CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY DATE DUE < /I -ftih^ <[i rt ♦ . — ^ ^ *^ *_ * ' ^# wWrtsi ^■■■iri^H^HH^^H^Hb ^ apiST T il m flPf^ *1^^ ' "^SjyJ CAVLOHD i»HINTCO iN 0. t A Cornell University Library DC 112.A4B82 1899 Reign and amours orff,f,,KS'K,i,H|K 3 1924 028 183 568 Olin Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924028183568 MESSIRE PIERRE DE BOVMBEHUuE [ SEECrKEUR BE EI^Al^TOMEo oTIie Steian and £ttnotivo of tftc oBoiizSon afleal^ne A Brilliant Description of the Courts of Louis XVI, Amours, Debaucher3^ Intrigues, and State Secrets, including Suppressed and Confiscated MvSS. The Book of the Illustrious Dames BY Pierre de Bourdeille, Abbe de Brantgme With Introductorv Essay by ^ C -A. Sainte-Beuve "^CjtQxpuzgatcd dRc}i3ition into 'S'fvgfioA PRIVATELY PRINTED FOK MEMBERS OF THE VERSAILLES HISTORICAL SOCIETY NEW YORK /^ 1 ;> Copyright, 1899 By H. p. & Co y^// Righfs Rcseii'ed. lEMtion be Xuie This editio}i is limited to two /fu?idrcd copies, of ivhicJi this is '-Nm^ibcr ...,::} ..# li^. CONTENTS. Page INTRODUCTION . . . . 1 DISCOURSE I. Anne Di: Bki.:t\(;tn^e, Queen of France . . . 25 Sainte-Bciivc's rejiiarks iipou her .... 40 DISCOUliSE II. Catherink de' Medki, Queen, and mother of our last kin^s .... . . . 44 S'unte-Btacc's icinark^ iiiion h< r . . - . . . . . . 85 DISCOUESE III. Makie Stuakt, Queen of Seotland, formerly Queen of our France . . 80 Sainte-Beuve's cssai/ on Ji( r . . . ... 121 DISCOURSE IV. Elisahetii OF France, Queen of Spain . . 138 DISCOURSE V. Marguerite, Queen of France and of Navarre, sole daughter now remaining of the Noble House of France 152 So inie-Bt lire's csscnj on her . . ... . 103 DISCOURSE VI. Mesdames, the Daughters of the Nol>le House of France : Madame Yoland ...... .... .... 214 Madame Jeanne ... . 215 Madame Anne . . . .210 Madame Claude .... .... 210 I\Iadame Renee . 220 Mesdaraes Charlotte, Louise, Magdelaine, IMarguerite .... 223 Mesdames Elisabeth, Claude, and Marguerite . .... 229 Madame Diane . . . ... . • 231 Margueriti: de Valois, Queen of Navarre . . 2-11 Sainte-Beuve's essay on the latter . . 24;i iv CONTENTS. DISCOUESE YU. Of Various Illustkious Ladies; Page Isabelle d'Autriche, wife of Charles IX 262 Jeanne d'Autriche, wife of the Infante of Portugal 270 Marie d'Autriche, wife of the Iving of Hungary 273 Louise de Lorraine, wife of Henri III 280 Marguerite de Lorraine, wife of the Due de Joyeuse 282 Christine of Denmark, wife of the Due de Lorraine 283 Marie d'Autriche, wife of the Emperor Maximilian II 291 Blanche de Montferrat, Duchesse de Savoie 293 Catlierine de Cleves, wife of Henri I. de Lorraine, Due de Guise 297 Madame de Bourdeille 297 APPENDIX 299 INDEX 305 LIST OF PHOTOGRAVURE ILLUSTRATIONS. Pierre de Bourdeille, Abbe and Seigneur de Brantome Frontispiece From an old engraving by I. Von Schley. Page Franoois de Lorraine, Due de Guise 8 By Francois Clouet; in the Louvre. Discourse L Tomb of Louis XIl. and Anne de Bketagne .... 34 By Jean Juste, in the Cathedral of Saint-Denis. The king and queen are carved as skeletons within the twelve columns; above they kneel at their prie-dieus, and the tradition is that the portraits are faithful. The cardinal virtues, Justice, Prudence, Temperance, and Fortitude, sit at the corners of the monument; the twelve apostles between the pillars; and round the base, between the virtues, are exquisite rep- resentations (not visible in the reproduction) of the king's campaigns in Italy. n. Catherine de' Medici, Queen of France ... ... 44 School of the sixteenth century; in the Louvre. IL Henri II., King of France .52 By Francois Clouet ; in the Louvre. II. Ball at the Court op Henri III., with Portraits ... 81 Attributed to Francois Clouet ; in the Louvre. See descrip- tion in note to Discourse VH. III. Marie Stuart, Queen of France and Scotland ... 90 Painter unknown ; in the Uffizi Gallery, Florence. IIL The Same 120 School of the sixteenth century ; Versailles. V. Henri IV., King of France 166 By Franz Pourbus (le jeune); in the Louvre. ^^ll ILLUSTRATIONS. DiscotJKSE Page V. Elisabeth de France, Queen of Spain 185 By Rubens ; in the Louvre. V. COEONATION OF MaRIE DE' MedICI, WITH PORTRAITS ... 211 By Rubens (Peter Paul); in the Louvre. See description in note to the Discourse. VI. Francois I., King of France 224 By Jean Clouet ; in the Louvre. VI. Diane de France, Duchesse d'Angouleme 232 School of the sixteenth centur}- ; in the Louvre. VII. ISABELLE d'AuTRICHE, WiFE OF CllARLES IX 262 By Francois Clouet; in the Louvre. VII. Charles IX., King of France 271 By Francois Clouet; in the Louvre. VII. Louise de Lorraine, Wife of Henri III 280 School of the sixteenth century; in the Lou\Te. Vn. Henri III., King of France 286 School of the sixteenth centur}-^ ; in tho Louvre. INTRODUCTION.^ The title, " Vie des Dames Illustres," given habitually to one volume of Brantome's Works, is not that which was chosen by its author. It was given by his first editor fifty years after his death; Brantome himself having called his work "The Book of the Ladies." One of his earliest commentators, Castelnaud, almost a cotemporary, says of him in his Memoirs : — " PieiTe de Bourdeille, Abb^ de Brantome, author of vol- umes of which I have availed myself in various parts of this history, used his quality as one of those warrior abb^s who were called Abhates Milites under the second race of our kings ; never ceasing for all that to follow arms and the Court, where his services won him the Collar of the Order and the dignity of gentleman of the Bedchamber to the King. " He frequented, with unusual esteem for his courage and intelligence, the principal Courts of Europe, such as Spain, Portugal (where the king honoured him with his Order), Scotland, and those of the Princes of Italy. He went to Malta, seeking an occasion to distinguish himself, and after that lost none in our wars of France. But, although he managed perfectly all the great captains of his time and belonged to them by alliance of friendship, fortune was ever contrary to 1 Taken chieflj from the Essays preceding the various editions of Brantome's works published in the 18th and 10th centuries ; some of which are anonymous ; the more recent being those of M. H. Vignaud and M. Henri Moland. — Tr. X 2 INTRODUCTION. him ; so that he never obtained a position worthy, not of his merits only, but of a name so illustrious as his. " It was this that made him of a rather bad humour in his retreat at Brantome, where he set himself to compose his books in different frames of mind, according as the persons who recurred to his memory stirred his bile or touched his heart. It is to be wished that he had written a discourse on himself alone, hke other seigneurs of his time. He would then have shown us much, if nothing were omitted in it ; but perhaps he abstained from doing this in order not to declare his inclinations for the House of Lorraine at the very moment of the ruin of all its schemes ; for he was greatly attached to that house, and it appears in various places that he had more respect than affection for the House of Bourbon. It was this that made him take part against the Salic law, in behalf of Queen Marguerite, whom he esteemed infinitely, and whom he saw, with regret, deprived of the Crown of France. " In many other matters he gives out sentiments which have more of the courtier than the abb^ ; indeed to be a courtier was his principal profession, as it still is with the greater part of the abb^s of the present day ; and in view of this quality we must pardon various little liberties which would be less pardonable in a sworn historian, " I do not speak of the volume of the ' Dames Galantes ' in order not to condemn the memory of a nobleman whose other Works have rendered him worthy of so much esteem; I attribute the crime of that book to the dissolute habits of the Court of his time, about which more terrible tales could be told than those he relates. "There is something to complain of in the method with which he writes; but perhaps the name of 'Notes' may cover this defect. However that may be, we can gather from INTRODUCTION. 3 him much and very important knowledge on our History ; and France is so indebted to liim for this labour that I do not hesitate to say that the services of his sword must yield in value to those of his pen. He had much wit and was well read in Letters. In youth he was very pleasing ; but I have heard those who knew him intimately say that the griefs of his old age lay heavier upon him than his arms, and were more displeasing than the toils and fatigues of war by sea or land. He regretted his past days, the loss of friends, and he saw nothing that could equal the Court of the Valois, in which he was born and bred. . ." " The family of Bourdeille is not only illustrious in tem- poral prosperities, but it is remarkable throughout antiquity for the valour of its ancestors. Kingf Charlemaijne held it in great esteem^ which he showed by choosing, when the splendid abbey of Brantome was founded in Pdrigord, that the Seigneur de Bourdeille should be associated in that pious work and be, with him, the founder of the Monastery. He therefore made him its patron, and obliged his posterity to defend it as^ainst all who midit molest the monks and hinder them in the enjoyment of their property. '' If we may rely on ancient deeds [^.)«?2.car^^;s] still in pos- session of this family, we must accord it a first rank among those which claim to be descended from kings, inasmuch as they carry back its origin to ]\Iarcomir, King of France, and Tiloa BoLirdelia, daughter of a kini_^ of England. " The same old deeds relate that ISTicanor, son of this Mar- comir, being appealed to by the people of Aquitaine to assist them in throwing off the Roman yoke, and having come with an army very near to Bordeaux, was compelled to withdraw by the violence of the Romans, who were stronger than he, and also by a tempest that arose in the sea. Nicanor cast anchor at an island, unmhabited on account of the wild beasts 4 INTRODUCTION. that peopled it, and especially certain griffins, animals with four feet, and heads and wings like eagles. " He had no sooner set foot on land with his men than he was forced to fight these monsters, and after battling with them a long time, not without loss of soldiers, he succeeded in vanquishing them. With his own hand he killed the largest and fiercest of them all, and cut off his paws. Tliis victory greatly rejoiced all the neighbouring countries, which had suffered much damage from these beasts. " On account of this affair, Nicanor was ever after surnamed ' The Griffin ' and honoured by every one, like Hercules when he killed the Stymphalides in Arcadia, those birds of prey that feed on human flesh. This is the origin of the arms which the Seigneurs de Brantome bear to this day, to wit: Or, two griffins' paws gules, ongl^e azure, counter barred." Pierre de Bourdeille, third son of Frangois, Yicomte de Bourdeille and Anne de Vivonne de la Chataignerie, was born ui the P(^rigord in 1537, under the reign of Frangois I. The family of Bourdeille is one of the most ancient and respected m the P(5rigord, which provmce borders on Gas- cony and echoes, if we may say so, the caustic tongue and rambling, restless temperaments that flourish on the banks of the Garonne. " Not to boast of myself," says Brantome, " I can assert that none of my race have ever been home-keeping ; they have spent as much time in travels and wars as any, no matter who they be, in France." As for his father, Brantome gives an amusing account of him as a true Gascon seigneur. He began life by running away from home to go to the wars in Italy, and roam the world as an adventurer. He was, says Brantome, "a jovial fellow, who could say his word and talk familiarly to the INTRODUCTION. 5 greatest personages." Pope Julius II. took a fancy to him. " One day they were playing cards together and the pope won from my father three hundred crowns and his horses, which were very fine, and all liis equipments. After he had lost all, he said : ' Chadicio hciiit !' (that was his oath when he was angry ; when he was good-natured he swore : ' Char- don henit ! ') — ' Chadieu hcnit ! pope, play me five hundred crowns against one of my ears, redeemable in eight days. If I don't redeem it I '11 give you leave to cut it off, and eat it if you hke.' The pope took Mm at his word ; and confessed afterwards that if my father had not redeemed his ear, he would not have cut it off, but he would have forced him to keep him company. They began to play again, and fortune willed that my father won back everything except a fine courser, a pretty little Spanish horse, and a handsome mule. The pope cut short the game and would not play any more. My father said to him : ' Hey ! Chadieu ! pope, leave me my horse for money ' (for he was very fond of him) ' and keep the courser, who will throw you and break your neck, for he is too rough for you ; and keep the mule too, and may she rear and break your leg ! ' The pope laughed so he could not stop himself. At last, getting his breath, he cried out : ' 1 11 do better ; I '11 give you back your two horses, but not the mule, and I '11 give you two other fine ones if you will keep me company as far as Eome and stay with me there two months ; we '11 pass the time well, and it shall not cost you anything.' My father answered : ' Chadieu I pope, if you gave me your mitre and your cap, too, I would not do it ; I would n't quit my general and my companions just for your pleasure. Good-bye to you, rascal' The pope laughed, while all the great captains, French and Italians, who always spoke so rev- erently to his Holiness, were amazed and laughed too at such liberty of language. When the pope was on the point of 6 INTRODUCTION. leaving, he said to Kim, ' Ask what you want of me and you shall have it,' thinkmg my father would ask for his horses ; but my father did not ask anything, except for a Kcense and dispensation to eat butter in Lent, for his stomach could never get accustomed to ohve and nut oil. The pope gave it him readily, and sent him a bull, which was long to be seen in the archives of our house." The young PieiTC de Bourdeille spent the first years of his existence at the Court of Marguerite de Valois, sister of Francois I., to whom his mother was lady-in-waiting. After the death of that princess in 1549 he came to Paris to begin his studies, which he ended at Poitiers about the year 1556. Being the yuungest of the family he was destined if not for the Church at least for church benefices, which he never lacked through life. An elder brother, Captain de Bourdeille, a valiant soldier, having been killed at the siege of Hesdm by a cannon-ball which took off his head and the arm that held a glass of water he was drinking on the breach, King Henri II. desired, in recognition of so glorious a death, to do some favour to the Bourdeille family ; and the abbey of Brantome falhng vacant at this very time, he gave it to the young Pierre de Bourdeille, then sixteen years old, who henceforth bore the name of Seigneur and Abbd de Brantome, abbreviated after a while to Brantome, by whicli name he is known to posterity. In a few legal deeds of the period, especially family documents, he is mentioned as " the rever- end father in God, the Abb^ de Brantome.'' Brantome had possessed his abbey about a year when he began to dream of going to the wars in Italy ; this was the high-road to glory for the young French nobles, ever since Charles VIII. had shown them the way. Brantome obtained from Frangois I. permission to cut timber in the forest of Saint-Trieix ; tliis cut brought him in five hundred golden INTEODUCTION. 7 crowns, with which he departed in 1558, "bearing," he says, " a matchlock arquebuse, a fine powder-horn from Milan, and moimted on a hackney worth a hundred crowns, fol- lowed by six or seven gentlemen, soldiers themselves, well set-up, armed and mounted the same, but on good stout nags." He went first to Geneva, and there he saw the Calvin is t emigration ; continuing his way he stayed at Milan and Ferrara, reaching Eome soon after the death of Paul IV. There he was welcomed by the Grand-Prior of Prance, Prangois de Guise, who had brought his brother, the Cardinal of Lorraine, to assist in the election of a new pontiff. This was the epoch of the Penaissance, — that epoch when the knightly king made all Europe resound with the fame of his amorous and warlike prowess ; when Titian and Primaticcio were leaving on the walls of palaces their im- mortal handiwork; when Jean Goujon was carving his figures on the fountams and the fagades of the Louvre ; when Eabelais was inciting that mighty roar of laughter which, in itself, is a whole human comedy ; when the Mar- guerite of Marguerites was telling in her " Heptameron " those charming tales of love. Prangois I. dies ; his son suc- ceeds him ; Protestantism makes serious progress. Mont- gomery kills Henri XL, and Francois XL ascends the throne only to live a year ; and then it is that Marie Stuart leaves France, the tears in her eyes, sadly singing as the beloved shores over which she had reigned so short a while re- cede from sight : " Farewell, my pleasant land of France, farewell ! " Eeturning to France without any warrior fame but closely attached by this time to the Guises, Brantome took to a Court life. He assisted in a tournament between the grand- prior, Francois de Guise, disguised as an Egyptian woman, 8 INTRODUCTION. " having on her arm a little monkey swaddled as an infant, which kept its baby face there is no teUiug how," and M. de Nemours, dressed as a bourgeoise housekeeper wearing at her belt more than a hundred keys attached to a thick silver cham. He witnessed the terrible scene of the execution of the Huguenot nobles at Amboise (March, 1560); was at Orleans when the Prince de Cond^ was arrested, and at Poissy for the reception of the Knights of Saint-Michel. In short, he was no more " home-keeping " in France than in foreign parts. Charles IX., then about ten years old, succeeded his brother Frangois 11. in December, 1560. The following year Due Frangois de Guise was commissioned to escort his niece, Marie Stuart, to Scotland. BrantSme went with them, saw the threatening reception given to the queen by her sullen subjects, and then returned with the duke by way of Eng- land. In London, Queen Elizabeth greeted them most graciously, deigning to dance more than once with Due Francois, to whom she said : " Monsieur mon prieur " (that was how she caUed him) " I like you very much, but not your brother, who tore my town of Calais from me." Brantome returned to France at the moment when the edict of Saint-Germain granting to Protestants the exercise of their religion was promulgated, and he was struck by the change of aspect presented by the Court and the whole nation. The two armed parties were face to face ; the Cal- vinists, scarcely escaped from persecution, seemed certain of approaching triumph ; the Prince de Cond^, with four hun- dred gentlemen, escorted the preachers to Charenton through the midst of a quivering population. " Death to papists! " the very cry Brantome had first heard on landing in Scot- land, where it sounded so ill to his ears — was beginning to be heard in France, to which the cry of " Death to the r INTRODUCTION. 9 Huguenots ! " responded in the breasts of an irritated popu- lace. Brantome did not hesitate as to the side he should take, — he was abbt^, and attached to the Guises ; he fought through the war with them, took part in the sieges of Blois, Bourges, and Eouen, was present at the battle of Dreux, where he lost his protector the grand-prior, and attached himself henceforth to Francois de Guise, the elder, whom he followed to the siege of Orleans in 1563, where the duke was assassinated by Poltrot de M^r^ under circumstances which Brantome has vividly described in his chapter on that great captain. In 1564 Brantome entered the household of the Due d'Anjou (afterwards Henri III.) as gentleman-in-waiting to the prince, on a salary of six hundred livres a year. But, being seized again by his passion for distant expeditions, he engaged during the same year in an enterprise conducted by Spaniards against the Emperor of Morocco, and went .with the troops of Don Garcia of Toledo to besiege and take the towns on the Barbary coast. He returned by way of Lisbon, pleased the king of Portugal, Sebastiano, who con- ferred upon him his Order of the Christ, and went from there to Madrid, where Queen Elisabeth gave him the cordial welcome on which he plumes himself in his Discourse upon that princess. He was commissioned by her to carry to her mother, Catherine de' Medici, the desire she felt to have an interview with her; which interview took place at Bayonne, Brantome not faihng to be present. In that same year, 1565, Sultan Suleiman attacked the island of Malta. The grand-master of the Knights of Saint- John, Parisot de La Valette, called for the help of all Chris- tian powers. The French government had treaties with the Ottoman Porte which did not allow it to come openly to the assistance of the Knights ; but many gentlemen, both 10 INTRODUCTION. Catholic and Protestant, took part as volunteers. Among them went Brantome, naturally. " We were," he says, " about three hundred gentlemen and eight hundred soldiers. Mr de Strozzi and M. de Bussac were with us, and to them we deferred our own wills. It was only a little troop, but as active and valiant as ever left France to fight the Infidel." Wliile at Malta he seems to have had a fancy to enter the Order of the Knights of Saint-John, but Philippe Strozzi dissuaded him. " He gave me to understand," says Bran- tume, " that I should do wrong to abandon the fine fortune that awaited me in Prance, whether from the hand of my king, or from that of a beautiful, virtuous lady, and rich, to whom I was just then servant and welcome guest, so that I had hope of marrying her." He left Malta on a galley of the Order, intending to go to Naples, according to a promise he had made to the " beau- tiful and virtuous lady," the Marchesa del Yasto. But a contrary wind defeated his project, which he did not re- nounce without regret. In after years he considered this mischance a strong feature in his unfortunate destiny. " It was possible," he says, " that by means of Mme. la marquise I might have encountered good luck, either by marriage or otherwise, for she did me the kindness to love me. But I believe that my unhappy fate was resolved to bring me back to Prance, where never did fortune smile upon me ; I have always been duped by vain expectations; I have received much honour and esteem, but of property and rank, none at all. Companions of mine who would have been proud had I deigned to speak to them at Court or in the chamber of the king or queen, have long been advanced before me ; I see them round as pumpkins and highly exalted, though I will not, for aU that, defer to them to the length of my thumb-nail. That proverb; ' No one is a prophet in his INTRODUCTION. 11 own country/ was made for me. If I had served foreign sovereigns as I have my own I should now be as loaded with wealth and dignities as I am with sorrows and years. Patience ! if Fate has thus woven my days, I curse her ! If my princes have done it, I send them all to the devil, if they are not there already." But when he started from Malta Brantome was still young, being then only twenty-eight years of age. " Jog- ging, meandering, vagabondizing," as he says, he reached Venice ; there he thought of going into Hungary in search of the Turks, wdiom he had not been able to meet in Malta. But the death of Sultan Suleiman stopped the invasion for one year at least, and Brantome reluctantly decided to return to France, passing through Piedmont, where he gave a proof of his disinterestedness, which he relates in his sketch of Marguerite, Duchesse de Savoie. Beaching his own land he found the war he had been so far to seek without encountering it ; whereupon he recruited a company of foot-soldiers, and took part in the third civil war with the title of commander of two companies, though in fact there was but one. Shortly after this he resigned his command to serve upon the staff of Monsieur, com- mander-in-chief of the royal army. After the battle of Jarnac (March 15, 1569), being sick of an intermittent fever, he retired to his abbey, where his presence throughout the troubles was far from useless. But always more eager for distant expeditions than for the dulness of civil war, Bran- tome let himself be tempted by a grand project of Marechal Strozzi, who dreamed of nothing less than a descent on South America and the conquest of Peru. Brantome was commissioned in 1571 to go to the port of Brouage and direct the preparations for the armament. It was this en- terprise that prevented him from being present at the battle 12 INTRODUCTION. of Lepanto (October 7, 1571). " I should have gone there resolutely, as did that brave M. de Grillon," he says, " if it had not been for M. de Strozzi, who amused me a whole year with that fine embarkation at Brouage, which ended in no tiling but the ruin of our purses, — to those of us at least who owned the vessels." But if the duties which kept him at Brouage robbed him of the glory of being present at the greatest battle of the age, it also saved him from being a witness of the Saint Bartholomew. The treaty of June 24, 1573, put an end to the siege of Kochelle and the fourth civil war. Charles IX. died on May 30, 1574 Monsieur, elected the year before to the throne of Poland, was in that distant country when the death of liis brother made him king of France. He has- tened to return. Brantome went to meet him at Lyons and was one of the gentlemen of his Bedchamber from 1575 to 1583. During the years just passed Brantome, besides the principal events already named in which he participated, took part in various little or great events in the daily life of the Court, such as : the quarrel of Sussy and Saint-Fal, the splendid disgrace of Bussy d'Amboise, the death and obsequies of Charles IX., the coronation of Henri III., etc. Throughout them all he played the part of interested spectator, of active supernumerary without importance; discontented at times and sulky, but always unable to make himself feared. The years went by in this sterile round. He was now thirty-five years old. The hope of a great fortune was realized no more on the side of his king than on that of his beautiful, virtuous, and rich lady. He is, no doubt, " liked, known, and made welcome by the kings, his masters, by his queens and his princesses, and all the great seigneurs, who held him in such esteem that the name of Brantome had great INTRODUCTION. 13 renown." But he is not satisfied with the Court small- change in which his services are paid. He is vexed that his own lightheartedness is taken at its word ; he would be very glad indeed if that love of liberty with which he decked himself were put to greater trials. Philosopher in spite of himself, he finds his disappointments all the more painful because of his own opinion of his merits. He sees men to whom he believes himself superior, prefeiTed before him. " His companions, not equal to him," he says in the epitaph he composed for himself, " surpassed him in benefits received, in promotions and ranks, but never in virtue or in merit." And he adds, with posthumous resignation : " God be praised nevertheless for all, and for his sacred mercy ! " Meantime, perchance a queen, Catherine de' Medici or Marguerite de Valois, deigns to drop into his ear some trifling word wliich he relishes with delight. Henri de Guise [le Balafr^], who was ten years younger than himself, called him " my son ; " and the Baron de Montesquieu, the one that killed the Prince de Cond^ at Jarnac and was very much older than Bran tome, who had pulled him out of the water during certain aquatic games on the Seine, called him " father.'' Such were the familiarities with which he was treated. He was, it is true, chevalier of the Order of Saint-Michel, but that was not enough to console his ambition. He com- plained that they degraded that honour, no longer reserved to the nobility of the sword. He thinks it bad, for instance, that it was granted to his neighbour, Michel de Montaigne. " We have seen," he says, " counsellors coming from the courts of parliament, abandonmg robes and the square cap to drag a sword behind them, and at once the king decks them with the collar, without any pretext of their going to war. 14 INTRODUCTION. This is what was given to the Sieur de Montaigne, who would have done much better to continue to write his Essays instead of changing his pen into a sword, which does not suit him. The Marquis de Trans obtained the Order very easily from the king for one of his neighbours, no doubt in derision, for he is a great joker." Brantome always speaks very slisfhtinsjly of Montai2:ne because the latter was of lesser nobility than his own ; but that does not prevent the Sieur de Montaigne from being to our eyes a much greater man than the Seimeur de Brantume. Brantome continued to follow the Court. He accompanied the queen-mother when she went in 1576 to Poitou to bring back the Due d'Alen^on, who was dabbling in plots. He accompanied her again when she conducted in 1578 her daughter Marguerite to ISTavarre ; and at their solemn entry into Bordeaux he had the honour of being near them on the " scaffold," or, as we should say in the present day, the plat- form. He had also the luck to hear at Samt-Germain-en- Laye King Henri III. make during his dinner, in presence of the Due de Joyeuse (on whose nuptials the fluent monarch was destined to spend a million), a discourse worthy of Cato aE^amst luxury and extravacjance. In 1582, his elder brother, Andre de Bourdeille, seneschal and governor of the Perigord, died. He left a son scarcely nine years old. Brantome had obtained from King Henri III. a promise that he should hold those offices until the majority of his nephew, on condition of transmitting them at that time. The king confirmed this promise on several occasions during the last illness of Andr^ de Bourdeille. But at the latter's death it was discovered that he had bound himself in his daughter's marriage contract to resign those offices to his son-in-law. The king considered that he ought to respect this family arrangement. Brantome was keenly hurt. " Od INTRODUCTION. 15 the second day of the year," he says, " as the king was returning from his ceremony of the Saint-Esprit, I made my complaint to him, more in anger than to implore him, as he well understood. He made me excuses, although he was my king. Among other reasons he said plainly that he could not refuse that resignation when presented to him, or he should be unjust. I made him no reply, except : ' Well, sire, I ought not to have put faith in you ; a good reason never to serve you again as I have served you.' On which I went away much vexed. I met several of my companions, to whom I related everything. I protested and swore that if I had a thousand lives not one would I employ for a King of France. I cursed my luck, I cursed life, I loathed the king's favour, I despised with a curling lip those beggarly fellows loaded with royal favours who were in no wise as worthy of them as I. Hanging to my belt was the gilt key to tlie king's bedroom ; I unfastened it and flung it from the Quai des Auefustins, where I stood, into tlie river below. I never aijain entered the king's room ; I abhorred it, and I swore never to set foot in it any more. I did not, however, cease to frequent the Court and to show myself in the room of the queen, who did me the honour to like me, and in those of her ladies and maids of honour and of the princesses, seigneurs, and princes, my good friends. I talked aloud about my displeasure, so that the kin or, hearim:^ of what I said, sent me a few words by M. du Halde, his head valet dc chamhre. I contented myself with answering that I was the king's most obedient, and said no more." Monsieur (the Due d'Alengon) took notice of ErantOme, and made him his chamberlain. About this time it was that he began to compose for this prince the " Discourses " after- wards made into a book and called " A'ies des Dames Galantes," which he dedicated to the Due d'Alen§on. The 16 INTRODUCTION. latter died in 1584, — a loss that daslied once more the hopes of Brantome and of others who, like liim, had pinned their faith upon that prince. After all, Brantome had some reason to complain of his evil star. Then it was that Brantome meditated vast and even criminal projects, which he himself has revealed to us : "I resolved to sell the httle property I possessed in France and go off and serve that great King of Spain, very illustrious and noble remunerator of services rendered to him, not com- pelling his servitors to importune him, but done of his own free will and wise opinion, and out of just consideration. Whereupon I reflected and ruminated within myself that I was able to serve him well ; for there is not a harbour nor a seaport from Picardy to Bayonne that I do not know per- fectly, except those of Bretagne which I have not seen ; and I know equally well all the weak spots on the coast of Lan- guedoc from Grasse to Provence. To make myself sure of my facts, I had recently made a new tour to several of the towns, pretending to wish to arm a ship and send it on a voyage, or go myself. In fact, I had played my game so well that I had discovered half a dozen towns on these coasts easy to capture on their weak sides, which I knew then and which I still know. I therefore thous^ht I could serve the King of SpaiQ in these directions so well that I might count on obtaining the reward of great wealth and dignities. But before I banished myself from France I proposed to sell my estates and put the money in a bank of Spain or Italy. I also proposed, and I discoursed of it to the Comte de La Piochefoucauld, to ask leave of absence from the king that I might not be called a deserter, and to be reheved of my oath as a subject in order to go wherever I should find myself better off than in his kingdom. I be- lieve he could not have refused my request ; because every- INTRODUCTION. 17 one is free to change his country and choose another. But however that might be, if he had refused me I should have gone all the same, neither more nor less like a valet who is angry with his master and wants to leave him ; if the latter will not give him leave to go, it is not reprehensible to take it and attach himself to another master." Thus reasoned BrantOme. He returns on several occa- sions to these lawless opinions ; he argues, apropos of the Conndtable de Bourbon and La None, against the scruples of those who are willing to leave their country, but not to take up arms against her. " I'faith ! " he cries, " here are fine, scrupulous philosophers ! Their quartan fevers ! While I hold shyly back, pray who will feed me ? Whereas if I bare my sword to the wind it will give me food and magnify my fame." Such ideas were current in those days among the nobles, in whom the patriotic sentiment, long subordinated to that of caste, was only developed later. These projects of treachery should therefore not be judged altogether with the severity of modern ideas. Besides, Brantome is working himself up ; it does not belong to every one to produce such grand disasters as these he meditates. Moreover, thought is far from action; events may intervene. People call them fate or chance, but chance will often simply aid the secret im- pulses of conscience, and bind our will to that it chooses. " Fine human schemes I made I " Brantome resumes. " On the very point of their accomplishment the war of the League broke out and turmoiled thiugs in such a way that no one would buy lands, for every man had trouble enough to keep what he owned, neither would he strip himself of money. Those who had promised to buy my property ex- cused themselves. To go to foreign parts without resources was madness, — it would only have exposed me to all sorts 18 INTRODUCTION. of misery ; I had too much experience to commit that folly. To complete the destruction of my designs, one day, at the height of my vigor and jolhty, a miserable horse, whose white skin might have warned me of nothing good, reared and fell over upon me breaking and crushing my loins, so that for four years I lay in my bed, maimed, impotent in every limb, unable to turn or move without torture and all the agony in the world ; and since then my health has never been what it once was. Thus man proposes, and God dis- poses. God does all things for the best ! It is possible that if I had realized my plans I should have done more harm to my country than the renegade of Algiers did to his ; and because of it, I might have been perpetually cursed of God and man." Consequently, this great scheme remained a dream ; no one need ever have known anything about it if Brantume himself had not taken pains to inform us of it with much complacency. The cruel fall which stopped his guilty projects must have occurred in 1585. At the end of three years and a half of suffering he met, he tells us, " with a very great personage and operator, called M. Saint-Christophe, whom God raised up for my good and cure, who succeeded in relieving me after many other doctors had failed." As soon as he was nearly well he began once more to travel. It does not appear that he frequented the Court after the death of Catherine de' Medici, which took place in January, 1589 ; but he was present, in that year, at the baptism of the posthumous son of Henri de Guise, whom the Parisians adopted after the father's murder at Blois, and named Paris. Agrippa dAu- bign(^, in his caricature of the Procession of the League, gives Brantume a small place as bearer of bells. But was he really there ? It seems doubtful ; lie makes somewhere the judicious INTRODUCTION. 19 reflection that : " One may well be surprised that so many French nobles put themselves on the side of the League, for if it had got the upper hand it is very certain that the clergy would have deprived them of church property and wiped their lips forever of it, which result would have cut the wings of their extravagance for a very long while.'' The secular Abb^ de Brantome had therefore as good reasons for not bein^ a Leasjuer as for not bein<]^ a Huo-uenot. In 1590 he went to make his obeisance to Marguerite, Queen of Navarre, then confined in the Chateau d'Usson in Auvergne. He presented to her his " discourse '' on " Spanish Ehodomontades," ]3ei'haps also a first copy of the life of that princess (which appears ui this volume), and he also showed her the titles of the other books he had composed. He was so enchanted with the greeting Queen Marguerite, la Eeine Margot, gave him, " the sole remaining daughter of the noble house of France, the most beautiful, most noble, grandest, most generous, most magnanimous, and most accomplished princess in the world " (when Brantome praises he does not do it by halves), that he promised to dedicate to her the entire collection of his works, — a promise he faithfully fulfilled. His health, now decidedly affected, confined more and more to his own home this indefatigable rover, who had, as he said, " the nature of a minstrel who prefers the house of others to his own." Condemned to a sedentary life, he used his activity as he could. He caused to be built the noble castle of Eichemont, with much pains and at great expense. He grew quarrelsome and litigious ; brouglit suits against his relations, against his neighbours, against his monks, whom he accused of mgratitude. By his will he bequeathed his lawsuits to his heirs, and forbade each and all to compromise them. 20 INTRODUCTION. Difficult to live with, soured, dissatisfied with the world, he was not, it would seem, in easy circumstances. He did not spare posterity the recital of his plaints : " Favours, gran- deurs, boasts, and vanities, all the pleasant things of the good old days are gone like the wind. ISTothing remains to me but to have been all that ; sometimes that memory pleases me, and sometimes it vexes me. Nearing a decrepit old age, the worst of all woes, nearing, too, a poverty which cannot be cured as in our flourishing years when nought is impossible, repenting me a hundred thousand times for the fine extrava- gances I committed in other days, and regretting I did not save enough then to support me now in feeble age, when I lack all of wliich I once possessed too much, — I see, with a bursting heart, an infinite number of paltry fellows raised to rank and riches, while Fortune, treacherous and blind that she is, feeds me on air and then deserts and mocks me. If she would only put me quickly into the hands of death I would still forgive her the ^Yrongs she has done me. But there is the worst of it ; we can neither hve nor die as we wish. Therefore, let destiny do as it will, never shall I cease to curse it from heart and hp. And worst of all do I detest old age weighed down by poverty. As the queen-mother said to me one day when I had the honour to speak to her on this subject about another person, ' Old age brings us inconveniences enough without the additional burden of poverty ; the two united are the height of misery, against which there is one only sovereign cure, and that is death. Happy he who finds it when he reaches fifty-six, for after that our Hfe is but labour and sorrow, and we eat but the bread of ashes, as saith the prophet.'" He continued, however, to write, retracing all that he had seen and garnered either while making his campaigns with the great captains of his time, or in gossiping with idle gen- rNTRODUCTION. 21 tlemen in the halls of the Louvre. It was thus he composed his biographical and anecdotical volumes, which he retouched and rewrote at intervals, making several successive copies. That he had the future of his writings much at heart, in spite of a scornful air of indifference which he sometimes assumed, appears very plainly from the following clause in his will : " I will," he says, " and I expressly charge my heirs to cause to be printed my Books, which I have composed from my mind and invention with great toil and trouble, written by my hand, and transcribed clearly by that of Mataud, my hired secretary; the which will be found in five volumes covered with velvet, black, tan, green, blue, and a large vol- ume, which is that of ' The Ladies,' covered with green velvet, and another covered with vellum and gilded thereon, which is that of 'The Khodomontades.' They will be found in one of my wicker trunks, carefully protected. Fine things will be found in them, such as tales, discourses, histories, and witti- cisms ; which no one can disdain, it seems to me, if once they are placed under his nose and eyes. In order to have them printed according to my fancy, I charge with that purpose Madame la Comtesse de Duretal, my dear niece, or some other person she may choose. And to do this I order that enough be taken from my whole property to pay the costs of the said printing, and my heirs are not to divide or use my property until this printing is provided for. It is not probable that it will cost much ; for the printers, when they cast their eyes upon the books, would pay to print them instead of exacting money ; for they do print many gratis that are not worth as much as mine. I can boast of this ; for I have shown them, at least in part, to several among that trade, who offered to print them for nothing. But I do not choose that they be printed during my life. Above all, I will that the said printing be in fine, large letters, in a great volume to 22 INTRODUCTION. make the better sliow, with license from the king, who will give it readily ; or without license, if that can be. Care must also be taken that the printer does not put on another name than mine ; otherwise I shall be frustrated of all my trouble and of the fame that is my due. I also will that the first book that issues from the press shall be given as a gift, well bound and covered in velvet, to Queen Marguerite, my very illustrious mistress, who did me the honour to read some of my writings, and who thought them fine and esteemed them." This will was made about the year 1609. On the 15th of July, 1614, Brantome died, after living his last years in com- plete obhvion ; he was buried, according to his wishes, in the cliapel of his chateau of Eichemont. In spite of his ex- press directions, neither the Comtesse de Duretal nor any other of his heirs executed the clause in his will relatinof to the publication of his works. Possibly they feared it might create some scandal, or it may be that they could not obtain the royal license. The manuscripts remained in the chateau of Eichemont. Little by little, as time went on, they at- tracted attention ; copies were made which found their way to the cabinets and libraries of collectors. They were finally printed in Holland ; and the first volume, which appeared in Leyden from the press of Jean Sambix the younger, sold by F. Foppons, Brussels, 1665, was that which here follows: " The Book of the Ladies," called by the pubHsher, not by BrantOme, " Lives of Illustrious Dames." It is not easy to distinguish the exact periods at which Brantome wrote his works. " The Book of the Ladies," first and second parts, — Dames Illustres and Dames Galantes, — were evidently the first A\Titten ; then followed " The Lives of Great and Illustrious French Captains," "Lives of Great Foreign Captains," " Anecdotes concerning Duels," " The mTKODUCTION. 23 Ehodomontades," and "Spanish Oaths." Brantome did not wiite his Memoirs, properly so-called ; his biographical facts and incidents are scattered throughout the above-named volumes. The following translation of the " Book of the Ladies " does not pretend to imitate BrantOme's style. To do so would seem an affectation in Enghsh, and attract attention to itself which it is always desirable to avoid in translating. Wherever a few of BrantOme's quaint turns of phrase are given, it is only as they fall naturally into Enghsh. THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. DISCOUKSE L ANNE DE BRETAGNE, QUEEN OF FRANCE. Inasmuch as I must speak of ladies, I do not choose to speak of former dames, of whom the histories are full ; that would be blotting paper in vain, for enough has been written about them, and even the great Boccaccio has made a fine book solely on that subject [De claris mulierihus]. I shall begin therefore with our queen, Anne de Bretagne, the most worthy and honourable queen that has ever been since Queen Blanche, mother of the King Saint-Louis, and very sage and virtuous. This Queen Anne was the rich heiress of the duchy of Bretagne, which was held to be one of the finest of Christen- dom, and for that reason she was sought in marriage by the greatest persons. M. le Due d'Orldans, afterwards King Louis XIL, in his young days courted her, and did for her sake his fine feats of arms in Bretagne, and even at the battle of Saint Aubin, where he was taken prisoner fighting on foot at the head of his infantry. I have heard say that this capture was the reason why he did not espouse her then ; for thereon intervened Maximilian, Duke of Austria, since emperor, who married her by the proxy of his uncle the Prince of Orange in the great church at Nantes. But King Charles VIIL, having advised with his council that it was 26 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. not good to have so powerful a seigneur encroach and get a footins: in his kingdom, broke off a marriao^e that had been settled between himself and Marguerite of Flanders, took the said Anne from Maximilian, her afhanced, and wedded her himself ; so that every one conjectured thereon that a marriage thus made would be luckless in issue. Xow if Anne was desired for her property, she was as much so for her virtues and merits ; for she was beautiful and agreeable ; as I have heard say by elderly persons who knew her, and according to her portrait, which I have seen from hfe ; resembhu^ in face the beautiful Demoiselle de Chateauneuf, who has been so renowned at the Court for her beauty ; and that is sufficient to tell the beauty of Queen Anne as I have heard it portrayed to the queen mother [Catherine de' ]\Iedici]. Her figure was fine and of medium height. It is true that one foot was shorter than the other the least in the world ; but this was little perceived, and hardly to be noticed, so that her beauty was not at all spoilt by it ; for I myself have seen very handsome women with that defect who yet were ex- treme in beauty, like ]\Ime. la Princesse de Cond6, of the house of Longueville. So much for the beauty of the body of this queen. That of her mind was no less, because she was very virtuous, wise, honourable, pleasant of speech, and very charming and sub- tile in wit. She had been taught and trained by Mme. de Laval, an able and accomplished lady, appointed her gov- erness by her father, Due Frangois. For the rest, she was very kind, very merciful, and very charitable, as I have heard my own folks say. True it is, however, that she was quick in vengeance and seldom pardoned whoever offended her maliciously ; as she showed to the ]\Iar^chal de Gi^ for the affront he put upon her when the king, her lord and husband, ANNE DE BRETAGNE, QUEEN OF TRANCE. 27 lay ill at Blois and was held to be dying. She, wisliing to provide for her wants in case she became a widow, caused three or four boats to be laden on the Eiver Loire with all her precious articles, furniture, jewels, rings and money, — - and sent them to her city and chateau of Nantes. The said marshal, meeting these boats between Saumur and Nantes, ordered them stopped and seized, being much too wishful to play the good officer and servant of the Crown. But fortune willed that the king, through the prayers of his people, to whom he was indeed a true father, escaped with his life. The queen, in spite of this luck, did not abstain from her vengeance, and having well brewed it, she caused the said marshal to be driven from Court. It was then that having finished a fine house at La Verger, he retired there, saying that the rain had come just in time to let him get under shelter in the beautiful house so recently built. But this banishment from Court was not all ; through great researches which she caused to be made wherever he had been in com- mand, it was discovered he had committed great wrongs, extortions and pillages, to which all governors are given ; so that the marshal, having appealed to the courts of parliament, was summoned before that of Toulouse, which had long been very just and equitable, and not corrupt. There, his suit being viewed, he was convicted. But the queen did not wish his death, because, she said, death is a cure for all pains and woes, and being dead he would be too happy ; she wished him to live as degraded and low as he had been great ; so that he might, from the grandeur and height where he had been, live miserably in troubles, pains, and sadness, which would do him a hundred-fold more harm than death, for death lasted only a day, and mayhap only an hour, whereas his languishing would make him die daily. Such was the vengeance of this brave queen. One day she 28 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. was SO angry against M. d'Orl^ans that she could not for a long time be appeased. It was in this wise : the death of her son, M. le dauphin, having happened, King Charles, her hus- band, and she were in such despair that the doctors, fearing the debility and feeble constitution of the king, were alarmed lest such grief should do injury to his health; so they coun- selled the king to amuse himself, and the princes of the Court to invent new pastimes, games, dances, and mum- meries in order to give pleasure to the king and queen ; the which M. d'Orl^ans having undertaken, he gave at the Chateau d'Amboise a masquerade and dance, at which he did such follies and danced so gayly, as was told and read, that the queen, believing he felt this glee because, the dauphin being dead, he knew himself nearer to be King of France, was extremely angered, and showed him such displeasure that he was forced to escape from Amboise, where the Court then was, and go to his chateau of Blois. Nothing can be blamed in this queen except the sin of vengeance, — if vengeance is a sin, — because otherwise she was beautiful and gentle, and had many very laudable sides. When the king, her husband, went to the kingdom of iN'aples [1494], and so long as he was there, she knew very well how to govern the kingdom of France with those whom the king had given to assist her; but she always kept her rank, her grandeur, and supremacy, and insisted, young as she was, on being trusted ; and she made herself trusted, so that nothing was ever found to say against her. She felt great regret for the death of King Charles [in 1498], as much for the friendship she bore him as for seeing herself henceforth but half a queen, having no children. And when her most intimate ladies, as I have been told on good authority, pitied her for being the widow of so great a king, and unable to return to her high estate, — for King ANNE DE BRETAGNE, QUEEN OF ERANCE. 29 Louis [the Due d'Orl(^ans, her first lover] was then married to Jeanne de France, — she repHed she would " rather be the widow of a king all her life than debase herself to a less than he ; but still, she was not so despairing of happiness that she did not think of again being Queen of France, as she had been, if she chose." Her old love made her say so ; she meant to relight it in the bosom of him in whom it was yet warm. And so it happened ; for King Louis [XIL], having repudi- ated Jeanne, his wife, and never having lost his early love, took her in marriage, as we have seen and read. So here was her prophecy accomplished ; she having founded it on the nature of King Louis, who could not keep himself from lov- ing her, all married as she was, but looked with a tender eye upon her, being still Due d'Orldans ; for it is difficult to quench a great fire when once it has seized the soul. He was a handsome prince and very amiable, and she did not hate him for that. Having taken her, he honoured her much, leaving her to enjoy her property and her duchy with- out touching it himself or taking a single louis ; but she employed it well, for she was very liberal. And because the king made immense gifts, to meet which he must have levied on his people, which he shunned like the plague, she supphed his deficiencies ; and there were no great captains of the kingdom to whom she did not give pensions, or make extraordinary presents of money or of thick gold chains when they went upon a journey ; and she even made little presents according to quality ; everybody ran to her, and few came away discontented. Above all, she had the reputa- tion of loving her domestic servants, and to them she did great good. She was the first queen to hold a great Court of ladies, such as we have seen from her time to the present day. Her suite was very large of ladies and young girls, for she 30 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. refused none ; she even inc[uirecl of the noblemen of her Court whether they had daughters, and what they were, and asked to have them brought to her. I had an aunt de Bom'deille who had the honour of being brought up by her [Louise de Bourdeille, maid of honour to Queen Anne in 1494] ; but she died at Court, aged fifteen years, and was buried behind the crreat ahar of the church of the Fran- o ciscans in Paris. I saw tlie tomb and its inscription before that church was burned [in 1580.] Queen Anne's Court was a noble school for ladies ; she had them taught and brought up wisely; and all, taking pattern by her, made themselves wise and virtuous. Be- cause her heart was great and lofty she wanted guards, and so formed a second band of a hundred gentlemen, — for hitherto there was only one ; and the greater part of the said new guard were Bretons, who never failed, when she left her room to go to mass or to promenade, to await her on that little terrace at Blois, still called the Breton perch, " La Perche aux Bretons," she herself having named it so by saying when she saw them : " Here are my Bretons on their perch, awaiting me." You may be sure that she did not lay by her money, but employed it well on all high things. She it was, who built, out of great superbness, that fine vessel and mass of wood, called "La Cordeliere," which at- tacked so furiously in mid-ocean the " Eegent of England," grappling to her so closely that both were burned and noth- ing escaped, — not the people, nor anything else that was in them, so that no news was ever heard of them on land ; which troubled the queen very much.^ The king honoured her so much that one day, it being reported to him that the law clerks at the Palais [de Justice] ^ See Appendix. ANNE DE BRETAGNE, QUEEN OF FRANCE. 31 and the students also were playing games in which there was talk of the king, his Court, and all the great people, he took no other notice than to say they needed a pastime, and he would let them talk of him and his Court, though not licentiously ; but as for the queen, his wife, they should not speak of her m any way whatsoever ; if they did he would have them hanged. Such was the honour he bore her. Moreover, there never came to his Court a foreign prince or an ambassador that, after having seen and listened to them, he did not send them to pay their reverence to the queen ; wishmg the same respect to be shown to her as to him ; and also, because he recognized in her a great faculty for entertaining and pleasing great personages, as, indeed, she knew well how to do ; taking much pleasure in it her- self ; for she had very good and fine grace and majesty in greeting them, and beautiful eloquence in talking with them. Sometimes, amid her French speech, she would, to make herself more admired, mingle a few foreign words, wdiich she had learned from M. de Grignaux, her chevalier of honour, who was a very gallant man who had seen the world, and was accomplished and knew foreign languages, being thereby very pleasant good company, and agree- able to meet. Thus it was that one day, Queen Anne having asked him to teach her a few words of Spanish to say to the Spanish ambassador, he taught her in joke a little indecency, which she quickly learned. The next day, while awaiting the ambassador, M. de Grignaux told the story to the king, who thought it good, understanding his gay and lively humour. Nevertheless he w^ent to the queen, and told her all, warning her to be careful not to use those words. She was in such great anger, though the king only laughed, that she wanted to dismiss M. de Grignaux, and 32 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. showed him her displeasure for several days. But M. de Grignaux made her such humble excuses, telling her that he only did it to make the king laugh and pass his time merrily, and that he was not so ill-advised as to fail to warn the king in time that he might, as he really did, warn her before the arrival of the ambassador; so that on these ex- cuses and the entreaties of the king she was pacified. Now, if the king loved and honoured her living, we may beheve that, she being dead, he did the same. And to mani- fest the mourning that he felt, the superb and honourable funeral and obsequies that he ordered for her are proof ; the which I have read of in an old " History of France " that I found lying about in a closet in our house, nobody caring for it ; and having gathered it up, I looked at it. Xow as tliis is a matter that should be noted, I shall put it here, word for word as the book says, without changing anything ; for though it is old, the language is not very bad; and as for the truth of the book, it has been confirmed to me by my grandmother, Mme. la Seneschale de Poitou, of the family du Lude, who was then at the Court. The book re- lates it thus : — ■ " This queen was an honourable and virtuous queen, and very wise, the true mother of the poor, the support of gentle- men, the haven of ladies, damoiselles, and honest girls, and the refuge of learned men ; so that all the people of France cannot surfeit themselves enough in deploring and regretting her. " She died at the castle of Blois on the twenty -first of January, in the year 151.3, after the accomplishment of a thing she had most desired, namely : the union of the king, her lord, with the pope and the Pioman Church, abhorring as she did schism and divisions. For that reason she had never ceased urging the king to this step, for which she was as ANNE DE BRETAGNE, QUEEN OE FRANCE. 33 much loved and greatly revered by the Catholic princes and prelates as the king had been hated. " I have seen at Saint-Denis a grand church cope, all cov- ered with pearls embroidered, which she had ordered to be made expressly to send as a present to the pope, but death prevented. After her decease her body remained for three days in her room, the face uncovered, and nowise changed by hideous death, but as beautiful and agreeable as when living. " Friday, the twenty -seventh of the month of January, her body was taken from the castle, very honourably accompanied by all the priests and monks of the town, borne by persons wearing mourning, with hoods over their heads, accompanied by twenty-four torches larger than the other torches borne by twenty-four officers of the household of the said lady, on each of which were two rich armorial escutcheons bear- ing the arms emblazoned of the said lady. After these torches came the reverend seigneurs and prelates, bishops, abb^s, and M. le Cardinal de Luxembourg to read the office ; and thus was removed the body of the said lady from the Chateau de Blois. . . . " Septuagesima Sunday, twelfth of February, they arrived at the church of Notre-Dame des Champs in the suburbs of Paris, and there the body was guarded two nights with great quantities of lights ; and on the following Tuesday, the devout services having been read, there marched before the body processions with the crosses of all the churches and all the monasteries of Paris, the whole University in a body, the presidents and counsellors of the sovereign court of Parlia- ment, and generally of all other courts and jurisdictions, officers and advocates, merchants and citizens, and other lesser officers of the town. All these accompanied the said body reverentially, with the very noble seigneurs and ladies aforenamed, just as they started from Blois, all keeping fine 3 34 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. order among themselves according to their several ranks. . . . And thus was borne through Paris, in the order and manner above, the body of the queen to be sepulchred in the pious church of Saint-Denis of France ; preceded by these pro- cessions to a cross which is not far beyond the place where the fair of Landit is held. "And to the spot where stands the cross the reverend father in God, the abb^, and the venerable monks, with the priests of the churches and parishes of Saint-Denis, vestured in their great copes, with their crosses, came in procession, together with the peasants and the inhabitants of the said town, to receive the body of the late queen, which was then borne to the door of the church of Saint-Denis, still accom- panied honourably by all the above-named very noble princes and princesses, seigneurs, dames, and damoiselles, and their train as already stated. . . . "And all being duly accomplished, the body of the said lady, Madame Anne, in her lifetime very noble Queen of France, Duchesse of Bretagne, and Comtesse d'Etampes, was honourably interred and sepulchred in the tomb for her prepared. " After this, the herald-at-arms for Bretagne summoned all the princes and officers of the said lady, to wit : the chevalier of honour, the grand-master of the household, and others, each and all, to fulfil their duty towards the said body, which they did most piteously, shedding tears from their eyes. And, this done, the aforenamed kinfj-at-arms cried three times aloud in a most piteous voice : ' The very Christian Queen of France, Duchesse de Bretagne, our Sovereign Lady, is dead ! ' And then all departed. The body remained entombed. " During her life and after her death she was honoured by the titles I have before given : true mother of the poor ; the comfort of noble gentlemen ; the haven of ladies and damoi- ^ K ^ \; N N ^ A2TNE DE BRETAGNE, QUEEN OF FRANCE. 35 selles and honest girls ; the refuge of learned men and those of good lives ; so that speaking of her dead is only renewing the grief and regrets of all such jDersons, and also that of her domestic servants, whom she loved singularly. She was very religious and devout. It was she who made the foundation of the ' Bons-Hommes ' [monastery of the order of Saint- Frangois de Paule at Chaillot], otherwise called the Minimes ; and she began to build the church of the said ' Bons-Hommes ' near Paris, and afterwards that in Piome which is so beautiful and noble, and where, as I saw myself, they receive no monks but Frenchmen." There, word for word, are the splendid obsequies of this queen, without changing a word of the original, for fear of doing worse, — for I could not do better. They were just like those of our kings that I have heard and read of, and those of King Charles IX., at which I w^as present, and which the queen, his mother, desired to make so fine and magnificent, though the finances of France were then too short to spend much, because of the departure of the King of Poland, who with his suite had squandered and carried off a great deal [1574]. Certainly I find these two interments much aHke, save for three things : one, that the burial of Queen Anne w^as the most superb ; second, that all went so well in order and so discreetly that there was no contention of ranks, as occurred at the burial of King Charles ; for his body, being about to start for Notre-Dame, the court of parliament had some pique of precedence with the nobility and the Church, claim- ing to stand in the place of the king and to represent him when absent, he being then out of the kingdom. [Henri III. was then King of Poland]. On wdiich a great princess, as the world goes, who was very near to him, whom I know but will not name, went about arguing and sayiag : " It was 36 THE BOOK OF THE LADEES. no wonder if, during tlie lifetime of the king, seditions and troubles had been in vogue, seeing that, dead as he was, he was still able to stir up strife." Alas ! he never did it, poor prince ! either dead or living. "IVe know well who were the authors of the seditions and of our civil wars. That princess who said those words has since found reason to regret them. The third thiug is that the body of King Charles was quitted, at the church of Saint-Lazare, by the whole pro- cession, princes, seigneurs, courts of parhament, the Church, and the citizens, and was followed and accompanied from there by none but poor M. de Strozzi, de Fumel, and myself, with two gentlemen of the bedchamber, for we were not willino; to abandon our master as lon^ as he was above ground. There were also a few archers of the guard, quite pitiable to see, in the fields. So at eight in the evening in the month of July, we started with the body and its effigy thus badly accompanied. Eeacliing the cross, we found all the monks of Saint- Denis awaiting us, and the body of the king was honourably escorted, with the ceremonies of the Church, to Saint-Denis, where the great Cardinal de Lorraine received it most honour- ably and devoutly, as he knew well how to do. The queen-mother was very angry that the procession did not continue to the end as she intended — save for Monsieur her son, and the King of ISTavarre, whom she held a prisoner. The next day, however, the latter anived in a coach, with a very good guard, and captains of the guard with him, to be present at the solemn high service, attended by the whole procession and company as at first, — a sight very sad to see. After dinner the court of parhament sent to tell and to command the grand almoner Amyot to go and say grace ANNE DE BRETAGNE, QUEEN OF FRANCE. 37 after meat for them as if for the king. To which he made answer that he should do nothing of the kind, for it was not before them he was bound to do it. They sent him two consecutive and threatening commands ; which he still refused, and went and hid himself that he might answer no more. Then they swore they would not leave the table till he came ; but not being able to find him, they were constrained to say grace themselves and to rise, which they did with great threats, foully abusing the said almoner, even to calling him scoundrel, and son of a butcher. I saw the whole affair ; and I know what Monsieur commanded me to go and tell to M. le cardinal, asking him to pacify the mat- ter, because they had sent commands to Monsieur to send to them, as representatives of the king, the grand almoner if he could be found. M. le cardinal went to speak to them, but he gained nothing ; they standing firm on their opinion of their royal majesty and authority. I know what M. le cardinal said to me about them, telling me not to say it, — that they were perfect fools. The chief president, de Thou, was then at their head ; a great senator certainly, but he had a temper. So here was another disturbance to make that princess say again that King Charles, either living or dead, on earth or under it, that body of his stirred up the world and threw it into sedition. Alas ! that he could not do. I have told this little incident, possibly more at length than I should, and I may be blamed; but I reply that I have told and put it here as it came into my fancy and memory ; also that it comes in k propos ; and that I cannot forget it, for it seems to me a thing that is rather remarkable. Now, to return to our Queen Anne : we see from this fine last duty of her obsequies how beloved she was of earth and heaven ; far otherwise than that proud, pompous queen, Isa- bella of Bavaria, wife of the late King Charles VI., who 38 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. having died in Paris, her body was so despised it was put out of her palace into a little boat on the river Seine, with- out form of ceremony or pomp, being carried through a little postern so narrow it could hardly go through, and thus was taken to Saint-Denis to her tomb like a simple damoiselle, neither more nor less. There was also a differ- ence between her actions and those of Queen Anne : for she brought the EngHsh into France and Paris, threw the king- dom into flames and divisions, and impoverished and ruined every one ; whereas Queen Anne kept Prance in peace, en- larged and enriched it with her beautiful duchy and the fine property she brought with her. So one need not wonder that the king regretted her and felt such mourning that he came nigh dying in the forest of Vincennes, and clothed himself and all his Court so long in black ; and those w^ho came otherwise clothed he had them driven away ; neither would he see any ambassador, no matter who he was, unless he were dresBed in black. And, moreover, that old History which I have quoted, says : " When he gave his daughter to M. dAngouleme, afterwards King rran(^ois, mourning was not left off by him or his Court ; and the day of the espousals in the church of Saint-Germ ain-en-Laye, the bridegroom and bride were vestured and clothed " — so this History says — " in black cloth, honestly cut in mourning shape, for the death of the said queen, Madame Anne de Bretagne, mother of the bride, in presence of the king, her father, accompanied by the princes of the blood and noble seigneurs and prel- ates, princesses, dames, and damoiselles, all clothed in black cloth made in mourning shape." That is what the book says. It was a strange austerity of mourning which should be noted, that not even on the day of the wedding was it dispensed with, to be renewed on the following day. From this we may know how beloved, and worthy to be ANNE DE BKETAGNE, QUEEN OF FRANCE. 39 beloved this princess was by the king, her husband, who sometimes in liis merry moods and gayety would call her "his Breton." If she had lived longer she would never have consented to that marriage of her daughter ; it was very repugnant to her and she said so to the king, her husband, for she mor- tally hated Madame d'Angouleme, afterwards Eegent, their tempers being (|uite unhke and not agreeing together ; be- sides which, she had mshed to unite her said daughter to Charles of Austria, then young, the greatest seigneur of Christendom, who was afterwards emperor. And this she wished in spite of M. d'Angouleme coming very near the Crown ; but she never tliought of that, or would not think of it, trusting to have more children herself, she being only thirty-seven years old when she died. In her lifetime and reign, reigned also that great and wise queen, Isabella of Castile, very accordant in manners and morals with our Queen Anne. For which reason they loved each other much and visited one another often by embassies, letters, and presents; 'tis thus that virtue ever seeks out virtue. King Louis was afterwards pleased to marry for the third time Marie, sister of the King of England, a very beautiful princess, young, and too young for him, so that evil came of it. But he married more from poHcy, to make peace with the English and to put his own kingdom at rest, than for any other reason, never being able to forget his Queen Anne. He commanded at his death that they should both be covered by the same tomb, just as we now see it in Saint-Denis, all in white marble, as beautiful and superb as never was. Now, here I pause in my discourse and go no farther; referring the rest to books that are written of this queen better than I could write ; only to content my own self have I made this discourse. 40 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. I will say one other little thing ; that she was the first of our queens or princesses to form the usage of putting a belt round their arms and escutcheons, which until then were borne not inclosed, but quite loose ; and the said queen was the first to put the belt. I say no more, not having been of her time ; although I protest having told only truth, having learned it, as I have said, from a book, and also from Mme. la Seneschale, my grandmother, and from Mme. de Dampierre, my aunt, a true Court register, and as clever, wise, and virtuous a lady as ever entered a Court these hundred years, and who knew well how to discourse on old things. From eight years of age she was brought up at Court, and forgot nothing ; it was good to hear her talk ; and I have seen our kings and queens take a singu- lar pleasure in hstening to her, for she knew all, — her own time and past times ; so that people took word from her as from an oracle. King Henri TIL made her lady of honour to the queen, his wife. I have here used recollections and lessons that I obtained from her, and I hope to use many more in the course of these books. I have read the epitaph of the said queen, thus made : — " Here hes Anne, who was wife to two great kings, Great a hundred-fold herself, as queen two times I Never queen like her enriched all France ; That is what it is to make a grand aUiance." Gui Patin, satirist and jovial spirit of his time [he was born in 1601], attracted to Saint-Denis because a fair was held there, visits the abbey, the treasury, " where " he says, " there was plenty of silly stuff and rubbish," and lastly the tombs of the kings, " where I could not keep myself from weeping to see so many monuments to the vanity of human ANNE DE BRETAGNE, QUEEN OF FRANCE. 41 life ; tears escaped me also before the tomb of the great and good king, Frangois I., who founded our College of Professors of the King. I must own my weakness ; I kissed it, and also that of his father-in-law, Louis XII., who was the Father of his People, and the best king we have ever had in France." Happy age ! still neighbour to beliefs, when those reputed the greatest satirists had these touching naivetes, these wholly patriotic and antique sensibihties. M^zeray [born ten years later], in his natural, sincere and expressive diction, his clear and full narration, into which he has the art to bring speaking circumstances which animate the tale, says in relation to Louis XII. [in his " History of France"] : "When he rode through the country the good folk ran from all parts and for many days to see him, strewing the roads with flowers and f oHage, and striving, as though he were a visible God, to touch his saddle with their handker- chiefs and keep them as precious rehcs." And two centuries later, Comte Koederer, in his Memoir on Polite Society and the Hotel de Eambouillet, printed in 1835, tells us how in his youth his mind was already busy with Louis XIL, and, returning to the same interest m after years, he made him his hero of predilection and his king. In studying the history of France he thought he discov- ered, he says, that at the close of the fifteenth century and the besinninsT- of the sixteenth what has since been called the " French Ptcvolution " was already consummated ; that liberty rested on a free Constitution ; and that Louis XIL, the Father of his People, was he who had accomplished it. Bonhomie and goodness have never been denied to Louis XIL, but Ptoederer claims more, he claims ability and skill. The Italian wars, considered generally to have been mistakes, he excuses and justifies by showing them in the king's mind as a means of useful national pohcy ; he needed to obtain from 42 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. Pope Alexander YI. the dissolution of his marriage with Jeanne de France, in order that he might marry Anne de Bretagne and so unite the duchy with the kingdom. Eoederer makes King Louis a type of perfection ; seeming to have searched in regions far from those that are liistorically bril- liant, far from spheres of fame and glor}', into " the depths obscure,'' as he says himself, " of useful government for a hero of a new species." More than that : he thinks he sees in the cherished wife of Louis XIL, in Anne de Bretagne, the foimdress of a school of polite manners and perfection for her sex. " She was," Brantome had said, " the most worthy and honourable queen that had ever been since Queen Blanche, mother of the King Saint-Louis. . . . Her Court was a noble school for ladies ; she had them taught and brought up wisely ; and all, taking pattern by her, made themselves wise and viituous." Eoederer takes these words of BrantOme and, giving them their strict meaning, draws therefrom a series of conse- quences : just as Francois I. had, in many respects, over- thrown the pohtical state of things established by Louis XIL, so, he believes, had the women beloved of Francois over- turned that honourable condition of society established by Anne de Bretagne. Starting from that epoch he sees, as it were, a constant struggle between two sorts of rival and incompatible societies: between the decent and ingenuous society of which Anne de Bretagne had given the idea, and the licentious society of which the mistresses of the king, women like the Duchesse d'Etampes and Diane de Poitiers, procured the triumph. These two societies, to his mind, never ceased to co-exist during the sixteenth century ; on the one hand was an emulation of virtue and merit on the part of the noble heu^esses, alas, too eclipsed, of Anne de Bretagne, on the other an emulation with high bidding of ANNE DE BKETAGNE, QUEEN OE ERANCE. 43 gallantry, by the giddy pii2:)ils of the school of Frangois I. To Ea3derer the Hotel de Kambouillet, that perfected salou, founded towards the beginnmg of the seventeenth century, is only a tardy return to the traditions of Anne de Bretagne, the triumph of merit, virtue, and polite manners over the license to which all the kings, from TranQois I., includmg Henri IV., had paid tribute. Eeaching thus the Hotel de Eambouillet and holding henceforth an unbroken thread in hand, Roederer divides and subdivides at pleasure. He marks the divers periods and the divers shades of transition, the growth and the dechne that he discerns. The first years of Louis XIV.'s youth cause him some distress ; a return is being made to the ways of Frangois L, to the brilliant mistresses. Eoederer, not con- cerning himself with the displeasure he will cause the classi- cists, lays a little of the blame for this return on the four great poets, Moli^re, La Fontaine, Eacine, and Boileau himself, all accomphces, more or less, in the laudation of victor and lover. However, age comes on ; Louis XIV. grows temperate in turn, and a woman, issuing from the very purest centre of Mme. de EambouiUet's society, and who was morally its heiress, a woman accomphshed in tone, in cultivation of mind, in precision of language, and in the sentiment of pro- priety, — Mme. de Maintenon, — knows so well how to seize the opportunity that she seats upon the throne, in a modest half-light, all the styles of mind and merit which made the perfection of French society in its better days. The triumph of Mme. de Maintenon is that of pohte society itself ; Anne de Bretagne has found her pendant at the other extremity of the chain after the lapse of two centuries. Sainte-Beuve, Causeries du Lundi^ Vol. VIII. DISCOUESE 11." CATHERINE DE' IMEDICI, QUEEN, AND MOTHER OF OUR LAST KINGS. I HAVE wondered and been astonished a hundred times that, so many good writers as we have had in our day in France, none of them has been inquisitive enough to make some fine selection of the hfe and deeds of the queen-mother, Catherine de' Medici, iaasmuch as she has furnished ample matter, and cut out much fine work, if ever a queen did — as said the Emperor Charles to Paolo Giovio [Italian histo- rian] when, on his return from his triumphant voyage in the " Goulette '' intending to make war upon King Francois, he gave him a provision of ink and paper, saying he would cut him out plenty of work. So it is true that this queen cut out so much that a good and zealous writer might make an IHad of it ; but they have all been lazy, — or ungrateful, for she was never niggardly to learned men ; I could name several who have derived good benefits from this queen, from which, in consequence, I accuse them of ingratitude. There is one, however, who did concern himself to write of her, and made a little book which he entitled " The Life of Catherine ; " ^ but it is an imposture and not worthy of belief, as she herself said when she saw it; such falsities being apparent to every one, and easy to note and reject. He that wrote it wished her mortal harm, and was an enemy to her name, her condition, her life, her honour, and nature ; and that is why he should be rejected. As for me, I would 1 See Appendix. '^ rf /// / J'/ // / //v - /■/f//V CATHERINE DE' JMEDICI. 45 I knew how to speak well, or that I had a good pen, well mended, at my command, that I might exalt and praise her as she deserves. At any rate, such as my pen is, I shall now employ it at all hazards. This queen is extracted, on the father's side, from the race of the Medici, one of the noblest and most illustrious fami- lies, not only in Italy, but in Christendom. Whatever may be said, she was a foreigner to these shores because the alliances of kings cannot commonly be chosen in their king- dom ; for it is not best to do so ; foreign marriages being as useful and more so than near ones. The House of the Medici has always been allied and confederated with the crown of France, which still bears the fleur-de-li/s that King Louis XL gave that house in sign of alliance and perpetual confederation [the Jleur de Louis, which then became the Florentine lily]. On the mother's side she issued originally from one of the noblest famiHes of France ; and so was truly French in race, heart, and affection through that great house of Boulogne and coimty of Auvergne ; thus it is hard to tell or judge in which of her two families there was most grandeur and memorable deeds. Here is what was said of them by the Archbishop of Bourges, of the house of Beaune, as great a learned man and worthy prelate as there is in Christendom (though some say a trifle unsteady in belief, and little good in the scales of M. Saint-Michel, who weighs good Christians for the day of judgment, or so they say) : it is given in the funeral oration which the archbishop made upon the said queen at Blois : — " In the days when Brennus, that great captain of the Gauls, led his army throughout aU Italy and Greece, there were with him in his troop two French nobles, one named Felsinus, the other named Bono, who, seeing the wicked 46 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. design of Brennus, after his fine conquests, to invade the temple of Delphos and soil himself and his army with the sacrilege of that temple, withdrew, hoth of them, and passed into Asia with their vessels and men, advancing so far that they entered the sea of the Medes, which is near to Lydia and Persia. Thence, having made great conquests and ob- tained great victories, they were returning through Italy, hoping to reach France, when Felsinus stopped at a place where Florence now stands beside the river Arno, which he saw to be fine and delectable, and situated much as another which had pleased him much in the coimtry of the Medes. There he built a city which to-day is Florence ; and his com- panion, Bono, built another and named it Bononia, now called Bologna, the which are neighbouring cities. Henceforth, in consequence of the victories and conquests of Felsinus among the Medes, he was called Mcdicus among his friends, a name that remained to the family ; just as we read of Paulus sumamed Maccdonicus for having conquered Macedonia fi'om Perseus, and Scipio called Africaiius for doing the same in Africa." I do not know where M. de Beaune may have taken this history ; but it is very probable that before the king and such an assembly, there convened for the funeral of the queen, he would not have alleged the fact without good authority. This descent is very far from the modern story invented and attributed without grounds to the family of Medici, according to that lying book which I have men- tioned on the life of the said queen. After this the said Sieur de Beaune says further, he has read in the chronicles that one named Everard de' Medici, Sieur of Florence, went, with many of his subjects, to the assistance of the voyage and expedition made by Charlemagne against Desiderius, King of the Lombards ; and having very bravely succoured CATHERINE DE' MEDICI. 47 and assisted him, was confirmed and invested with the lordship of Florence. Many years after, one Anemond de' Medici, also Sieur of Florence, went, accompanied by many of his subjects, to the Holy Land, with Godefroy de BouilloD, where he died at the siege of Nictea in Asia. Such greatness always continued in that family until Florence was reduced to a republic by the intestine wars in Italy between the em- perors and the peoples, the illustrious members of it mani- festing their valour and grandeur from time to time ; as we saw ui the latter days Cosmo de' Medici, who, with his arms, his navy, and vessels, terrified the Turks in the Mediterra- nean Sea and in the distant East; so that none since his time, however great he may be, has surpassed him in strength and valour and wealth, as Kaffaelle Volaterano has written. The temples and sacred shrines by him built, the hospitals by him founded, even in Jerusalem, are ample proof of his piety and magnanimity. There were also Lorenzo de* Medici, surnamed the Great for his vhtuous deeds, and two great popes, Leo and Clement, also many cardinals and grand personages of the name; besides the Grand Duke of Tuscany, Cosmo de' Medici, a wise and wary man, if ever there w^as one. He succeeded in maintainmg himself in his duchy, which he foimd invaded and much disturbed when he came to it. In short, nothing can rob this house of the Medici of its lustre, very noble and grand as it is in every way. As for the house of Boulogne and Auvergne, who will say that it is not great, having issued originally from that noble Eustache de Boulogne, whose brother, Godefroy de Bouillon, bore arms and escutcheons with so vast a number of princes, seigneurs, chevaliers, and Christian soldiers, even to Jerusalem and the Sepulchre of our Saviour ; and would have made himself, by his sword and the favour of God, king, not 48 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. only of Jerusalem but of the greater part of the East, to the confusion of Mahomet, the Saracens, and the Mahometans, amazing all the rest of the world and replanting Christianity in Asia, where it had fallen to the lowest ? For the rest, this house has ever been sought in alliance by all the monarchies of Christendom and the great families ; such as France, England, Scotland, Hungary, and Portugal, which latter kingdom belonged to it of right, as I have heard President de Thou say, and as the queen herself did me the honour to tell me at Bordeaux when she heard of the death of King Sebastian [in Morocco, 1578], the Medici being received to argue the justice of their rights at the last Assembly of States before the decease of King Henry [in 1580]. This was why she armed M. de Strozzi to make an invasion, the King of Spain having usurped the kingdom ; she was arrested in so fine a course only by reasons which 1 will explain at another time. I leave you to suppose, therefore, whether this house of Boulogne was great ; yes, so great that I once heard Pope Pius IV. say, sitting at table at a dinner he gave after his election to the Cardinals of Ferrara and Guise, his creations, that the house of Boulogne was so great and noble he knew none in France, whatever it was, that could surpass it m antiquity, valour, and grandeur. All this is much against those malicious detractors who have said that this queen was a Florentine of low birth. Moreover, she was not so poor but what she brought to France in marriage estates which are worth to-day twenty-six thousand livres, — such as the counties of Auvergne and Laura- gais, the seigneuries of Leverons, Donzenac, Boussac, Gorr^ges, Hondecourt and other lands, — all an inheritance from her mother. Besides which, her dowiy was of more than two hundred thousand ducats, which are worth to-day over four CATHERINE DE' MEDICI. 49 hundred thousand ; with great quantities of furniture, precious stones, jewels, and other riches, such as the finest and largest pearls ever seen in so great a number, which she afterwards gave to her daughter-in-law, the Queen of Scotland [Mary Stuart], whom I have seen wearing them. Besides all this, many estates, houses, deeds, and claims in Italy. But more than all else, through her marriage the affairs of Trance, which had been so shaken by the imprisonment of the king and his losses at Milan and Naples, began to get firmer. King Frangois was very wilKng to say that tlie mar- riage had served his interests. Therefore there was given to this queen for her device a rainbow, which she bore as long as she was married, with these words in Greek ? (pepec rjSe yaXrjvTjv. Which is the same as saying that just as this fire and bow in the sky brings and signifies good weather after rain, so this queen was a true sign of clearness, serenity, and the tranquillity of peace. The Greek is thus translated : Lucem fert et sercnitatem — " She brings light and serenity." After that, the emperor [Charles V.] dared push no longer his ambitious motto : " Ever farther." For, although there was truce between himself and King Francois, he was nurs- ing his ambition with the design of gaining always from France whatever he could ; and he was much astonished at this alliance with the pope [Clement VII.], regarding the lat- ter as able, courageous, and vindictive for his imprisonment by the imperial forces at the sack of Eome [1527]. Such a marriage displeased him so much that I have heard a truthful lady of the Court say that if he had not been married to the empress, he would have seized an alliance with the pope him- self and espoused his niece [Catherine de' Medici], as much for the support of so strong a party as because he feared the pope would assist in making him lose Naples, Milan, and 50 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. Genoa; for the pope had promised King Frangois, in an authentic document, when he dehvered to him the money of his niece's dowry and her rings and jewels, to make the dowry worthy of such a marriage hy the addition of three pearls of inestimable value, of the excessive splendour of which all the greatest kings were envious and covetous ; the which were Naples, Milan, and Genoa. And it is not to be doubted that if the said pope had lived out his natural life he would have sold the emperor well, and made him pay dear for that im- prisonment, in order to aggrandize his niece and the kingdom to which she was joined. But Clement VII. died young, and all this profit came to nought. So now our queen, having lost her mother, Magdelaine de Boulogne, and Lorenzo de' Medici, Duke of Urbiuo, her father, in early life, was married by her good uncle the pope to France, whither she was brought by sea to Marseille in great triumph ; and her wedding was pompously performed, at the age of fourteen. She made herself so beloved by the king, her father-in-law, and by King Henri, her husband [not king till the death of Frangois L], that on remauiing ten years without producing issue, and many persons endeavouriag to persuade the king and the dauphin, her husband, to repu- diate her because there was such need of an heir to France, neither the one nor the other would consent because they loved her so much. But after ten years, in accordance with the natural habit of the women of the race of Medici, who are tardy in conceiving, she began by producing the httle King Frangois II. After that, was born the Queen of Spain, and then, consecutively, that fine and illustrious progeny whom we have all seen, and also others no sooner born than dead, by great misfortune and fatahty. All this caused the king, her husband, to love her more and more, and in such a way that he, who was of an amorous tempera- CATHERINE DE' MEDICL 51 ment, and greatly liked to make love and to change his loves, said often that of all the women in the world there was none like his wife for that, and he did not know her equal. He had reason to say so, for she was truly a beautiful and most amiable princess. She was of rich and very fine presence ; of great majesty, but very gentle when need was ; of noble appearance and good grace, her face handsome and agreeable, her bosom very beautiful, white and full ; her body also very white, the flesh beautiful, the skin smooth, as I have heard from several of her ladies ; of a fine plumpness also, the leg and thigh very beautiful (as I have heard, too, from the same ladies) ; and she took great pleasure in being well shod and in having her stockings well and tightly drawn up. Besides all this, the most beautiful hand that was ever seen, as I beheve. Once upon a time the poets praised Aurora for her fine hands and beautiful fingers ; but I think our queen would efface her in that, and she guarded and maintained that beauty all her hfe. The king, her son, Henri III., inherited much of this beauty of the hand. She always clothed herself well and superbly, often with some pretty and new invention. In short, she had many charms in herself to make her beloved. I remember that one day at Lyons she went to see a painter named Corneille, who had painted in a large room all the great seigneurs, princes, cavahers, queens, princesses, ladies of the Court, and damoiselles. Being in the said room of these portraits we saw there our queen, painted very well in all her beauty and perfection, apparelled ct la Frangaise in a cap and her great pearls, and a gown with wide sleeves of silver tissue furred with lynx, — the whole so well represented to the life that only speech was lacking ; her three fine daughters were beside her. She took great pleasure at the sight, and all the 52 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. company there present did the same, praising and admiring her beauty above all. She herself was so ravished by the contemplation that she could not take her eyes from the picture until M. de Nemours came to her and said : " Madame, I think you are there so well portrayed that nothing more can be said ; and it seems to me that your daughters do you proper honour, for they do not go before you or surpass you." To this she answered : " My cousin, I think you can re- member the time, the age, and the dress of this picture ; so that you can judge better than any of this company, for you saw me like that, whether I was estimated such as you say, and whether I ever was as I there appear.'' There was not one in the company that did not praise and estimate that beauty highly, and say that the mother was worthy of the daughters, and the daughters of the mother. And such beauty lasted her, married and widowed, almost to her death ; not that she was as fresh as in her more blooming years, but always well preserved, very desirable and agreeable. For the rest, she was very good company and of gay humour ; loviug all honourable exercises, such as dancing, in which she had great grace and majesty. She also loved hunting ; about which I heard a lady of the Court tell this tale : King FrauQois, having chosen and made a company which was called " the little band of the Court ladies," the handsomest, daintiest, and most favoured, often escaped from the Court and went to other houses to hunt the stag and pass his time, sometimes staying thus withdrawn eight days, ten days, sometimes more and some- times less, as the humour took him. Our queen (who was then only Mme. la dauphine) seeing such parties made with- out her, and that even Mesdames her sisters-in-law were there while she stayed at home, made prayer to the king, to take her always with him, and to do her the honour to permit that she should never budge without him. ^/<■;. ' ij .1. ■a'.- ■■ " .111 -a]; '.•' :i: .! -'A,:. * ( .' ■ ■ • - -J -i'V u^Ly; ''U , V N s V V X V N"' CATHERINE DE' MEDICI. 81 [This refers to " Les Dames Galantes," and not to the present volume.] Now, to thoroughly consider how fine a sight was this troupe of beautiful ladies and damoiselles, creatures divine rather than human, we must imagine the entries into Paris and other cities, the sacred and superlative bridals of our kings of France, and their sisters, the daughters of France ; such as those of the dauphin, of King Charles, of King Henri III., of the Queen of Spain, of Madame de Lorraine, of the Queen of Navarre, not to speak of many other grand weddings of the princes and princesses, like that of M. de Joyeuse, which would have surpassed them all if the Queen of Navarre had been there. Also we must picture to our- selves the interview at Bayonne, the arrival of the Poles, and an infinite number of other and like magnificences, which I could never finish naming, where I saw these ladies appear, each more beautiful than the rest ; some more finely appointed and better dressed than others, because for such festivals, m addition to their great means, the king and queen would give them splendid liveries. In short, nothing was ever seen finer, more dazzling, dainty, superb ; the glory of Niqu^e never approached it [enchanted palace m " Amadis "]. All this shone in a ball- room of the Tuileries or the Louvre as the stars of heaven in the azure sky. The queen-mother wished and commanded her ladies always to appear in grand and superb apparel, though she herself during her widowhood never clothed herself in worldly silks, unless they were lugubrious, but alwa}^s properly and so well-fittmg that she looked the queen above all else. It is true that on the days of the weddings of her two sons Henri and Charles, she wore gowns of black velvet, wishing, she said, to solemnize the event by so signal an act. While she was married she always dressed G S2 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. very richly and superbly, and looked what she was. And it w^as fine to see and admire her in the general processions that were made, both in Paris and other cities, such as the Fete Dieu, that of the Eameaux [Palm Sunday], bear- ing palms and branches with such grace, and on Candlemas Day, when the torches were borne by all the Court, the flames of which contended against their owti brilhancy. At these three processions, which are most solemn, we certainly saw nothing but beauty, grace, a noble bearing, a fine gait and splendid apparel, all of which delighted the spectators. It was fine also to see the queen in her married life going through the country in her litter, being pregnant, or after- wards on horseback attended by forty or fifty ladies and damoiselles mounted on handsome hackneys well caparisoned, and sittmg their horses with such good grace that the men could not do better, either in equestrian style or apparel ; their hats adorned with plumes which floated in the air as if demanding either love or war. Virgil, who took upon himself to write of the apparel of Queen Dido when she went to the chase, says nothing that approaches the luxury of that of our queen with her ladies, may it not displease her, as I think I have said elsewhere. Tliis queen (made by the act of the great King Prangois), who introduced this beautiful pageantry, never forgot or let slip anything of the kind she had once learned, but always wanted to imitate or surpass it ; I have heard her speak three or four times in my life on this subject. Those who have seen things as I did still feel their souls enchanted like mine, for what I say is true ; I know it having seen it. So there is the Court of our queen. Unhappy was the day when she died ! I have heard tell that our present king [Henri IV.], some eighteen months after he saw himself more in hope and prospect of becoming King of Prance, CATHERINE DE' MEDICI. 83 began one day to discourse with the late M. le Mar^chal de Biron, on the plans and projects he would undertake to make his Court prosperous and fine and in all things like that of our said queen, for at that time it was in its greatest lustre and splendour. M. le mart^chal answered : " It is not in your power, nor in that of any king who will ever reign, unless you can manage with God that he shall resuscitate the queen-mother, and bring her round to you." But that was not wdiat the king wanted, for when she died there was no one whom he hated so much, but without grounds, as I could see, and as he should have known better than I. How luckless was the day on which such a queen died, at the very point when we had such great necessity for her, and still have ! She died at Blois of sadness caused by the massacre w^hich there took place, and the melancholy tragedy there played, seeing that, without rellection, she had brought the princes to Blois thinking to do well ; whereas it was true, as M. le Cardinal de Bourbon said to her : " Alas ! madame, you have led us all to butchery without intending it." That so touched her heart, and also the death of those poor men, that she took to her bed, having previously felt ill, and never rose again. They say that when the king announced to her the murder of M. de Guise, saying that he was now absolutely kmg, without equal, or master, she asked him if he had put the affairs of his kinsjdom in order before strikincj the blow. To which he answered yes. '' God grant it, my son," she said. Very prudent that she was, she foresaw plainly what would happen to him, and to all the kingdom. ^ Persons have spoken diversely as to her death, and even as 1 Henri III. convoked the States-General at Blois in 1588 ; the Due de Guise (Henri, le Balafre) was there assassinated, by the king's order, December 23, 1588 ; his brother, Cardinal de Bourbon, the next day. — Tr. 84 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. to poison. Possibly it was so, possibly not; but she was held to have died of desperation, and she had reason to do so. She was placed on her state-bed, as one of her ladies told me, neither more nor less hke Queen Anne of whom I have already spoken, clothed in the same royal garments that the said Queen Anne wore, they not having served since her death for any others ; and thus she was borne to the church of the castle, with the same pomp and solemnity as Queen Anne, where she lies and rests stilL The king wished to take her to Chartres and thence to Saint-Denis, to put her with the king, her husband, in the same tomb which she had caused to be made, built, and constructed, so noble and superb, but the war which came on prevented it. This is what I can say at this time of tliis great queen, who has given assuredly such noble grounds to speak worthily of her that this short discourse is not enough for her praise. I know that well ; also that the quahty of my speech does not suffice, for better speakers than I would be insufficient. At any rate, such as my discourse is, I lay it, in all humility and devotion, at her feet ; also I would avoid too great pro- Imty, for which indeed I feel myself too capable ; but I hope I shall not separate from her much, although in my discourses I shall be silent, and only speak of what her noble and incomparable virtues command me, giving me ample matter so to do, I having seen all that I have written of her ; and as for what had happened before my time, I heard it from persons most illustrious ; and thus I shall do in all my books. This queen, who was of many kings the mother, Of queens also, belonging here to France, Died when we had most need of her support ; For none but she could give us true assistance. CATHERINE DE' MEDICI. 85 M^zeray [in his "History of France"], who never thinks of the dramatic, nevertheless makes known to us at the start his principal personages ; he shows them more especially in action, without detaching them too much from the general sentiment and interests of which they are the leaders and representatives, while, at the same time, he leaves to each his individual physiognomy. The old Conn^table de Mont- morency, the Guises, Admiral de Coligny, the Chancellor de I'Hopital define themselves on his pages by their conduct and proceedings even more than by the judgment he awards them. Catherine de' Medici is painted there in all her dis- simulation and her network of artifices, in which she was often caught herself ; ambitious of sovereign power without possessing either the force or the genius of it; striving to obtain it by craft, and using for this purpose a continual sys- tem of what we should call to-day sec-saiviiig ; " rousing and elevating for a time one faction, putting to sleep or lowering another ; uniting herself sometimes with the feeblest side out of caution, lest the stronger should crush her ; sometimes with the stronger from necessity ; at times standing neutral when she felt herself strong enough to command both sides, but without intention to extinguish either." Far from being always too Catholic, there are moments when she seems to lean to the Eeformed rehgion and to w^ish to grant too much to that party ; and this with more sincerity, perhaps, than belonged to her naturally. The Catherine de' Medici, such as she presents herself and is developed in plain truth on the pages of M^zeray is well calculated to tempt a modern writer. As there is nothing new but that which is old, for often dis- coveries are nothing more than that which was once known and is forgotten, the day when a modern historian shall take up the Catherine de' Medici of M^zeray and give her some of the rather forced features which are to the taste of the S6 THE BOOK OF THE LADIES. present day, there will come a great cry of astonishment and admiration, and the critics will register a new discovery.^ M. Niel, hbrarian to the ministry of the Interior, an en- lightened amateur of the arts and of history, has been engaged since 1848 in publishiag a series of Portraits or " Crayons " of the celebrated personages of the sixteenth century, kings, queens, mistresses of kings, etc., the whole forming already a folio volume. ]\L Niel has applied liim- self in this collection to reproduce none but authentic portraits and solely from the original, and he has confined himself to a smgle form of portraiture, that which was drawn in crayons of divers colours by artists of the sixteenth century. " They designated in those days by the name of ' crayons,' " he observes, " certain portraits executed on paper in red chalk, in black lead, and in white chalk, shaded and touched in a way to present the effect of painting." These designs, faithfully reproduced, in which the red tone pre- dominates, are for the most part originally due to un- known artists, who seem to have belonged to the true French lineage of art. They resemble the humble com- panions and followers of our chroniclers who simply sought in their rapid sketches to catch physiognomies, such as they saw them, with truth and candour ; the likeness alone con- cerned them. Frangois I. leads the procession with his obscure wives, and one, at least, of his obscure mistresses, the Comtesse de Chateaub riant. Henri 11. succeeds him, cjivimr one hand to Catherine de' Medici, the other to Diane de Poitiers. We are shown a Marie Stuart, young, before and after her widow- 1 Honore de Balzac's volume, in the Philosophical Series of his " Com- edy of Human Life," on Catherine de' Medici, while called