A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 521 pages of information about A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 2.

A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 521 pages of information about A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 2.
support the heavy mass of his body.  Any one else, however humble, would have had neither the will nor the power to ride a-horseback; but he, against the advice of all his friends, listened only to the voice of courage, braved the fiery suns of June and August, which were the dread of the youngest knights, and made a scoff of those who could not bear the heat, although many a time, during the passage of narrow and difficult swampy places, he was constrained to get himself held on by those about him.”  After an obstinate struggle, and at the intervention of William VII., Duke of Aquitaine, the Count of Auvergne’s suzerain, “Louis fixed a special day for regulating and deciding, in parliament, at Orleans, and in the duke’s presence, between the bishop and the count, the points to which the Auvergnats had hitherto refused to subscribe.  Then triumphantly leading back his army, he returned victoriously to France.”  He had asserted his power, and increased his ascendency, without any pretension to territorial aggrandizement.

[Illustration:  Louis the Fat on an Expedition——­69]

Into his relations with his two powerful neighbors, the King of England, Duke of Normandy, and the Emperor of Germany, Louis the Fat introduced the same watchfulness, the same firmness, and, at need, the same warlike energy, whilst observing the same moderation, and the same policy of holding aloof from all turbulent or indiscreet ambition, adjusting his pretensions to his power, and being more concerned to govern his kingdom efficiently than to add to it by conquest.  Twice, in 1109 and in 1118, he had war in Normandy with Henry I., King of England, and he therein was guilty of certain temerities resulting in a reverse, which he hastened to repair during a vigorous prosecution of the campaign; but, when once his honor was satisfied, he showed a ready inclination for the peace which the Pope, Calixtus ii., in council at Rome, succeeded in establishing between the two rivals.  The war with the Emperor of Germany, Henry V., in 1124, appeared, at the first blush, a more serious matter.  The emperor had raised a numerous army of Lorrainers, Allemannians, Bavarians, Suabians, and Saxons, and was threatening the very city of Rheims with instant attack.  Louis hastened to put himself in position; he went and took solemnly, at the altar of St. Denis, the banner of that patron of the kingdom, and flew with a mere handful of men to confront the enemy, and parry the first blow, calling on the whole of France to follow him.  France summoned the flower of her chivalry; and when the army had assembled from every quarter of the kingdom at Rheims, there was seen, says Suger, “so great a host of knights and men a-foot, that they might have been compared to swarms of grasshoppers covering the face of the earth, not only on the banks of the rivers, but on the mountains and over the plains.”  This multitude was formed in three divisions.  The third division was composed of Orleanese, Parisians,

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A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.