by the enemy, so that instead of winning victories
there he might not even be able to live there.
In 1536 this system had been found successful by
the constable in causing the failure of Charles V.’s
invasion of Provence; but in 1550 a new generation
had come into the world, the court, and the army;
it comprised young men full of ardor and already distinguished
for their capacity and valor; Francis de Lorraine,
Duke of Guise (born at the castle of Bar, February
17, 1519), was thirty-one; his brother, Charles de
Guise, Cardinal of Lorraine, was only six-and-twenty
(he was born at Joinville, February 17, 1524); Francis
de Scepeaux (born at Durdtal, Anjou, in 1510), who
afterwards became Marshal de Vieilleville, was at
this time nearly forty; but he had contributed in
1541 to the victory of Ceresole, and Francis I. had
made so much of it that he had said, on presenting
him to his son Henry, “He is no older than you,
and see what he has done already; if the wars do not
swallow him up, you will some day make him constable
or marshal of France.” Gaspard de Coligny
(born at Chatillon-sur-Loing, February 16, 1517) was
thirty-three; and his brother, Francis d’Andelot
(born at Chatillon, in 1521), twenty-nine. These
men, warriors and politicians at one and the same
time, in a high social position and in the flower of
their age, could not reconcile themselves to the Constable
de Montmorency’s system, defensive solely and
prudential to the verge of inertness; they thought
that, in order to repair the reverses of France and
for the sake of their own fame, there was something
else to be done, and they impatiently awaited the
opportunity.
[Illustration: Henry II.——235]
It was not long coming. At the close of 1551,
a deputation of the Protestant princes of Germany
came to Fontainebleau to ask for the king’s
support against the aggressive and persecuting despotism
of Charles V. The Count of Nassau made a speech “very
long,” says Vieilleville in his Memoires,
“at the same time that it was in very elegant
language, whereby all the presence received very great
contentment.” Next day the king put the
demand before his council for consideration, and expressed
at the very outset his own opinion that “in the
present state of affairs, he ought not to take up
any enterprise, but leave his subjects of all conditions
to rest; for generally,” said he, “all
have suffered and do suffer when armies pass and repass
so often through my kingdom, which cannot be done
without pitiable oppression and trampling-down of the
poor people.” The constable, “without
respect of persons,” says Vieilleville, “following
his custom of not giving way to anybody, forthwith
began to speak, saying that the king, who asked counsel
of them, had very plainly given it them himself and
made them very clearly to understand his own idea,
which ought to be followed point by point without any
gainsaying, he having said nothing but what was most
equitable and well known to the company.”