than if you had risked a loss of two to one.
And so, farewell!” In 1465, another man of
war, Odet d’Aydie, Lord of Lescun in Warn, had
commanded at Montlhery the troops of the Dukes of
Berry and Brittany against Louis XI.; and, in 1469,
the king, who had found means of making his acquaintance,
and who “was wiser,” says Commynes, “in
the conduct of such treaties than any other prince
of his time,” resolved to employ him in his
difficult relations with his brother Charles, then
Duke of Guienne, “promising him that he and his
servants, and he especially, should profit thereby.”
Three years afterwards, in 1472, Louis made Lescun
Count of Comminges, “wherein he showed good
judgment,” adds Commynes, “saying that
no peril would come of putting in his hands that which
he did put, for never, during those past dissensions,
had the said Lescun a mind to have any communication
with the English, or to consent that the places of
Normandy should be handed over to them;” and
to the end of his life Louis XI. kept up the confidence
which Lescun had inspired by his judicious fidelity
in the case of this great question. There is
no need to make any addition to the name of Philip
de Commynes, the most precious of the politic conquests
made by Louis in the matter of eminent counsellors,
to whom he remained as faithful as they were themselves
faithful and useful to him. The
Memoires of
Commynes are the most striking proof of the rare
and unfettered political intellect placed by the future
historian at the king’s service, and of the
estimation in which the king had wit enough to hold
it.
Louis XI. rendered to France, four centuries ago,
during a reign of twenty-two years, three great services,
the traces and influence of which exist to this day.
He prosecuted steadily the work of Joan of Arc and
Charles VII., the expulsion of a foreign kingship and
the triumph of national independence and national
dignity. By means of the provinces which he
successively won, wholly or partly, Burgundy, Franche-Comte,
Artois, Provence, Anjou, Roussillon, and Barrois, he
caused France to make a great stride towards territorial
unity within her natural boundaries. By the
defeat he inflicted on the great vassals, the favor
he showed the middle classes, and the use he had the
sense to make of this new social force, he contributed
powerfully to the formation of the French nation,
and to its unity under a national government.
Feudal society had not an idea of how to form itself
into a nation, or discipline its forces under one
head; Louis XI. proved its political weakness, determined
its fall, and labored to place in its stead France
and monarchy. Herein are the great facts of his
reign, and the proofs of his superior mind.