anti-inflammable creatures appeared in their turn,
and were followed by the Duc de Rohan, attired as Vulcan,
with his twelve companions in the garb of Parthians,
all similarly dressed, and armed with lances, swords,
and shields, on which their arms were splendidly emblazoned.
Renewed feats of dexterous horsemanship were exhibited
by this brilliant band, after which, as their predecessors
had previously done, they established themselves in
an angle of the lists, and made way for the representatives
of Air. First came the pages, forming an escort
to the goddess Juno, with her attendant eagle and
a multitude of other birds, all skilfully imitated
and grouped; and when the feathered pageant had passed
on, appeared the Comte de Sommerive[320] and his noble
band, all wearing the same costume and bearing the
same arms. Lastly came Earth, in which the pages
were succeeded by two enormous elephants, artistically
constructed, and bearing upon their backs small towers
filled with musicians, who, as they advanced, poured
out a volume of sweet sound, to which several horses,
draped with cloth of gold and led by Moors, moved in
cadence like the grooms by whom they were conducted.
Then followed more pages, and a band of trumpeters
whose occasional flourishes overpowered the softer
instruments of those who marched in front; and finally,
twelve Moorish knights, led by the Duc de Nevers,[321]
all resplendent with gold and jewels, closed the procession,
and fell back to the remaining extremity of the enclosure.
A combat then commenced between the knights of Earth
and those of Water, first single-handed, then in couples,
and finally troop against troop, and so soon as this
had terminated, the cavaliers of Air and Fire went
through the same evolutions; when each having exhibited
his dexterity in the manege and his skill in
arms, the whole of the four bands joined in the melee,
shivering their lances, their arrows, and their shields,
and then each of the combatants seized a torch which
had been prepared for him, and after having ridden
round and round each other, making the wandering lights
assume the appearance of meteors, the entire company
formed once more into order and returned to the Hotel
de Bourbon like a long line of fire.[322]
These were precisely the entertainments that Henri IV was eager to encourage, as they involved an expenditure which frequently crippled the means of those by whom they were exhibited for several years; and he was accustomed to declare that it was frequently to the poverty of his nobles that he was indebted for their fidelity, as they no sooner found themselves in a position to arm a few retainers and assume the offensive, than they forthwith began to organize a cabal.