A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 5 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 863 pages of information about A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 5.

A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 5 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 863 pages of information about A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 5.
Brissac was communicating secretly, by means of his cousin, Sieur de Rochepot, with the royalists, and that the provost of tradesmen, L’Huillier, and three of the four sheriffs were agreed to bring the city back to obedience to the king.  When the Sixteen and their adherents saw Mayenne departing with his wife and children, great were their alarm and wrath.  A large band, with the incumbent of St. Cosmo (Hamilton) at their head, rushed about the streets in arms, saying, “Look to your city; the policists are brewing a terrible business for it.”  Others, more violent, cried, “To arms!  Down upon the policists!  Begin!  Let us make an end of it!” The policists, that is, the burgesses inclined to peace, repaired on their side to the provost of tradesmen to ask for his authority to assemble at the Palace or the Hotel de Ville, and to provide for security in case of any public calamity.  The provost tried to elude their entreaties by pleading that the Duke of Mayenne would think ill of their assembling.  “Then you are not the tradesmen’s but M. de Mayenne’s provost?” said one of them.  “I am no Spaniard,” answered the provost; “no more is M. de Mayenne; I am anxious to reconcile you to the Sixteen.”  “We are honest folks, not branded and defamed like the Sixteen; we will have no reconciliation with the wretches.”  The Parliament grew excited, and exclaimed against the insolence and the menaces of the Sixteen.  “We must give place to these sedition-mongers, or put them down.”  A decree, published by sound of trumpet on the 14th of March, 1594, throughout the whole city, prohibited the Sixteen and their partisans from assembling on pain of death.  That same day, Count de Brissac, governor of Paris, had an interview at the abbey of St. Anthony, with his brother-in-law, Francis d’Epinay, Lord of St. Luc, Henry IV.’s grand-master of the ordnance; they had disputes touching private interests, which they wished, they said, to put right; and on this pretext advocates had appeared at their interview.  They spent three hours in personal conference, their minds being directed solely to the means of putting the king into possession of Paris.  They separated in apparent dudgeon.  Brissac went to call upon the legate Gaetani, and begged him to excuse the error he had committed in communicating with a heretic; his interest in the private affairs in question was too great, he said, for him to neglect it.  The legate excused him graciously, whilst praising him for his modest conduct, and related the incident to the Duke of Feria, the Spanish ambassador.  “He is a good fellow, M. de Brissac,” said the ambassador; “I have always found him so; you have only to employ the Jesuits to make him do all you please.  He takes little notice, otherwise, of affairs; one day, when we were holding council in here, whilst we were deliberating, he was amusing himself by catching flies.”  For four days the population of Paris was occupied with a solemn procession in honor of St. Genevieve, in which the
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A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 5 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.