finding pleasure in doing justice to his comrades,
amongst others the veteran Doge of Venice, Henry Dandolo,
and sometimes intermingling with his story the reflections
of a judicious and sincere Christian, without any
pious fanaticism and without ostentation. Joinville
wrote his History of St. Louis at the request of Joan
of Navarre, wife of Philip the Handsome, and five
years after that queen’s death; his manuscripts
have it thus: “The things which I personally
saw and heard were written in the year of grace 1309,
in the month of October.” He was then
eighty-five, and he dedicated his book to Louis le
Hutin (the quarreller), great-grandson of St. Louis.
More lively and more familiar in style than Villehardouin,
he combines the vivid and natural impressions of youth
with an old man’s fond clinging to the memories
of his long life; he likes to bring himself upon the
scene, especially as regards his relations towards
and his conversations with St. Louis, for whom he
has a tender regard and admiration, at the same time
that he maintains towards him a considerable independence
of ideas, conduct, and language; he is a valiant and
faithful knight, who forms a very sensible opinion
as to the crusade in which he takes part, and who
will not enter upon it a second time even to follow
the king to whom he is devoted, but whose pious fanaticism
and warlike illusions he does not share; his narrative
is at one and the same time very full of himself without
any pretension, and very spirited without any show
of passion, and fraught with a graceful and easy carelessness
which charms the reader and all the while inspires
confidence in the author’s veracity. Froissart
is an insatiable Fry, who revels in all the sights
of his day, events and personages, wars and galas,
adventures of heroism or gallantry, and who is incessantly
gadding about through all the dominions and all the
courts of Europe, everywhere seeking his own special
amusement in the satisfaction of his curiosity.
He has himself given an account of the manner in
which he collected and wrote his Chronicles.
“Ponder,” says he, “amongst yourselves,
such of ye as read me, or will read me, or have read
me, or shall hear me read, how I managed to get and
put together so many facts whereof I treat in so many
parts. And, for to inform you of the truth,
I began young, at the age of twenty years, and I came
into the world amidst the deeds and adventures, and
I did always take great delight in them, more than
in aught else. And God gave me such grace that
I was well with all parties, and with the households
of the kings, and, especially, the household of King
Edward of England, and the noble queen his wife, Madame
Philippa of Hainault, unto whom, in my youth, I was
clerk, and I did minister unto her with beautiful ditties
and amorous treatises. And for love of the service
of the noble and valiant dame with whom I was, all
the other lords, kings, dukes, counts, barons, and
knights, of whatsoever nation they might be, did love