commines, iv., ch. vi.]
+[Footnote 7: Commines, iv., ch. viii.: Comines-Lenglet, ii., 217.]
+
+[Footnote 8: The terms of the treaty provided for a seven years'
+truce, with international free trade and mutual assistance in civil
+or foreign wars of either monarch. Louis's complaisance went so far
+that he did not insist on Edward's renouncing the title of King of
+England and France.]
+
+[Footnote 9: _The Paston Letters_. Sir John Paston to his mother,
+Sept. 11, 1475.]
+
+[Footnote 10: The story must be omitted here. The constable was
+finally apprehended, tried, and executed at Paris.]
+
+[Footnote 11: _Depeches Milanaises_, i., 253. The copy only is at
+Milan and there is no seal.]
+
+[Footnote 12: Toutey, p. 380.]
+
+[Footnote 13: _Dep. Milan_., i., 266.]
+
+[Footnote 14: _Dep. Milan_., i., 300.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Jomini lays the defeat to a tactical error. "Charles had
+committed the fault of encamping with one wing of his army resting on
+the lake, the other ill-secured at the foot of a wooded mountain.
+Nothing is more dangerous for an army than to have one of its wings
+resting on an unbridged stream, on a lake, or on the sea." Charles
+explained to Europe that he had been surprised, and his defeat was a
+mere bagatelle.]
+
+[Footnote 16: III., 216.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Embossed ornaments.]
+
+[Footnote l8: _Dep. Milan._, ii., 126.]
+
+[Footnote 19: _Dep. Milan._, ii., 335.]
+
+[Footnote 20: _Dep. Milan_., ii., 295.]
+
+[Footnote 21: III., 234.]
+
+[Footnote 22: _Dep. Milan_, ii., 339.]
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+THE BATTLE OF NANCY
+
+1477
+
+
+It was manifestly impossible for Charles to attempt to retrieve his
+fortunes without having large sums of ready money at his command.
+He therefore proceeded to appeal to the guardians of each and every
+treasury in his various states. Flanders and Burgundy were, however,
+the only quarters whence succour was in the least probable. The
+Estates of the latter duchy met, deliberated, and resolved to make no
+pretence nor to "yield anything contrary to the duty which every one
+owes to his country."[1] A certain Sieur de Jarville, accompanied
+by other true Burgundians, undertook to report the proceedings to
+Charles,--a duty usually falling to the share of the presiding officer
+of the ecclesiastical chamber. The message which he carried was
+laconic but sturdy:
+
+"Tell Monsieur that we are humble and brave subjects and servitors,
+but as to what is asked in his behalf, it never has been done, it
+cannot be done, it never will be done."
+
+"Small people would never dare use such language," is the comment
+of the Burgundian chronicler, proud of the temerity of his fellow
+countrymen.
+
+In the Netherlands, the individual Estates were equally emphatic in
+their refusal to meet the duke's wishes. Charles, therefore, resolved
+to call together a general assembly of deputies in the hope of finding
+them, collectively, more amenable. Writs of summons were issued very
+widely and a "States-general" was formally convened at Ghent on
+Friday, April 26, 1476.[2] At the last assembly of this nature, in
+1473, the duke had expressly promised, in consideration of an annual
+grant of 500,000 crowns for six years then accorded to him, to refrain
+from further demands, and there was a spirit of sullen resentment in
+the air when this session, whose purpose was plain, was opened by
+Chancellor Hugonet. He set forth three points for consideration.
+Monseigneur wished his daughter Mary, "that most precious jewel," to
+join him in Burgundy. A suitable escort was necessary to ensure her
+safe journey and that the duke requested the States to provide.
+Secondly he desired the States to endorse a levy of fresh troops to
+meet his immediate requirements. Further, he requested each town to
+equip a specified number of horses at its own expense; he demanded the
+service of his tenants, fief and arriere-fief; and, in addition, he
+required that all other men, no matter what their condition, able to
+bear arms, should enlist or provide a substitute. A portion of the
+troops should be set to guard the frontier, and the rest should be
+sent to the duke in Burgundy.
+
+It was a demand pure and simple for a universal call to arms, a
+national levy. The duke's paternal desire to see his daughter was the
+flimsiest of excuses that deceived no one for a moment.
+
+After the chancellor's exposition there was probably adjournment for
+discussion. The pensionary of Brussels, Gort Roelants, then acted as
+spokesman to present the following report, as the result of their
+deliberations, to the duchess-regent.
+
+As for Mlle. of Burgundy, the deputies would ascertain the wishes
+of their principals, but the second request did not call for a
+referendum. The representatives were fully capable of settling the
+matter at once. Considering the heavy burdens laid on the people, and
+taking into account the promises made to them in 1473, that no
+further demands should be made on the public purse, the three Estates
+concurred in humbly petitioning Monseigneur to excuse them from
+granting his request.
+
+It was on a Sunday after dinner (April 28th) when this decision was
+communicated to the duchess in her own hotel. After a private colloquy
+between her and Hugonet, the chancellor told the messenger that it was
+quite right for the deputies to consult their principals before the
+heiress was permitted to leave the guardianship of her faithful
+subjects. That was a grave matter, but surely there was no reason why
+her "escort" could not be determined upon at once. In regard to the
+levies, Madame was not empowered to take any excuse. It was beyond her
+province. Since the opening of the assembly, fresh letters had
+arrived from the duke urging the speedy execution of his previous
+instructions. The chancellor then appointed a committee to meet a
+committee from the States at 8 A.M. on the morrow at the convent of
+the Augustines.
+
+This was not satisfactory. Hugonet was speedily notified that the
+States did not feel empowered to appoint a committee. The most they
+could do was to resolve themselves into a committee of the whole. The
+objection to this was that a small conference was far better suited
+to free discussion. It was easy for unqualified persons to enter the
+session of a large body. The States, however, were tenacious in their
+opinion that their writs did not qualify them to appoint committees.
+Every point must be threshed out in the presence of every deputy.
+_Potestas delegata non deleganda est_.
+
+[Illustration: PHILIBERT, DUKE OF SAVOY (AFTER THE DESIGN BY MATHEY)]
+
+There was further negotiation, and it was not until Monday afternoon
+that Hugonet's commissioner brought a conciliatory message that if the
+gentlemen were so bent on it, he would, in spite of the difficulty of
+discussion in an open meeting, talk over both points with them in
+full assembly. Again the States objected. They had no instructions
+whatsoever in regard to Mademoiselle, and could not discuss her
+movements either in public or in private session. As to levies, they
+repeated in detail all previous arguments, and expressed a fervent
+hope that Monseigneur would withdraw the request. It would, in the
+end, be more to Monseigneur's advantage, etc. Back and forth travelled
+the commissioner between States and duchess. The latter simply
+reiterated her dictum that Mary must certainly set forth to visit her
+father in May, with an adequate escort, in whose ranks must appear
+three prelates, three or four barons, fifty knights, and notable men
+from the "good towns," well armed.
+
+The States were then resolved into a committee of the whole, for a
+private deliberation, an action that probably enabled them to exclude
+the embarrassing spectators. In preparation for this, the diligent
+commissioner called apart one deputy from each contingent, and
+expatiated on the duke's need of proof of sturdy loyalty. Seven to
+eight thousand combatants, besides Mademoiselle's escort and the fiefs
+and arriere-fiefs, Monseigneur could manage to make suffice for the
+present, and these must be provided. These confidences were at once
+reported to the assembly, which then adjourned to think over the
+matter during the night.[3]
+
+When they met again on April 30th, the chancellor was ready with a new
+message from Madame: "Go home now, consult your principals, and return
+on May 15th." On the motion of some deputy, this date was changed to
+May 24th. Precautions were taken to prevent any binding action in the
+interim. Moreover, the exact phrasing of the reports to the separate
+groups of constituents was also agreed upon by the majority of the
+deputies. In this, Hainaut refused to participate, as in that province
+there was a reluctance to deny the obligations of the fiefs.
+
+When the deputies reassembled a month later, Hugonet tried to weaken
+the effect of their answer by a suggestion that it had better not
+be considered the final decision, but a mere informal expression of
+opinion. "There were so many strangers present," etc. The States
+determinedly refused to be trifled with. "Madame must not be
+displeased if they gave the result of their deliberations in the
+presence of the whole assembly, not by way of opinion, but as a formal
+and conclusive report." Their charge was restricted to this manner
+of procedure. The chancellor, interrupting them, asked, since their
+charge was thus restricted, whether they had also been limited in the
+number of times they might drink on their way.[4] The answer was:
+"Chancellor, come now, say what you wish. The answer shall be given as
+it was meant to be given."
+
+[Illustration: PLAN OF BATTLE OF NANCY. REPRODUCED FROM KIRK'S
+"CHARLES THE BOLD," BY PERMISSION OF J.B. LIPPINCOTT CO.]
+
+The communication was so long that its delivery took from 3 to 8
+P.M. It was nothing more than a detailed apology for refusing the
+sovereign's demands. Several days more were consumed in unsuccessful
+efforts to cajole or browbeat the deputies into a more genial mood.
+The only concessions offered were insignificant, and to their
+resolution the deputies held firmly. "According to current rumour
+[concludes Gort Roelants's story] the ducal council would gladly have
+accepted a notable sum in lieu of the service of towns and of the
+fiefholders, but the States made no such offer."
+
+There was evidently a hope that better results might be obtained from
+a new assembly,[5] but none was held and the most earnest endeavours
+of the duke's wife and daughter failed to arouse enthusiasm for his
+plans. Moreover, when there seemed a prospect that the Netherlands
+might be attacked from France, the sympathy of even the duchess and
+council for offensive operations was chilled. Not only did Margaret
+fail to send her husband the extra supplies demanded, but she decided
+to appropriate the three months' subsidy, the chief item of regular
+ducal revenue, for protection of the Flemish frontier--an action that
+made Charles very angry. Defences at home! Yes, indeed, they were
+necessary, but the people must provide them. The subsidy was lawfully
+his and he needed every penny of it. His army had not been destroyed.
+He was simply obliged to strengthen it. Burgundy was helping him.
+Flanders must do her part. They were deaf to this appeal, although a
+generous message was sent saying that if he were hard pressed they
+would go in person to rescue him from danger.
+
+The story of the assembly of the Estates of the two Burgundies is
+equally interesting as a picture of the clash between sovereign will
+and popular unreadiness to open the carefully guarded money-boxes.[6]
+The deputies convened at Salins on July 8th, in the presence of the
+duke himself. The session was opened by Jean de Grey, the president
+of the _parlement_ of the duchy, with a brief statement of the
+sovereign's needs. Then Charles took the floor, and delivered a
+tremendous harangue with a marvellous command of language. Panigarola
+declared that his allusions to parallel crises in ancient times were
+so apt and so fluent that it seemed as though the book of history lay
+opened before him and that he read from its pages.[7] The impression
+he made was plain to see.
+
+[Illustration: BATTLE OF NANCY CONTEMPORANEOUS MINIATURE IN ABBEY OF
+ST. GERMAIN DES PRES (COMINES-LENGLET, III.)]
+
+His demands for aid to retrieve the Swiss disasters were open and
+aboveboard this time. There was no such pretence put forward as the
+escort of Mary. The argument was that any ruler, backed by his people
+unanimous in their willingness to give their last jewel for public
+purposes, must inevitably succeed in his righteous wars, etc.
+
+His learned and able discourse was well received, according to other
+reporters besides the Milanese, but there was no hearty yielding to
+sentiment in the reply. Four days were consumed in deliberation before
+that was ready on July 12th. They had certainly considered that the
+grant of 100,000 florins annually for six years, accorded two years
+previously, was their share. But in view of the duke's appeal, they
+would endeavour to aid him. Let him stipulate which cities he wished
+fortified and they would assume charge of the work. Two favours they
+begged--that Charles should not rashly expose his person "for he was
+the sole prince of his glorious House," and that he should be ready
+to receive overtures of peace. "We will give life and property for
+defence, but we implore you to take no offensive step." Charles did
+not, perhaps, feel the distrust of his military skill and of his
+judgment that these words implied.
+
+Financial stress was not the duke's only difficulty in 1476. The
+defection of his allies continued, Yolande--that former good friend of
+his--was now a fervent suppliant to Louis XI., begging him to restore
+her to freedom and to her son's estates. Not that her restraint was
+in itself hard to bear. At Rouvre, whither she had been removed from
+Rochefort, she was free to do what she wished, except to depart.
+Couriers, too, were at her service apparently, who carried uninspected
+letters to Milan, Geneva, Nice, Turin, and to Louis XI. Commines
+says that she hesitated to take refuge with the last lest he should
+promptly return her to Burgundian "protection." Yet her brother's
+hatred to Charles seemed a fairly strong assurance against such
+action. Louis XI. was never so genial as when hearing some ill of
+Charles. "From what I have learned, I believe his Turk, his devil
+in this world, the person he loathes most intensely, is the Duke of
+Burgundy, with whom he can never live in amity." These words were sent
+by Petrasanta to the Duke of Milan,[8] who was also turning slowly,
+with some periods of hesitation, to an alliance with Louis, now
+engaged in "following the hare with a cart."[9]
+
+On his side the king declared that he had no intention of troubling
+further about his obligations to the Duke of Burgundy. "He has himself
+broken the truce repeatedly. I can begin a war when I please. But I
+have thought it best to temporise."
+
+[Illustration: COLUMN COMMEMORATING CHARLES AT NANCY AFTER THE DRAWING
+BY PERNOT]
+
+In the succeeding weeks Louis plunged deeper and deeper into
+negotiations with any and every one whom he could turn against
+Charles. In October, Sire de Chamont, governor of Champagne, --the
+territory that Edward IV. had failed to consign to the duke's
+sovereignty,--made a descent on Rouvre and rescued Yolande of Savoy.
+There was no attempt to stay her departure, and she was scrupulous, so
+it is said, in leaving money behind to pay for the Burgundian property
+carried off in her train--though it were nothing but an old crossbow.
+"Welcome, Madame the Burgundian," was the fraternal salutation which
+she received on her arrival at her brother's court. She replied that
+she was a good French woman and quite ready to obey his majesty's
+commands.[10]
+
+During the summer, Charles remained at La Riviere exerting every
+effort to levy an army. It was no easy task, and the review held on
+July 27th showed a meagre return for his exertions. But he did not
+slacken his efforts. Lists were immediately drawn up showing the
+vacancies in each company, and his money stress did not prevent
+his offering increased pay as an extra inducement to recruits. "An
+excellent means of encouragement," comments Panigarola.
+
+The necessity for his preparations was evident. An opportune legacy
+inherited by Rene of Lorraine enabled that dispossessed prince to work
+to better advantage than he had been able to do since Charles had
+convened the Estates of Lorraine at Nancy. Moreover, on the very day
+of the review of the deficient Burgundian troops, a Swiss diet at
+Fribourg adopted resolutions regarding, a closer alliance with
+Rene.[11] Louis XI. ostensibly maintained his truce with Charles but
+he had intimated that a French army would wait in Dauphine ready "to
+help adjust the affairs of Savoy," and, at about the same time when
+Yolande was at court, he gave a gracious reception to a Swiss embassy,
+so that Rene did not feel himself without support as he advanced to
+recover his city.
+
+The mercenaries left by Charles at Nancy were weak and indifferent--a
+brief siege, and the capital of Lorraine capitulated to Duke Rene.
+Charles was too late to prevent this mortifying loss. His forces, too,
+were a mere shadow. Three to four thousand men rallied round him in
+the Franche-Comte, a few hundred joined him in Burgundy, and as he
+skirted the frontier of Champagne he received slight reinforcements
+from Luxemburg. Then came Campobasso and his mercenary troops, and
+the Count of Chimay with such Flemish fiefs as had, individually,
+respected the duke's appeal. In all, the forces at Charles's
+disposition amounted to about ten thousand, far fewer than those at
+Neuss or at Granson.
+
+At a diet of October 17th, the compact between Rene and the Swiss was
+confirmed, and the former was assured of efficient aid to help him
+repulse Charles in his advance into Lorraine. There was need. The city
+of Toul refused admission to both dukes, but furnished provision for
+Charles's troops, so that for the moment he was the better off of the
+two. Rene then proceeded to provision Nancy and to prepare it for a
+siege, while he himself proceeded to Pont-a-Mousson, and for several
+days the two adversaries were only separated by the Moselle. Charles's
+army was augmented daily by slight accessions from Flanders, and
+England, and by fragments of the garrisons of the towns in Lorraine
+that had yielded to Rene and the latter fell back, little by little.
+Charles in his turn held Pont-a-Mousson, and proceeded along the road
+to Nancy, not deterred by the Lorrainers.
+
+It was on October 22nd, that Charles of Burgundy laid siege for the
+second time to Nancy. In thus entering into active hostilities, he was
+ignoring the advice of his councillors who were unanimous in begging
+him to devote the winter months to refitting his army in Luxemburg or
+Flanders. His position was really very dangerous. He had no base on
+which to rest as he had recovered no towns except Pont-a-Mousson. But
+he ignored the patent obstacles and tried assault after assault upon
+Nancy--all most valiantly repulsed. Within the walls, there was an
+amazing display of courage, energy, and good humour. As a matter of
+fact, the duke's reputation had waned, while the fear of his cruelty
+emboldened the burghers to hold out to the last ditch. Any fate would
+be better than falling into his hands, was the general opinion.
+
+Throughout Lorraine, the captains of the garrisons seized every
+occasion to harry the Burgundians. Familiar with the lay of the land,
+with every cross-road and by-path, they were able to lie in wait for
+the foragers and to do much damage. Four hundred cavaliers, coming
+up from Burgundy, were attacked by one Malhortie de Roziere, and
+literally cut to pieces, while their horses changed sides with ease.
+Only a few escaped to report the fate of the others to Charles. Not
+long after, Malhortie, encouraged by this success, crept up to the
+Burgundian camp, fell upon the sleepers, and captured a goodly number
+of horses.
+
+The troops on which Charles counted most confidently were
+Campobasso's. Several attempts were made to warn him that treachery
+was possible in that quarter if the commander were too much
+exasperated by delays in payment, too much tried by the ill-temper of
+his employer. But the duke persisted in being oblivious to what was
+passing under his eyes. Thus, while awaiting the moment for his final
+defection, the Italian found it possible to enter into communication
+with Rene and to retard the operations of the siege so as to give time
+for the advance of the army of relief.
+
+The weather of this year was a marked contrast to the mild season of
+1473. The winter set in early and the cold became very severe, almost
+at once. Their sufferings made the burghers very impatient for the
+relief of whose coming they could get no certain assurance. The
+Burgundian lines were held so rigidly that the interchange of messages
+between the city and her friends was rendered very difficult.[12] One
+Suffren de Baschi tried to slip through to Nancy, to tell the besieged
+that Rene was levying troops in Switzerland and would soon be with
+them. Baschi fell into the duke's hands and was immediately hanged.
+One story says that Campobasso was among the interceders for his life
+and received a box on the ear for his pains, an insult that proved the
+last straw in his allegiance to Charles. Commines, however, declares
+that the Italian urged the death of the captive, fearful of the
+premature betrayal of his own intended treachery.
+
+This execution was one of those arbitrary acts condemned by public
+opinion as contrary to the code of warfare. Intense indignation among
+the Lorrainers and the Swiss forced Rene to retaliatory measures, and
+he ordered the execution of all the Burgundian prisoners. One hundred
+and twenty bodies hung on the gibbets, each bearing an inscription
+to the effect that their death was the work of _le temeraire_. The
+rancour of the proceedings became terrible. No quarter was given in
+any engagements. Slaughter was the only thought on either side.
+
+Towards the end of December, one Thierry, a draper of Mirecourt,
+proved more successful than Baschi in reaching Nancy. His information,
+that Rene's army would leave Basel on December 26th, put heart into
+the beseiged and the bells rang out joyfully.
+
+Just at this epoch, there was an attempt at mediation between the
+combatants. The King of Portugal,[13] nephew of Isabella, appeared at
+his cousin's camp and implored him to put an end to the carnage, and
+in the name of humanity to stop a war that was horrible to all the
+world. In spite of his own stress, Charles managed to give his kinsman
+a splendid reception, but he waved aside his petition, and simply
+invited him to join him in his campaign.
+
+A week sufficed for the Swiss contingent to march from Basel to Nancy,
+across the plains of Alsace. Meantime Rene had rallied about four
+thousand men under Lorraine captains, and to this was added an
+Alsatian force which had joined him by way of St.-Nicolas-du-Port.
+They were a rude, pitiless crowd, as they soon evinced by routing
+a few Burgundians out of the houses where they had hidden, and
+massacring them publicly. A reconnaissance, sent out by Charles, was
+easily put to flight.
+
+On January 4th, Charles learned that fresh troops had reached St.
+Nicolas. He showed assurance, arrogance, and negligence. His belief in
+his star was fully restored. He actually did not take the trouble to
+try once more to ascertain the exact strength of the enemy. He had
+commissioned the Bishop of Forli to negotiate for him at Basel, and
+refused to credit the statement that the Swiss were throwing in their
+fortunes with Rene. He thought that "the Child," as he contemptuously
+termed his adversary, had simply gone right and left to hire
+mercenaries, and he rather ridiculed the idea of taking such
+_canaille_ seriously, saying that it was a host unworthy of a
+gentleman. Still he resolved to meet and finish them once for all.[14]
+
+It is a fact that the Swiss reinforcements were a different and far
+less efficient body than the volunteers of Granson and Morat had been.
+French gold, scattered freely, had done its work in exciting the
+cupidity of every man who could bear arms. There were some staunch
+leaders, like Waldemar of Zurich and Rudolph de Stein, but their kind
+was in the minority. Berne aided with money rather than with men, but
+she was not a generous ally as she insisted on having hostages to
+ensure her repayment. A venal spirit was evident in every quarter. As
+the troops made their way over the Jura their behaviour showed that
+the late splendid booty had affected them. Plunder was their aim. When
+Rene reviewed these fresh arrivals from Basel, one of his attending
+officers was Oswald von Thierstein, late governor of Alsace.[15]
+Disgraced by Sigismund he had passed over to the Duke of Lorraine, who
+appointed him marshal.
+
+On that January 4th, a Saturday, Charles held a council meeting. The
+opinion of the wisest, already given on previous occasions, was urged
+again:
+
+ "Do not risk battle. Rene is poor. If there are no immediate
+ engagements, his mercenaries will abandon him for lack of pay.
+ Raise the siege and depart for Flanders and Luxemburg. The army
+ can rest and be increased. Then at the approach of spring it will
+ be easy to fall upon Rene deprived of his troops."
+
+Charles was absolutely deaf to these arguments. He was determined on
+facing the issue at once. Leaving a small force to sustain the siege,
+he ordered the camp to be broken on the evening of the 4th and a
+movement made towards St.-Nicolas. He selected a ground favourable
+for the manipulation of a large body, and placed his artillery on a
+plateau situated between Jarville and Neuville. It was not a good
+position, being hedged in on the right and in front by woods which
+could conceal the movements of a foe without impeding them. Only one
+way of retreat was open--towards Metz, whose bishop was Charles's
+last ally. But to reach Metz, it was necessary to cross several small
+streams and deceptive marshes, half frozen as they were, besides the
+river Meurthe, a serious obstacle with the garrison of Nancy on the
+flank. In short, there was ample reason to dread surprise, while
+in case of defeat a terrible catastrophe was more than possible.
+Curiously, the precise kind of difficulties which beset the field of
+Morat were repeated here--proof that Charles had not the qualities of
+a general who could learn by experience.[16]
+
+The exact force at his disposal on this occasion has been variously
+estimated. Considering the ravages of the sanguinary skirmishes during
+the siege, and of the cold, it is probable that the actual combatants
+did not number more than ten thousand, all told. And only half of
+these were of any value--two thousand men under Galeotto, and
+three thousand Burgundians commanded by Charles and his immediate
+lieutenants. The remainder were unreliable mercenaries and the still
+more unreliable troops of Campobasso already pledged to the foe. La
+Marche estimates Rene's force at twelve thousand and adds: "The Duke
+of Burgundy was far behind, for, on my conscience, he had not two
+thousand fighting men."[17]
+
+The allies adopted a plan of battle proposed by a Lorrainer, Vautrin
+Wuisse. The first manoeuvre was to divert the foe and turn him towards
+the woods, and then to attack his centre, which would at the same
+time be pressed at the front by the Lorraine forces, headed by Rene
+himself. The plan succeeded in every point. Surprised that they dared
+take the offensive, Charles was alert to the harsh cries of the "bull"
+of Uri and the "cow" of Unterwalden, which were heard across the
+woods. A sudden presentiment saddened him. Putting on his helmet, he
+accidentally knocked off the lion bearing the legend _Hoc est signum
+Dei_. He replaced it and plunged into the melee.
+
+The onslaught was terrific. Galeotto's troops and the duke's were the
+only ones to make sturdy resistance. The right wing of the army gave
+way under the fierce assault of the Swiss. The cry, "_Sauve qui
+pent_!" raised possibly by Campobasso's traitors, produced a terrible
+rout. Three quarters of the troops were in flight, while the duke
+still fought on with superhuman ferocity.
+
+Galeotto, seeing that the day was lost, protected his own mercenaries
+as best he could, while Campobasso completed the treason that he had
+plotted with Rene, which had been partially accomplished four days
+previously, and calmly took up his position on the bridge of Bouxieres
+on the Meurthe, to make prisoners for the sake of ransom. Then the
+besieged made a sudden sortie which increased the disorder. The battle
+proper was of short duration, with little bloodshed, but the pursuit
+was sanguinary in the extreme, because the Burgundian army had left no
+loophole open for retreat.
+
+The Swiss pursued the fugitives hotly as far as Bouxieres and
+inflicted carnage right and left on the route. It was easy work. The
+morasses were traps and the Burgundians, encumbered with their arms,
+found it impossible to free themselves, when they once were entangled.
+They fell like flies before the fury of the mountaineers. The
+Lorrainers and Alsatians were more humane or more mercenary, for they
+took prisoners instead of killing indiscriminately. Charles fought
+desperately to the very end. There is no doubt that he plunged into
+the thick of the fight and risked his life in a reckless manner,
+but there is absolute uncertainty as to how he met his death. It is
+generally accepted that the last person to see him alive was one
+Baptista Colonna, a page in the service of a Neapolitan captain. This
+lad, with an extra helmet swung over his shoulder, found himself
+close to the duke. He saw him surrounded by troops, noticed his horse
+stumble, was sure that the rider fell. The next moment, Colonna's
+attention was diverted to himself. He was taken prisoner and knew no
+more of the day's events. The figure of Charles of Burgundy disappears
+from the view of man. A curtain woven of vague rumour hides the
+closing scenes of his life.
+
+At seven o'clock the victorious Duke of Lorraine rode into the rescued
+city and re-entered his palace. At the gates was heaped up a ghastly
+memorial of the steadfastness of the burghers in their devotion to
+his cause. This was a pile of the bones of the foul animals they had
+consumed when other food was exhausted, rather than capitulate to
+their liege's foe. To ascertain the fate of that foe now became Rene's
+chief anxiety, and he despatched messengers to Metz and elsewhere
+to find out where Charles had taken refuge. The reports were all
+negative. The first positive assurance that the duke was dead came
+from young Baptista Colonna, whom Campobasso himself introduced into
+Rene's presence on Monday evening. The page told his tale and declared
+that he could point out the precise place where he had seen the Duke
+of Burgundy fall. Accordingly, on Tuesday morning, January 7th, a
+party went forth from Nancy to the desolate battlefield and were
+guided by Colonna to the edge of a pool which he asserted confidently
+was the very spot where he had seen Charles. Circumstantial evidence
+went to give corroboration to his word, for the dozen or more bodies
+that lay strewn along the ground in the immediate vicinity of the pool
+were close friends and followers of the duke, men who would, in all
+probability, have stayed faithfully by their master's person, a
+volunteer bodyguard as long as they drew breath. These bodies were all
+stripped naked. Harpies had already gathered what plunder they could
+find, and no apparel or accoutrements were left to show the difference
+in rank between noble and page. But the faces were recognisable and
+they were identified as well-known nobles of the Burgundian court.
+Separated from this group by a little space at the very edge of the
+pool, was another naked body in still more doleful plight. The face
+was disfigured beyond all semblance of what it might have been in
+life. One cheek was bitten by wolves, one was imbedded in the frozen
+slime. Yet there was evidence on the poor forsaken remains that
+convinced the searchers that this was indeed the mortal part of the
+great duke. Two wounds from a pick and a blow above the ear--inflicted
+by "one named Humbert"--showed how death had been caused. The missing
+teeth corresponded to those lost by Charles, there was a scar just
+where he had received his wound at Montl'hery, the finger nails were
+long like his, a wound on the shoulder, a fistula on the groin, and an
+ingrowing nail were additional marks of identification,--six definite
+proofs in all. Among those who gazed at this wretched sight, on that
+January morning, were men intimately acquainted with the duke's
+person.
+
+ "There were his physician, a Portuguese named Mathieu, and his
+ valets, besides Olivier de la Marche[18] and Denys his chaplain
+ who were taken thither and there was no doubt that he was dead. It
+ has not yet been decided where he will be buried, and to know it
+ better it [the body] has been bathed in warm water and good wine
+ and cleansed. In that state it was recognisable by all who
+ had previously seen and known him. The page who had given the
+ information was taken to the king. Had it not been for him it
+ would never have been known what had become of him considering the
+ state and the place where he was found."[19]
+
+Before the body could be freed from the ice in which it was imbedded,
+implements had to be brought from Nancy. Four Lorraine nobles hastened
+to the spot, when they heard the tidings, to show honour to the man
+who had been their accepted lord for a brief period, and they acted
+as escort as the burden was carried into the town and placed in a
+suitable chamber in the home of one George Marquiez. There seems to
+have been no insult offered to the fallen man, no lack of deference in
+the proceedings. The very spot where the bier rested for a moment was
+marked with a little black cross.
+
+As the corpse was bathed, three wounds became evident--a deep cut
+from a halberd in the head, spear thrusts through the thighs and
+abdomen--proofs of the closeness of the last struggle. When all the
+dignity possible had been given to the miserable human fragment and
+the chamber hung with conventional mourning, Rene came thither clad
+in black garments. Kneeling by the bier, he said: "Would to God, fair
+cousin, that your misfortunes and mine had not reduced you to the
+condition in which I see you."
+
+For five days the body lay in state before the high altar of the
+church of St. George, and the obsequies that followed were attended by
+Rene and his nobles, and the coffin was honourably placed among the
+ducal dead.
+
+Yet doubt of the man's existence was not buried with the bones to
+which his name was given. When the Swiss turned their way homeward,
+their farewell words to Rene were: "If the Duke of Burgundy has
+escaped and should reopen war, tell us." "If he has assured his
+safety," Rene answered, "we will fight again when summer comes." There
+was no delay, however, in the division of the spoils. The Burgundian
+treasure was distributed among Rene's allies, and the ignorant
+soldiers received articles worth many times their pay, which they, in
+many cases, disposed of for an infinitesimal part of their value.
+
+As late as January 28th, Margaret of York and Mary of Burgundy wrote
+to Louis XI. from Ghent:
+
+"We are still hoping that Monseigneur is alive in the hands of his
+enemies." Other rumours continued to be current, not only for weeks
+but for years. In 1482, it was gravely recounted that the vanished
+duke had retired to Brucsal in Swabia, where he led an austere life,
+_genus vitae horridum atque asperum_. Bets were made, too, on the
+chances of his return.[20]
+
+Louis XI. was a very pleasant person when news was brought him that he
+liked to hear. Commines and Bouchage together had told him about the
+defeat of Morat and had each received two hundred silver marks. It was
+a Seigneur de Lude who had the good luck to bring him letters from
+Craon recounting the battle of Nancy. It was "really difficult for the
+king to keep his countenance so surprised was he with joy."[21] His
+letter to Craon was written on January 9th and ran as follows.[22]
+
+ "M. the Count, my friend, I have received your letter and heard
+ the good news that you impart to me, for which I thank you as much
+ as I can. Now is the time to use all your five natural senses to
+ deliver the duchy and county of Burgundy into my hands. If the
+ duke be dead, do you and the governor of Champagne take your
+ troops and put yourselves within the land, and, if you love me,
+ keep as good order among your men as if you were in Paris, and
+ prove that I mean to treat them [the Burgundians] better than any
+ one in my realm."
+
+The "five natural senses" of the king's lieutenant were employed most
+loyally to his master's service. The duchy of Burgundy returned to the
+French crown. Before Easter, the Estates were convened by Louis XI,
+and there was no longer any duke in Burgundy to be an over powerful
+peer in France.
+
+With the exception of Guelders the lands acquired by Charles fell
+away, but the remainder as inherited by him passed under the rule of
+his daughter Mary, who carried her heritage into the House of Austria,
+through which it passed finally to the King of Spain.
+
+On that fatal fifth of January, Charles of Burgundy had only just
+passed middle life. He was forty-four years, one month, and twenty-six
+days old, an age when a man has the right to look forward to new
+achievements. Every circumstance of the dreary and premature death was
+in glaring contrast to his prospects at his birth in 1433, in insolent
+contradiction to his own estimation of the obligations assumed by Fate
+in his behalf. In certain details of the catastrophe there are, of
+course, accidents. No one could have predicted that the duke whose
+chief title was a synonym for magnificence, that this cherished heir
+to his House, who had been bathed in all the luxury known to his
+epoch, should have thus lain in death, many hours long, unattended and
+uncared-for, naked and frozen on a bed of congealed mud, with a winter
+sky as canopy. The actual adversity as it overwhelmed him was too
+appalling for any foresight. But the great dream of the man's life
+that vanished with his vitality owed its annihilation to no mere
+chance of warfare. Had it not been rudely ended by the battle of
+Nancy, other means of destruction, inevitable and sure, would have
+appeared. The projected erection of a solidified kingdom stretching
+from the North Sea to Switzerland and possibly to the Mediterranean,
+one that could hold the balance of power between France and Germany,
+contained elements of disintegration, latent at its foundation. It is
+clear, from a consideration of the Duke of Burgundy and his position
+in the Europe of his time, that the materials which he expected to
+mould into a realm were a collection of sentient units. Each separate
+one was instinct with individual life, individual desires, conscious
+of its own minute past, capable of directing its own contracted
+future. That the hereditary title of overlord to each political unity
+had lodged upon a head already dignified by a plurality of similar
+titles, was a mere chance and viewed by the burghers in a wholly
+different light from that in which this same overlord regarded it. The
+fishers in Holland, the manufacturers in Brabant, the merchants in
+Flanders, the vintners in Burgundy, cared nothing for being the wings
+of an imperial idea. They wanted safe fishing grounds, unmolested
+highways of commerce, vineyards free from the tramp of armies. And
+with their desires fixed on these as needful, their attitude towards
+the political centralisation planned by their common ruler, often
+betrayed both ignorance and inconsistency. At various epochs some
+degree of imperialism for the Netherland group had been quite to
+popular taste. In Holland, Zealand and Hainaut, it had been conceded
+that Jacqueline of Bavaria was less efficient to maintain desirable
+conditions than her cousin of Burgundy, and the exchange of sovereigns
+had been effected in spite of the manifest injustice involved in the
+transaction. But while there was willingness to accept any advantages
+that might accrue to a people from the reputation of a local overlord,
+it was never forgotten for an instant that his relation to his
+subjects was as their own count and strictly limited by conditions
+that had long existed within each petty territory. While Charles
+seemed to be on the straight road towards his goal, the people within
+each body politic of his inherited states were profoundly preoccupied
+with their own local concerns, and only alive to his schemes when they
+feared demands upon their internal revenues for external purposes.
+
+It does not seem probable, however, that the abstract question of the
+projected kingdom was ever taken very seriously among those to be
+directly affected by the proposed change. The bars interposed by his
+own subjects in the duke's progress towards royalty were obstructions
+to his successive steps rather than to his theory. Indeed, strenuous
+opposition to details was allied to a vague and passive acceptance of
+the whole. Moreover when the idea was phrased it was distinctly as
+a revival, not as a novelty. The previous existence of a kingdom of
+Burgundy was undoubtedly a potent factor in the degree of progress
+made by Charles towards conjuring into new life a reincarnation of
+that ancient realm. Yet it was a factor clothed with a shadow rather
+than with the substance of truth. Geographically there was very little
+in common between the dominion projected more or less definitely in
+1473 and any one of the kingdoms of Burgundy as they had successively
+existed. That of Charles corresponded very nearly to the ancient
+kingdom of Lorraine. Franche-Comte was the only ground common to the
+territories actually held by the duke and to the latest kingdom of
+Burgundy. His possessions in Picardy and Alsace lay wholly beyond the
+limits of either Burgundy or Lorraine. But the old name survived in
+his ducal title, and it was that name that lent a semblance of reality
+to this fifteenth-century dream of a middle kingdom as outlined in the
+duke's mind more or less definitely or as bounded by his ambition.
+
+In retrospect it is clear that more was requisite for the realisation
+of the vision of the wished-for nation, than imperial investiture of
+a crowned monarch with sovereignty over a group of lands. A modern
+writer has pointed out how infinitely subtle is the vital principle
+of a nation, one not even to be created by common interests. A
+_Zollverein_ is no _patria_. An element of sentiment is needful, and
+an element of growth.[23] The nation like the individual is the result
+of what has gone before. An heroic past, great men, glory that can
+command respect at home and abroad--that is the capital on which
+is based a national idea. To have wrought in common, to wish to
+accomplish more in the future, are essential conditions to be a
+people. "The existence of a nation is a plebiscite of every day, just
+as the existence of the individual is a perpetual affirmation of
+life."
+
+Now it is evident, in summing up the salient features of this failure,
+that a vital principle was not germinating in the inchoate mass.
+Charles himself never attained the rank of a national hero. More than
+that, with all his individual states, he never had any nation, great
+or small, at his back. Personally he was a man without a country. His
+father, Philip, was French, pure and simple, quite as French as his
+grandfather, Philip the Hardy, the first Duke of Burgundy out of the
+House of Valois, even though Philip the Good had extended his sway
+to many non-French-speaking peoples and was able to use the Flemish
+speech if it suited his whim. But that was as a condescension and as
+something extraneous. The chief of French peers remained his proudest
+title; his ability to influence French affairs, the task he liked
+best.
+
+His son was quite different in his attitude towards France. He
+minimised his degree of French blood royal. More than once he boasted
+of his kinship with Portuguese, with English stock. He had certain
+characteristics of an immigrant, who has abandoned family traditions
+and is proudly confident that his bequest to posterity is to outshine
+what he has inherited. Charles was not exactly a stupid man, but he
+certainly was dazzled by his early surroundings into an overestimate
+of himself, into a conceit that was a tremendous stumbling-block in
+his path. He had not the kind of intelligence that would have enabled
+him to take at their worth the rhetorical phrases of adulation heaped
+upon him on festal occasions. Yet this same conceit, this very
+self-confidence, gave him a high conception of his duties. At his
+accession, he showed a sense of his responsibilities, a definite
+theory of conduct which he fully intended to act upon. His very belief
+in his own powers gave him an intrinsic honesty of purpose. He was
+convinced that he could maintain law, order, justice in his domain,
+and he fully intended to do so in a paternal way, but he left out of
+consideration the rights of the people, rights older than his dynasty.
+In his military career, too, at the outset, he evinced the strongest
+bent towards preserving the best conditions possible amid the
+brutalities of warfare. He curbed the soldiers' passions, he protected
+women, and was as relentless towards miscreants in his ranks as
+towards his foe. In civil matters he exerted himself to secure
+impartial equity for all alike. When he gave a promise, he fully
+intended to make his words good. It was only in the face of repeated
+deceptions of the cleverer and more unscrupulous Louis XI. that
+Charles changed for the worse. Exasperated by the knowledge that the
+king's solemn pledges were given repeatedly with no intention of
+fulfilment, he attempted to adopt a similar policy and was singularly
+infelicitous in his imitation. His political methods degenerated into
+mere barefaced lying, softened by no graces, illumined by no clever
+intuition of where to draw the line. From 1472 on, the duke's word was
+worth no more than the king's, and words were assuredly at a discount
+just then. A perusal of the international correspondence of the period
+leaves the reader marvelling why time was wasted in covering paper,
+with flimsy, insincere phrases, mendacious sign-posts which gave no
+true indication of the road to be travelled. There are, however,
+differences in the art of dissimulation and Charles never attained a
+mastery of the science.
+
+The adjective which has attached itself to his name in English in an
+inaccurate rendering of _le temeraire_ which belongs to him in French.
+There were other terms too applied to Charles at different periods of
+his career. He was Charles the Hardy in his early youth, Charles the
+Terrible in those last months when he tried to fortify himself with
+wine unsuited to his constitution, but at all times he might have been
+called Charles the self-absorbed, Charles the solitary. There have
+been many men more passionate, more uncontrolled, than Charles of
+Burgundy, whose personal magnetism yet enabled them to win friends and
+to keep them, as the duke was powerless to do. The failure to command
+personal devotion, unquestioning loyalty, was one of his chief
+personal misfortunes. Philip, magnificent, lavish, debonair, found
+many lenient apologists for his crimes, while his son received
+criticism for his faults even from the faithful among his servitors.
+How a reflection of his bearing glows out from the mirror turned
+casually upon him by Commines' skilful hand! Take the glimpse of Louis
+XI. as he lures on St. Pol's messenger to imitate Charles. The Sire
+de Creville inspired by the royal interest in his narration about an
+incident at the court of Burgundy, puffs out his cheeks, stamps his
+feet in a dictatorial manner, and swears by St. George as he quotes
+the duke's words. Behind a screen are hidden Commines, and a
+Burgundian envoy aghast at hearing his liege lord so mocked. It is
+a time when St. Pol is trying to ride three horses at once and
+the French king takes this method to have Charles informed of his
+duplicity. "Speak louder" he says, "I grow a little deaf," and the
+flattered envoy repeats his dramatic performance in a way to engrave
+it on the memory of the duke's retainer.
+
+[Illustration: THE TOMB OF CHARLES OF BURGUNDY]
+
+In thus touching on the traits of his former master, Commines does not
+show malice or even a dislike for the duke. He is much more severe
+about Louis--only he found the latter easier to serve.
+
+In his family life, too, Charles does not seem to have found any
+companionship that affected his life. He is lauded as a faithful
+husband to Isabella of Bourbon but her death seemed to make little
+difference. Neither she nor Margaret of York had the actual
+significance enjoyed by Isabella of Portugal as consort to Philip the
+Good with his notoriously roving fancy.
+
+Thus at home as well as abroad the last Duke of Burgundy tried to
+stand alone. Perhaps his chief happiness in life was that he never
+knew how insufficient for his desired task he was and how the new art
+of printing, the birth of Erasmus of Rotterdam, were the really great
+events of his brief decade of sovereignty. It was his good fortune
+that he never knew that no splendid achievement gave significance to
+his device: "I have undertaken it"--_Je lay emprins_.
+
+
+[Footnote 1: _Mem. de la soc. bourg. de geog. et d' hist_. Article by
+A. Cornereau, vi., 229.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Les etats de Gand en 1476. (Gachard, _Etudes et notices
+hist,. des Pays-Bas_, i., I.)
+
+This is a study of the report made by Gort Roelants, pensionary of
+Brussels, one of the deputies to the assembly of 1476. This so-called
+"States-general" was by no means a legislative assembly. When Philip
+the Good convened deputies from the various states at Bruges in 1463,
+it was to save himself the trouble of going to the separate capitals
+to ask for _aides_. Assemblies of similar nature occurred several
+times before 1477, when Mary of Burgundy granted the privilege of
+self-convention and when a constitutional role was assured to the
+body; though not used for many years (_See_ Pirenne, ii., 379.)]
+
+[Footnote 3: _Pour y penser la nuit jusques aw lendemain_.]
+
+[Footnote 4: _S'ils n'avaient point charge limitee quantefois ils
+devaient boire en chemin_.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Compte-rendu par Antoine Rolin, Sr. d' Aymeries, Oct. 1,
+1475-Sept. 30, 1476. In the archives of Hainaut there are proofs that
+another assembly was confidently expected.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Gingins la Sarra, ii., 354.]
+
+[Footnote 7: _Ibid_., 359. Scorende queste cose come avesse il libro
+avanti, parse ad ogniuno imprimesse bene questo suo intento.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Petrasanta to the Duke of Milan Aug. 12th. Quoted in
+Kirk, iii., 487.]
+
+[Footnote 9: An Italian phrase signifying to run down his game
+slowly.]
+
+[Footnote 10: Commines, v., ch. iv.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Toutey calls the diet at Fribourg a veritable congress
+of central Europe, the first of international congresses.]
+
+[Footnote 12: Huguenin Jeune, _Hist. de la guerre de Lorraine_, p.
+217.]
+
+[Footnote 13: This monarch, Alphonse V., called the African, asking
+Louis XI. for assistance against Ferdinand of Castile, was refused on
+the score that Charles the Bold was menacing the safety of the French
+frontier. Alphonse's prayer for peace might have been instigated by
+thoughts of his own needs as well as those of humanity. (Toutey, p.
+386.)]
+
+[Footnote 14: Toutey, p. 387.]
+
+[Footnote 15: See Scott's _Anne of Geierstein_. This is the man whom
+the author makes the appointed instrument of the _Vehmgericht_ to slay
+Charles.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Toutey, p. 388.]
+
+[Footnote 17: _Memoires_, iii., 239.]
+
+[Footnote 18: It is strange that La Marche does not make more of
+this scene if he were really there. His sole statement is: "The duke
+remained dead on the field of battle, stretched out like the poorest
+man in the world and I was taken and others." iii., 240.]
+
+[Footnote 19: _La deconfiture de Monseigneur de Bourgogne faite par
+Monseigneur de Lorraine_. Comines-Lenglet, iii., 493.
+
+This brief account was drawn up evidently before the duke's burial was
+known by the writer. It may have been written solely to please Louis
+XI. Still there is a simplicity about it that holds the attention,
+in spite of the fact that the story is not accepted by critical
+historians.]
+
+[Footnote 20: La Marche, iii., 240.]
+
+[Footnote 21: Comines v., ch. x.]
+
+[Footnote 22: _Lettres_ vi., p. 111.]
+
+[Footnote 23: Renan, _Qu'est ce qu'une nation_.]
+
+
+
+
+
+BIBLIOGRAPHY
+
+
+There is an enormous mass of literature bearing upon the later years
+of Philip of Burgundy and the brief career of Charles the Bold. Fairly
+adequate bibliographies can be found in Pirenne and Molinier (see
+list). The following list contains the full titles of the chief works
+to which direct reference is made in the text but falls far short of a
+complete description of the matter, contemporaneous or critical, which
+has coloured the treatment of the subject.
+
+When extracts have been taken from matter quoted by other writers the
+reference is to the later books only.
+
+_Archives curieuses de l'histoire de France_. Vol. i. (Paris, 1834.)
+Contains _Le cabinet du roy Louis XI.; Discours du siege de Beauvais,
+en_ 1472, etc.
+
+BARANTE, M. DE. _Histoire des ducs de Bourgogne de la maison de
+Valois. Avec des remarques par le baron de Reiffenberg._ 6th ed. 10
+vols. (Brussels, 1835.)
+
+BASIN, THOMAS, 1412-1491. _Histoire des regnes de Charles VII. et de
+Louis XI._ (Latin text). Ed. J.E.J. Quicherat. 2 vols. (Paris, 1855.)
+
+BEAUCOURT, G. DU FRESNE, MARQUIS DE. _Histoire de Charles VII_ . 6
+vols. (Paris, 1890.)
+
+BLOK, P.J. _Eene Hollandsche stad onder de Bourgondisch-Oostenrijksche
+Heerschappij._ (The Hague, 1884.)
+
+BRANTOME, PIERRE DE BOURDEILLE, SEIGNEUR DE. _OEuvres completes de_.
+Ed. Ludovic Lalanne. (Paris, 1876.)
+
+BUDT, ADRIAN DE. _Chronicon Flandriae. De Smet Corpus chron. Flandr.
+I_. (Brussels, 1837-65.)
+
+BUSSIERE, BARON MARIE-THEODORE DE. _Histoire de la ligue formee contre
+Charles le temeraire_. (Paris, 1846.)
+
+_Cent nouvelles nouvelles, Les_. Edition revue sur les textes
+originaux, etc., par A.J.V. Le Roux de Lincy. (Paris, 1841.)
+
+CHABEUF, H. _Deux portraits bourguignons du XV^{e} siecle_. (Dijon,
+1893.) (Memoires de la societe bourguignonne de geographie et
+d'histoire. Vol. ix.)
+
+CHASTELLAIN, GEORGES, 1404-1475. _OEuvres._ (Ed. Kervyn de Lettenhove.)
+8 vols. (Brussels, 1863-66.)
+
+CHMEL, JOSEPH. _Geschichte Kaiser Friedrichs IV._ 2 vols. (Hamburg,
+1843.)
+
+CHMEL, JOSEPH. _Urkunden zur Geschichte von Oesterreich, Steiermark,_
+etc. [Monumenta Habsburgica.] 2 vols. (Vienna, 1849.)
+
+CLEMART, PIERRE. _Jacques Coeur et Charles VII_. (Paris, 1873.)
+
+_Collection de documents inedits sur l'histoire de France_.
+"Melanges." (Ed. M. Champollion-Figeac.) (Paris, 1843.)
+
+COMMINES, PHILIP DE. _The Historie of_, Englished by Thomas Dannett.
+Anno 1596. With an introduction by Charles Whibley. (London, 1897.)
+
+_Memoires de Philippe de Comines,_ 1447-1511. Nouvelle edition par
+Messieurs Godefroy, augmentee par M. l'Abbe Lenglet du Fresnoy. 4
+vols. Ref. (Comines-Lenglet.) (Paris, 1747.)
+
+This edition contains many letters, documents, etc., collected by
+M. Lenglet du Fresnoy. Their accuracy has been impugned in many
+instances. Those cited have been taken with a view to the later
+criticism upon them.
+
+_Memoires de Philippe de Commynes_. Nouvelle edition publiee avec
+une introduction et des notes par Bernard de Mandrot. 2 vols. Ref.
+(Commynes-Mandrot.) (Paris, 1901.)
+
+_Memoires de Philippe de Commynes_. Nouvelle edition, revue sur les
+manuscrits de la bibliotheque royale, etc., par Mlle. Dupont. 3 vols.
+Ref. (Commynes-Dupont.) (Paris, 1840.)
+
+CORNEREAU, A. _Le palais des etats de Bourgogne a Dijon_. (Dijon,
+1890.) (Memoires de la soc. bourguignonne de geog. et d'hist., v.)
+
+COURTEPEE, M. _Description, generale et particuliere du duche de
+Bourgogne_. 4 vols. (Dijon, 1847.)
+
+DESCHAMPS, EUSTACHE. _Oeuvres completes_. (Paris, 1878- 1904.) (Soc.
+des anciens textes francais.) 11 vols.
+
+DES MAREZ, G. _L'organisation du travail a Bruxelles au XV^{e}
+siecle_. (Bruxelles, 1903-04.) (Memoires couronnes de l'acad. royale
+de Belgique. Vol. lxv.-lxvi.)
+
+DEWEZ, M. _Histoire particuliere des provinces belgiques sous le
+gouvernement des ducs et des comtes, pour servir de complement a
+l'histoire generale_. 3 vols. (Brussels, 1834.)
+
+DU CLERCQ, JACQUES, 1420-1501. _Memoires_. (Ed. Baron F. de
+Reiffenberg.) 4 vols. (Brussels, 1823.)
+
+DUCLOS, CHARLES P. _(Oeuvres completes de_. Nouvelle edition. 9 vols.
+(Paris, 1820.)
+
+ESCOUCHY, MATHIEU D'(DE COUCY). _Chronique_. (1420?-1482 +.) (Ed. G.
+du Fresne de Beaucourt.) 3 vols. (Paris, 1863.) (Soc. de l'hist. de
+France.)
+
+FREDERICQ, PAUL. _Le role politique et social des ducs de Bourgogne_.
+(Brussels, 1875.)
+
+FREEMAN, EDWARD A. _The Historical Geography of Europe._ 2 vols. 3d
+edition, edited by G. B. Berry. (London, 1903.)
+
+GACHARD, L. P. _Analectes belgiques ou recueil de pieces inedites,_
+etc. Vol. i. (Brussels, 1830.)
+
+GACHARD, L. P., Ed. _Collection des voyages des souverains des
+Pays-Bas._ 4 vols. (Brussels, 1830.)
+
+GACHARD, L. P., Ed. _Documents inedits concernant l'histoire de la
+Belgique_. 3 vols. (Brussels, 1833.)
+
+GACHARD, L. P. _Etudes et notices historiques concernant l'histoire
+des Pays-Bas._ 3 vols. (Brussels, 1890.)
+
+_Gesta Episcoporum Leodiensium_. (Martene Coll. Vol. iv.) (Paris,
+1729.).
+
+GINGINS LA SARRA, LE BARON DE FREDERIC DE, Ed. _Depeches des
+ambassadeurs milanais sur les campagnes de Charles le Hardi_,
+1474-1477. 2 vols. (Paris, 1858.)
+
+GOLLUT, M. LOYS. _Les memoires historiques de la republique sequanoise
+et des princes de la Franche-Comte de Bourgogne._ (Arbois, 1846.)
+
+JEUNE, HUGUENIN. _Histoire de la guerre de Lorraine et du siege de
+Nancy, par Charles le Temeraire, duc de Bourgogne,_ 1473-1477. (Metz,
+1837.)
+
+KERVYN DE LETTENHOVE, LE BARON. [Ed. of works of Chastellain, Budt,
+etc.]; see article in _Bulletin de l'academie royale de Belgique_,
+1887, etc.
+
+KERVYN DE LETTENHOVE. _Histoire de Flandre_. 5 vols. (Brussels,
+1853-54.)
+
+KIRK, JOHN FOSTER. _History of Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy_. 3
+vols. (Philadelphia, 1864-1868.)
+
+LABORDE (L.E.S.J.), COMTE DE. _Les ducs de Bourgogne: Etudes sur les
+lettres, les arts et l'industrie pendant le XV^{e} siecle_, etc.
+"Preuves." 3 vols. (Paris, 1849-52.)
+
+LACOMBLET, TH. J. _Urkundenbuch fuer die Geschichte des Niederrheins._
+4 vols. (Duesseldorf, 1848.)
+
+LA MARCHE, OLIVIER DE, 1422-1502. _Memoires._ (1435-1488.) Paris,
+1883-84. (Ed. Beaune et d'Arbaumont.) 3 vols.
+
+LAVISSE, ERNEST. _Histoire de France depuis les origines jusqu'a la
+revolution_. Publiee avec la collaboration de MM. Bayet, Block, Carre,
+Kleinclausz, Langlois, Lemonnier, Luchaire, Mariejol, Petit-Dutaillis,
+etc. (Paris, 1893-.)
+
+The volume covering periods of Charles VII. and Louis XI. is written
+by Ch. Petit-Dutaillis, Professor at the University of Lille.
+(Reference used, Lavisse, IV^{11}.) (Paris, 1902.)
+
+LE FEVRE, JEAN, SEIGNEUR DE ST. REMY. (_Toison d'or._) (1395-1463.)
+_Chronique._ 2 vols. (Paris, 1876.)
+
+LE ROUX DE LINCY, A.J.V. _Chants historiques sur les regnes de Charles
+VII. et de Louis XI_.
+
+_Lettres de Louis XI_. (Paris, 1883-.) (Eds., Joseph Vaesen, et
+Etienne Charavay,
+
+LOOMIS, LOUISE ROPES. _Medieval Hellenism_. (Columbia University,
+1906.)
+
+MARTENE, EDMUND. _Veterum Scriptorum et Monumentorum, Historicorum,
+Dogmaticorum, Moralium, Amplissium Collectio_. Vol. iv. (Paris, 1729.)
+
+_Memoires et documents publies par la societe d'histoire de la suisse
+romande_. Vol. viii. "Melanges." (Lausanne, 1849.)
+
+MEYER, J. _Commentarii sive annales rerum Flandricarum_. (Antwerp,
+1561.)
+
+MOLINET, JEAN. _Chronique_ (1474-1506.) (Paris, 1824-29.)
+
+This is a continuation of Chastellain and is interesting especially
+for the siege of Neuss.
+
+MONSTRELET, ENGUERRAND DE (d. 1453). _La Chronique_. (Paris, 1861.)
+
+MOLINIER, AUGUSTE. _Les sources de l'histoire de France des origines
+aux guerres d'Italie_. Vols. iv., v., 1461-1494. (Paris, 1904.)
+
+_Neues Archiv der Gesellschaft fuer aeltere deutsche Geschichtskunde_.
+Vol. xxv. (Leipzig, 1900.)
+
+OMAN, CHARLES W.C. _Warwick the Kingmaker_. 1890. ONUFRIUS DE SANCTA
+CROCE, Bishop of Tricaria. _Memoire sur les affaires de Liege_ (1468).
+(Ed., S. Bormans.) (Brussels, 1885.)
+
+OUDENBOSCH. _Veterum scriptorum et monumentorum, historicorum_, etc.
+_Rerum Leodiensius. Opus Adriani de vetere Buseo_, 1343. See Martene.
+
+PICQUE, CAMILLE. _Memoire sur Philippe de Commines_. (Brussels, 1864.)
+Mem. couronnes par 1'acad. royale de Belgique, vol. xvi.
+
+PIOT, G.J.C., Ed. _Chronycke van Nederlandt_--1565. _Vlaamsche
+Kronijk_--1598. _Collection des chroniques belges_. (Brussels, 1836-.)
+
+PIRENNE, HENRI. _Histoire de Belgique_. 2 vols. (Brussels, 1903.)
+
+PIRENNE, HENRI. _Bibliographie de l'histoire de Belgique: catalogue
+methodique et chronologique des sources et des ouvrages principaux
+relatifs a l'histoire de tous les Pays-Bas jusqu' en 1598_. (Brussels,
+1902.)
+
+PLANCHER, URBAIN. _Histoire generale et particuliere de Bourgogne avec
+des notes et les preuves justificatives_, etc. 4 vols. (Dijon, 1739.)
+
+POICTIERS, ALIENOR DE. _Les honneurs de la cour_. (In Sainte-Palaye,
+_Memoires sur l'ancienne chevalerie_, vol. 2, pp. 171-267.) (Paris,
+1781.)
+
+POLAIN, M.L. _Recits historiques sur l'ancien pays de Liege._ 4th ed.
+(Brussels, 1866.)
+
+PUTNAM, RUTH. _A Medieval Princess_. (New York, 1904.)
+
+RAM, P.F.X. DE. _Documents relatifs aux troubles du pays de Liege
+sous les princes-eveques Louis de Bourbon et Jean de Horne_, I vol.
+(Brussels, 1844.)
+
+RAMSAY, SIR JAMES H. _Lancaster and York, a Century of English
+History_ (A.D., 1399-1485). 2 vols. (Oxford, 1892.)
+
+REIFFENBERG, BARON F.A. DE. _Essai sur les enfants naturels de
+Philippe de Bourgogne_.
+
+REIFFENBERG, BARON F.A. DE. _Histoire de l'Ordre de la Toison d'Or_.
+(Brussels, 1830.)
+
+REIFFENBERG, BARON F.A. DE. _Memoire sur le sejour de Louis XI. aux
+Pays-Bas_. Nouveaux mem. de l'acad. royale. 1829.
+
+REIFFENBERG, BARON F.A. DE. _De l'etat de la population_, etc., _dans
+les Pays-Bas pendant le XV^{e} et le XVI^{e} siecle_. Mem. de l'acad.
+royale in 4 deg.. (Brussels, 1822.) [Also editor of various works.]
+
+RODT, EMANUEL VON. _Die Feldzuege Karls des Kuehnen_. 2 vols.
+(Schaffhausen, 1843.)
+
+ROLAND, P. AUBERT. _La guerre de Rene II. contre Charles le Hardi_.
+(Luxembourg, 1742.)
+
+ROYE, JEAN DE. _Chronique scandaleuse_. [A journal of the years
+1460-1483.] (Ed. Bernard de Mandrot.) 2 vols. (Paris, 1894-96.)
+
+RUHL, GUSTAVE. _L'expedition des Franchimontoir en 1468_. Soc. d'art
+et d'histoire de Liege, ix. (Liege, 1895.)
+
+RYMER, THOMAS. _Foedera, conventiones, litterae et cujuscumque generis
+acta publica inter reges Angliae et alios quosvis reges_, etc. 20 vols.
+Vol. xi. (London, 1704--1716.)
+
+SCHELLHASE, K. "Zur Trierer Zusammenkunft im Jahre 1473." In _Deutsche
+Zeitschrift fuer Geschichtswissenschaft_. Band VI. (Freiburg, 1891.)
+
+SELDEN, JOHN. _Titles of Honor_. 3d ed. (London, 1672.)
+
+SNOY, RENIER (Snoyus Reinerus). _De rebus Batavicis_. (Frankfurt,
+1620.) In fol.
+
+STEIN, H. "_Olivier de la Marche historien, poete et diplomate
+Bourgogne_." In men couronne etc., par l'acad. royale vol. xlix.
+(Brussels, 1888.)
+
+STOUFF, Louis. _Les comtes de Bourgogne et leurs villes domaniales_.
+(Paris, 1899.)
+
+STOUFF, LOUIS. "Les possessions bourguignonnes dans la vallee du Rhin
+sous Charles le temeraire." _Annales de l'est_. Vols. xvii.-xviii.
+(Paris, 1903.)
+
+TOUTEY, E. _Charles le temeraire et la ligue de Constance._ (Paris,
+1902.)
+
+VANDER MAELEN, PH. _Dictionnaire geographique de la province de
+Liege_. (Brussels, 1831.)
+
+WAGENAAR, JAN. _Vaderlandsche Historie_. 21 vols. (Amsterdam,
+1749-1759.)
+
+WAVRIN, JEHAN DE (living 1465-1471). _Anchiennes croniques de
+Engleterre_. (Ed. Mlle. Dupont.) 3 vols. (Paris, 1858-63.)
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+A
+
+Abbeville
+Agincourt
+Aire
+Aix
+Alkmaar
+Alsace
+Alsace
+Amboise
+Amiens
+Amont
+Andernach
+Angers
+Anjou
+Anjou, Margaret of, Queen of England
+Anjou, Rene, King of
+Anjou, Yolande of, _see_ Vaudemont
+Antwerp
+Appiano, Antoine d' (Antonius de Aplano), Milanese ambassador
+Aragon
+Argau
+Armagnac
+Arras, Bishop of
+Arras, treaty
+Arson, Jehan d
+Arthur, King
+Artois
+Artois, Bonne of, Duchess of Burgundy, _see_ Burgundy
+Atclyff, William
+Ath
+Augsburg, Diet of
+Austria
+Austria, House of
+Austria, Maximilian, Archduke of, _see_ Maximilian
+Austria, Sigismund of (Count of Tyrol;
+ mortgages lands to Charles of Burgundy;
+ resumes sovereignty of mortgaged lands;
+Auvergne, Marshal d'
+Auxonne
+Auxy, Jehan, Seigneur d
+Avesnes
+Avranches, Bishop of
+Aydie, Odet d'
+
+
+
+B
+
+"Bad Penny," the, tax
+Balue, Cardinal
+Bar, duchy of
+Barante, cited
+Bari, Duc de (Sforza)
+Barnet, battle of
+Barre, Corneille de la
+Barrois
+Baschi, Suffren de
+Basel
+Basel, Bishop of
+Basin, Thomas, cited
+_Basse-Union_
+Baume-les-Dames
+Bavaria, elector of
+Bavaria, Stephen of
+Beaujeu, Lord of
+Beaumont, chateau of
+Beauvais, siege of
+Bedford, John, Duke of, death of
+Begars, Abbe de
+Belfort
+Belliere, Vicomte de la
+Berne
+Berry, Bailiff of
+Berry, Charles of France, Duke of (Normandy and Guienne),
+ heads League of Public Weal;
+ character of;
+ Normandy given to;
+ won over by Louis;
+ Guienne given to;
+ proposed marriage of;
+ suspicious death of
+Besancon
+Biche, Guillaume de
+Biscay, Bay of
+Black Forest
+Bladet
+Blamont, Count of
+Blaumont, Seigneur de, Marshal of Burgundy
+Boccaccio
+Bohemia
+Bonn
+Borselen, Adrian van, Seigneur of Breda
+Borselen, Frank van (Count of Ostrevant;
+ death of
+Borselen, Henry van
+Boscise
+Bouchage, Monseigneur du
+Boudault, Jehan
+Boulogne
+Bourbon, Catharine of, _see_ Guelders
+Bourbon, Duchess of
+Bourbon, duchy of
+Bourbon, Duke of
+Bourbon, Isabella of (Countess of Charolais), _see_ Charolais
+Bourbon, Louis of, Bishop of Liege
+Bourges
+Bouvignes
+Bouxieres
+Brabant, Anthony, Duke of
+Brabant, duchy of
+Brabant, Duke of
+Brandenburg, Albert, elector of
+Brandenburg, Margrave of
+Brantome, Pierre de Bourdeille, Seigneur de, cited
+Breda
+Brederode, Gijsbrecht of
+Breisgau
+Bresse, Philip de
+Brie
+Brisac (Breisach)
+Brittany, Duchess of
+Brittany, duchy of
+Brittany, Francis, Duke of,
+ joins League of Public Weal;
+ ally of Charles of Burgundy;
+ is reconciled to Louis XI.
+Broeck, M. van der
+Bruchsal
+Bruges
+_Brunette_
+Brussels
+Bureau, Jehan
+Buren, castle of
+Burgundy, duchy of;
+ Estates of
+Burgundy, Franche-Comte of
+Burgundy, Anthony, Grand Bastard of
+Burgundy, Baldwin, Bastard of
+Burgundy, Charles the Bold, (Count of Charolais), Duke of;
+ birth of;
+ elected knight of the Golden Fleece;
+ description of;
+ ancestry of;
+ imperial ambitions of;
+ education of;
+ weds Catherine of France;
+ takes official part in public affairs;
+ character of;
+ first campaign of;
+ entrusted with regency of Holland;
+ English sympathies of;
+ weds Isabella of Bourbon;
+ judicial methods of;
+ rejoices over birth of daughter;
+ strained relations with his father;
+ enmity between Louis and ;
+ at coronation of Louis XI;
+ fears plots against his life;
+ joins League of Public Weal;
+ allies of;
+ letters of, to cities;
+ to Louis;
+ to Duchess Isabella;
+ to French council;
+ to Duke of Brittany;
+ to Sigismund;
+ to Edward IV.;
+ to Duke of Milan;
+ at battle of Montl'hery;
+ armies of;
+ dictates terms of treaty of Conflans;
+ marches against Liege;
+ destroys Dinant;
+ underestimates character and strength of enemies;
+ accedes to the dukedom;
+ invested with titles;
+ unpopularity of;
+ punishes Ghent;
+ reforms of;
+ weds Margaret of York;
+ ducal state of;
+ demands _aides_;
+ receives Louis at Peronne;
+ crushes revolt of Liege;
+ makes treaty of Peronne;
+ proposed sons-in-law for;
+ signs treaty of St. Omer;
+ takes lands from Sigismund;
+ relations of, with Swiss;
+ invested with Order of the Garter;
+ _Remonstrance_ presented to;
+ embassies to;
+ truces of, with Louis XI;
+ besieges Beauvais;
+ reverses of;
+ acquires duchy of Guelders;
+ negotiations between Emperor Frederic and;
+ interview of, with emperor at Treves;
+ becomes "protector" of Lorraine;
+ interferes in Cologne affairs;
+ visits Alsace;
+ troubles with Alsace;
+ besieges Neuss;
+ war declared against;
+ makes truce with Frederic;
+ defeated at Hericourt;
+ besieges Nancy;
+ allies desert;
+ defeated at Granson;
+ at Morat;
+ convenes states-general;
+ last battle of;
+ death and burial of
+Burgundy, Cornelius, Bastard of
+Burgundy, David of, Bishop of Utrecht
+Burgundy, Isabella of Portugal, Duchess of;
+ ancestry of;
+ English sympathies of;
+ retires to convent;
+ burial of
+Burgundy, John the Fearless, Duke of;
+ death of
+Burgundy, Margaret, Bastard of
+Burgundy, Margaret of York, Duchess of
+Burgundy, Mary of (Duchess of Austria;
+ godfather of;
+ proposed marriages for
+Burgundy, Philip the Good, Duke of, marriages of;
+ institutes Order of Golden Fleece;
+ children of;
+ alliance of;
+ signs treaty of Arras;
+ territories acquired by;
+ suppresses revolt in Bruges;
+ wealth and magnificence of;
+ crushes rebellion of Ghent;
+ gives Feast of the Pheasant;
+ plans crusade;
+ chooses second wife for Charles;
+ character of;
+ interferes in affairs of Utrecht, of Liege, and of Cologne;
+ hospitality of, to dauphin;
+ influenced by the Croys;
+ attends coronation of Louis XI;
+ illnesses of;
+ witnesses punishment of Dinant;
+ death and burial of;
+ epitaph of;
+ description of;
+ popularity of
+Burgundy, Philip the Hardy, Duke of
+Burgundy, Yolande, Bastard of
+
+
+
+C
+
+Cagnola
+Calabria, Duke of, _see_ Lorraine
+Calais
+Calixtus III.
+Cambray
+Campobasso, Antonello de, mercenary captain;
+ treachery of
+Canterbury
+Casanova
+Castile
+Castile, Henry IV., King of
+Castile, Jeanne of
+Cat, Gilles le
+Catto, Angelo
+Caux;
+ Bailiff of
+_Cent Nouvelles Nouvelles, les_
+_Cento Novelle_, by Boccaccio
+Cesner, Balthasar
+Chambery
+Chambes, Helen de
+Chamont, Sire de
+Champagne
+Channel
+Charenton
+Charlemagne
+Charles IV.
+Charles (V.) the Wise, King of France
+Charles VII., King of France,
+ reconciliation of, with Philip of Burgundy;
+ character of;
+ letters of;
+ refuses to join crusade;
+ breach between dauphin and;
+ illness and death of;
+ institutes standing army
+Charles VIII., King of France
+Charles the Simple, King of France
+Charmes
+Charny, Count de
+Charny, Countess de
+Charolais, Catherine of France, Countess of;
+ death and burial of
+Charolais, Count of, _see_ Charles of Burgundy
+Charolais, Isabella of Bourbon, Countess of;
+ death of
+Chassa, Jehan de
+Chastellain, cited;
+ death of
+Chateau-Chinon
+Chatenois
+Chauny,
+Chesny, Guiot du
+Chevelast, Louis de
+Chimay, Count of
+Citeaux, Abbe of
+Clarence, Duke of
+Clery
+Cleves, Adolph, Duke of
+Cleves, duchy of
+Cleves, Marie of, Duchess of Orleans
+Cods, the (party name)
+Colmar
+Cologne
+Cologne, Robert, Archbishop of
+Colonna, Baptista
+Commines (Commynes, Comines), Philip de,
+ enters service of Duke of Burgundy;
+ defection of;
+ cited
+Compiegne
+Compostella
+Conflans, treaty of
+Constance;
+ League of
+Constantinople
+Cordes, Monsieur de
+Corguilleray
+Cornwallis, Lord
+Corvinus, Matthias, King of Hungary
+Cosmo
+Court, Jehan de la
+Coutault, Monsieur
+Craon, Seigneur de
+Cret, Dion du
+Crevecoeur, Philip of
+Crevecoeur, Seigneur of
+Creville, Sire de
+Croy, A. de
+Croy, J. de
+Croy, Philip de
+Croy family, the
+_Cueillotte_, the (tax)
+Cyprus
+
+
+
+D
+
+Damian
+Dammartin, Count of
+ letters of Louis to
+Damme
+Dauphine
+Dauxonne, Jacquemin
+De Bussiere, cited
+Decapole, Alsatian, the
+De la Loere, secretary
+Dendermonde
+Denmark
+Denys, Chaplain
+Deschamps, Eustache, _Lay de Vaillance_ by
+Deventer
+Dieppe
+Diesbach, Ludwig von
+Dijon
+Dinant;
+ destruction of
+Dole
+Dombourc
+Dompaire
+Dordrecht
+Du Clercq, cited
+Duclos, cited
+Dunois, Count
+Dunois, Francois
+Du Plessis, Seigneur
+
+
+
+E
+
+Easterlings
+l'Ecluse
+Edward IV., King of England;
+ aided by Charles of Burgundy;
+ plans conquest of France;
+ character of;
+ makes peace with Louis XI.
+Edward of Lancaster, Prince of Wales;
+ death of
+Emeries, Antoine Raulin, Sire d' (Aymeries)
+Engelburg
+England alliance of,
+ with Burgundy;
+ with France;
+ French possessions of;
+ commercial relations of;
+ wars of the Roses in
+Ensisheim
+Epinal
+Erasmus
+Escalles, Seigneur d'
+Escouchy, Mathieu d,'
+ cited
+Estampes, Count d'
+Etampes
+Eu
+Eu, Count d'
+_Ewige Richtung_
+Exeter, Duke of
+Eyb, Ludwig von
+
+
+
+F
+
+Faret (or Farrel), Guillaume
+Favre, Jourdain
+Ferrara
+Ferrette, county of
+Flanders;
+ Estates of;
+ commerce of
+Flanders, Count of
+Florence
+Foix, Count de
+Foix, Eleanor de
+Foix, Gaston de
+Forli, Bishop of
+Fossombrone, Bishop of
+Fou, Ivon du
+France, alliance of, with Burgundy;
+ waning power of England in;
+ changed conditions in;
+ assembly of states-general of;
+ invasion of
+France, Admiral of, the
+France, Catherine, Daughter of, _see_ Charolais
+France, Charles of, Duke of Berry, _see_ Berry
+France, Jeanne of
+France, Michelle of, _see_ Burgundy
+Franche-Comte
+Franchimont
+Frankfort
+Frederic, elector palatine
+Frederic III., Emperor;
+ character of;
+ negotiations of, with Charles of Burgundy;
+ meets Charles at Treves;
+ description of;
+ signs treaty with Charles
+Fribourg
+Friesland;
+ title of Lord of
+Friesland, West
+
+
+
+G
+
+_Gabelle_
+Gachard, cited
+Galeotto
+Garter, Order of the
+Gauthier, Dan
+Gautier, cited
+Gaveren;
+ battle of;
+ treaty of
+Gelthauss, Johannes
+Genappe
+Geneva
+Geneva
+Genoa
+Gex
+Ghent;
+ rebellion of;
+ submission of;
+ insurrection in;
+ humiliation of
+Gilles, Frere
+Givry, Sire de
+Gloucester, Duke of
+Gloucester, Humphrey, Duke of
+Golden Fleece, Order of the, instituted;
+ assemblies of;
+ knights of
+Gorcum
+Goerlitz, Elizabeth of
+Granson, battle of
+Grave
+Grenoble
+Grey, Jean de
+Groothuse, Louis de la
+Groothuse, Mathys de la
+Guelders, Adolf, Duke of;
+ imprisonment of
+Guelders, Arnold, Duke of;
+ death of
+Guelders, Catharine of Bourbon, Duchess of
+Guelders, Charles of
+Guelders, duchy of
+Guelders, Philippa of
+Guerin, Jean de
+Guienne, Charles of France, Duke of, _see_ Berry
+Guienne, duchy of
+Guise
+Guisnes
+
+
+
+H
+
+Haarlem
+Hagenbach, Peter von;
+ Governor of Alsace;
+ trial and execution of
+Hagenbach, Stephen von
+Hague, The
+Hainaut
+Ham
+Hanseatic League
+Heers, Raes de la Riviere, Lord of
+Heinsberg, John of, Bishop of Liege
+Hemricourt, Jacques de
+Henry IV., of Castile
+Henry V., King of England
+Henry VI., King of England;
+ character of;
+ death of
+Henry VII., King of England
+Hericourt
+Hermite, Tristan l'
+Hesdin
+Hesse, Hermann of
+Holland;
+ title of Count of
+Holland, Jacqueline of Bavaria, Countess of
+Holland, South
+Holland, William VI., Count of
+Honfleur
+Hooks, the (party name)
+Houthem
+Howard, Lord
+Hugonet, Chancellor
+Humbercourt, Seigneur de
+Hungary;
+ King of
+Huy
+
+
+
+I
+
+Innsbruck
+Irma, Jean
+Isabella of Portugal, Duchess of Burgundy, _see_ Burgundy
+
+
+
+J
+
+Jarville
+Jarville, Sieur de
+Jerusalem
+Joan of Arc
+Joinville, castle of;
+ treaty of
+Jomini
+Jougne
+Jouvencal
+Juliers, Duke of
+Jura, the
+
+
+
+K
+
+Kaisersberg
+Kennemerland
+Kervyn de Lettenhove, Baron, cited
+Knebel, Johannes R.
+
+
+
+L
+
+La Hogue
+Laisne, Jeanne (Fouquet), _La Hachette_
+Lalaing, Jacques de, prowess of;
+ death of
+La Marche, Olivier de, cited;
+ knighted;
+ loyalty and zeal of
+Lambert, Bishop of Tongres
+Lancaster, House of
+Lannoy, Jehan, Seigneur de
+Lanternier, Jehan
+Laon
+La Riviere
+La Rochelle
+Lauffen
+Lauffenberg
+Laurentian Library, the
+Lausanne
+Lavin, Etienne de
+League of Constance
+League of Public Weal
+Le Grand, Abbe
+Le Gros, Jehan
+Le Quesnoy
+Lescun, Seigneur de
+Liege, description of;
+ government of;
+ bishop-princes of;
+ rebellion of;
+ aided by Louis XI.;
+ punishment of
+Liege, bishopric of
+Lille
+Limbourg
+Livornia
+Loches
+Loisey, Anthony de
+Lombardy
+London
+Longjumeau
+Longueval, Hugues de
+Loreille, Thomas de
+Lorraine, duchy of
+Lorraine, Estates of
+Lorraine, Duke of
+Lorraine, Nicholas of Anjou, Duke of (Calabria);
+ death of
+Lorraine, Rene, Duke of, accepts Burgundian protection;
+ joins league against Charles
+Louis XI., King of France;
+ rebels against Charles VII.;
+ marries Charlotte of Savoy;
+ letters of, to Charles VII.;
+ to Dammartin;
+ to envoys;
+ to Count de Foix;
+ to Lorenzo de' Medici;
+ to Duke of Milan;
+ to Amiens;
+ to chancellor;
+ flees to Duke of Burgundy;
+ generosity of Duke Philip to;
+ is godfather of Mary of Burgundy;
+ tastes of;
+ duplicity of;
+ accession of;
+ ingratitude of;
+ character of;
+ enmity between Charles and;
+ nobles in league against;
+ policy of;
+ signs treaty of Conflans;
+ incites opposition to Charles of Burgundy;
+ breaks treaties;
+ makes visit to Peronne;
+ signs treaty at Peronne;
+ ally of the Swiss;
+ makes nucleus of standing army;
+ aids Earl of Warwick and Margaret of Anjou;
+ birth of son of;
+ makes truce with Charles;
+ suspected of death of brother;
+ rewards Beauvais;
+ wins over Edward IV.;
+ rejoices in death of Charles
+Louvain;
+ University of
+Lower Union, the, _see_ Basse-Union
+Lucerne
+Lude, Seigneur de
+Luxemburg, duchy of
+Luxemburg, John of
+Luxeuil
+Luzine River, the
+Lyme
+Lyons
+
+
+
+M
+
+Maestricht
+Maine
+Malhortie
+Mandrot, Bernard Edouard,
+ editor of Commynes' _Memoires, Jean de Roye_, etc.,
+ cited
+Manton, Seigneur de
+Marchant, Ythier
+Marck, Adolph de la
+Marne River, the
+Marquiez, George
+Mas, Gilles du
+Mathieu
+Maximilian, Archduke of Austria;
+ proposed marriage of
+Mayence
+Mayence, Archbishop of
+Mayence, Duke of
+Mazilles, Jehan de
+Mechlin
+Medici, Lorenzo de'
+Metz
+Metz
+Meurin, secretary to Louis XI.
+Meurthe River, the
+Meuse River, the
+Meyer, J., cited
+Michel, the Rhetorician, cited
+Middelburg
+Milan
+Milan
+Mirecourt
+Mongleive
+Mons
+Montbazon
+Montereau, bridge of
+Montfort, Ulrich von
+Montgomery, Sir Thomas (Mongomere)
+Montl'hery, battle of
+Monulphe, Bishop of Tongres
+Morat, battle of
+Morges
+Morvilliers, Chancellor
+Moselle River, the
+Moutils-les-Tours
+Mulhouse
+
+
+
+N
+
+Namur
+Namur
+Nancy;
+ sieges of;
+ battle of
+Naples
+Naples, King of
+Napoleon
+Narbonne, Archbishop of
+Nassau, Engelbert of
+Nassau, John of
+_Nations_, the
+Nesle
+Netherlands, the;
+ states-general of
+Neufchatel
+Neufchatel, Isabelle of
+Neuss
+Neuville
+Nevers
+Nevers, Charles, Count of
+Neville, Anne
+Nice
+Nimwegen
+Norfolk, Duchess of
+Normandy, Charles of France, Duke of, _see_ Berry
+Normandy, duchy of
+Norway
+Noseret
+Noyon
+Nuremberg
+
+
+
+O
+
+Obernai
+Oise River, the
+Onofrio de Santa Croce
+Orange, Prince of
+Oriole, Pierre d'
+Orleans
+Orleans, duchy of
+Orleans, Duke of
+Osterlings, the
+Ostrevant, Count of, _see_ Borselen
+Oudenarde
+Ourre, Gerard
+Oxford
+
+
+
+P
+
+Palatinate, the
+Palatine, Count;
+ the elector;
+ Frederic, elector
+Panigarola, Johannes Petrus,
+ Milanese ambassador, cited
+Paris
+Paris, University of
+Paston, Sir John, letters of
+Paston, John, the younger
+ (brother of above), letter of
+Paston, Margaret
+Pavia
+Pellet, Jean
+Pepin
+Perdriel, Henry
+Perigny
+Perigord
+Peronne, interview of Louis XI. and Charles at;
+ treaty of
+"Peronne, the Peace of"
+Perrenet
+Petit-Dutaillis, Ch., author of Vol. IV^{II}, Lavisse,
+ _Hist. de France, see_ Lavisse.
+Petitpas
+Petrasanta, Franciscus, Milanese ambassador
+Pheasant, Feast of the
+Picardy
+Picquigny
+Plessis-les-Tours
+Pleume
+Podiebrad, George, ex-king of Bohemia
+Poictiers, Alienor de
+Poinsot, Jean
+Poitiers
+Poland
+Pont-a-Mousson
+Pont de Ce
+Porcupine, Order of the
+Portinari, Thomas
+Portugal
+Portugal, Alphonse V., King of
+Portugal, Isabella of, Duchess of Burgundy, _see_ Burgundy
+Pot, Philip de
+Poucque, castle of
+Prussia
+Public Weal, War of, _see_ League
+
+
+
+Q
+
+Quaux River, the
+Quercy
+Quievrain, Seigneur de
+Quingey, Simon de
+
+
+
+R
+
+Rampart, Jean
+Ratellois
+Ratisbon
+Ravestein, Madame de
+Ravestein, Monseigneur de
+Renty, Monseigneur de
+Rethel
+Rheims
+Rheims, Archbishop of
+Rheinfelden
+Rhine, the;
+ Valley
+Rhinelands, the
+Rhodes
+Rivers, Earl
+Roche, Henri de la
+Rochefort
+Rochefort, Sire of
+Rochefoucauld
+Roelants, Gort
+Romans, King of the
+Rome
+Romont, Count of
+Romorantin
+Roses, Wars of the
+Rossillon
+Rottelin, Marquise Hugues de
+Rotterdam
+Rouen
+Rousillon
+Rouvre
+Roye
+Roziere, Malhortie de
+Rubempre, the bastard of
+Rubempre, Jehan de
+Ruple, G.
+Russia
+
+
+
+S
+
+Saeckingen
+St. Bavon, Abbot of
+Ste. Beuve, cited
+St. Blaise, Abbe of
+St. Claude
+St. Cloud
+St. Denis
+St. Lievin, feast of
+St. Michel-sur-Loire
+St. Nicolas-du-Port
+St. Omer;
+ treaty of
+St. Pol, Count of
+ made constable of France;
+ treachery of;
+ execution of
+St. Quentin
+St. Remy, Jean le Fevre, Seigneur de
+St. Thierry
+St. Trond
+Sale, Anthony de la
+Salesart
+Salins
+Salisbury, Bishop of
+Savoy, Charlotte of, marries the dauphin
+Savoy, duchy of
+Savoy, dukes of
+Savoy, Yolande, Duchess of;
+ ally of Charles the Bold;
+ kidnapped;
+ rescued
+Saxony, Duke of
+Saxony, elector of
+Schellhass, Karl
+Schiedam
+Schlestadt
+Scotland, Eleanor of, wife of Sigismund of Austria
+Scotland, Margaret of, wife of Louis, the dauphin
+Seine River, the
+Sforza, Galeazzo-Maria, Duke of Milan
+Sicily
+Sigismund, Archduke of Austria, _see_ Austria
+Sigismund, Emperor
+Sluis
+Snoy, Renier, cited
+Soleure
+Somerset, Duke of
+Somme, towns on the river,
+ ceded to Duke of Burgundy;
+ redemption of towns on the
+Sorel, Agnes
+Soulz, Rudolf de
+Spain
+Spain, King of
+Stein, Hertnid von
+Stein, Rudolph de
+Stephen, Martin
+Strasburg
+Strasburg, Bishop of
+Stuttgart
+Sundgau, the
+Swabia
+Swiss, the, valour of;
+ victories of;
+ allies of Louis XI.
+Swiss Cantons, the;
+ declare war against Charles the Bold
+Swynaerde
+Sylvius, AEneas
+
+
+
+T
+
+Talmont, Prince of
+Tewkesbury, battle of
+Texel, island of
+Thann
+Therain, the
+Therouanne, Bishop of
+Thierry
+Thierry, Monsieur de
+Thierstein, Oswald von
+Thionville
+Thouan, Mme. de
+Thouars, Guillaume de
+Thurgau
+Tilhart, secretary to Louis XI.
+Tongres;
+ bishops of
+Tonnerre, Count of
+Toul
+Touraine
+Tournay
+Tournay, Bishop of
+Tournehem
+Tours
+Toustain, Aloysius (Toussaint)
+Toustain, Guillaume
+Toutey, E., cited
+Trausch, cited
+Tree of Gold, jousts of the
+Tremoille, Jehan de la
+Treves
+Treves, Archbishop of
+Tuin
+Turin
+Turks, the, capture Constantinople;
+ proposed crusade against
+
+
+
+U
+
+Unterwalden
+Uri
+Urse, Seigneur d'
+Utenhove, Richard
+Utrecht
+
+
+
+V
+
+Vaesen, Joseph Frederic Louis (editor of _Lettres de Louis XI_.)
+Valenciennes
+Valois, House of
+Vaudemont, Yolande of Anjou, Duchess of
+Vendome, Count of
+Venice
+Verard, Antoine
+Verdun
+Vere
+Vermandois
+Vermandois, Count de
+Vesoul
+Villeclerc, Demoiselle de
+Virnenbourg, Count of
+Visen, Charles de
+Vosges, the
+
+
+
+W
+
+Wailly
+Waldemar of Zuerich
+Waldshut
+Walloon language, the
+Warwick, Earl of;
+ death of
+Wavrin, Philip de
+Wellington, Duke of
+Wenlock, governor of Calais
+Weymouth
+Wieringen, island of
+Woodville, Elizabeth
+Wuisse, Vautrin
+Wyler, Hans
+
+
+
+X
+
+Xaintes
+
+
+
+Y
+
+York, House of
+York, Margaret of, Duchess of Burgundy, _see_ Burgundy
+Ypres
+
+
+Z
+
+Zealand
+Zuerich
+Zutphen
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Charles the Bold, by Ruth Putnam
+
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