his release.” Henry
iv. was right.
As early as the 7th of August, the Duke of Mayenne
had an announcement made to the Parliament of Paris,
and written notice sent to all the provincial governors,
“that, in the interval until the states-general
could be assembled, he urged them all to unite with
him in rendering with one accord to their Catholic
king, that is to say, Cardinal de Bourbon, the obedience
that was due to him.” The cardinal was,
in fact, proclaimed king under the name of Charles
X.; and eight months afterwards, on the 5th of March,
1590, the Parliament of Paris issued a decree “recognizing
Charles X. as true and lawful king of France.”
Du Plessis-Mornay, ill though he was, had understood
and executed, without loss of time, the orders of
King Henry, going bail himself for the promises that
had to be made and for the sums that had to be paid
to get the cardinal away from the governor of Chinon.
He succeeded, and had the cardinal removed to Fontenay-le-Comte
in Poitou, “under the custody of Sieur de la
Boulaye, governor of that place, whose valor and fidelity
were known to him.” “That,”
said Henry
iv. on receiving the news, “is
one of the greatest services I could have had rendered
me; M. du Plessis does business most thoroughly.”
On the 9th of May, 1590, not three months after the
decree of the Parliament of Paris which had proclaimed
him true and lawful King of France, Cardinal de Bourbon,
still a prisoner, died at Fontenay, aged sixty-seven.
A few weeks before his death he had written to his
nephew Henry
iv. a letter in which he recognized
him as his sovereign.
The League was more than ever dominant in Paris; Henry
iv. could not think of entering there.
Before recommencing the war in his own name, he made
Villeroi, who, after the death of Henry iii.,
had rejoined the Duke of Mayenne, an offer of an interview
in the Bois de Boulogne to see if there were no means
of treating for peace. Mayenne would not allow
Villeroi to accept the offer. “He had no
private quarrel,” he said, “with the King
of Navarre, whom he highly honored, and who, to his
certain knowledge, had not looked with approval upon
his brothers’ death; but any appearance of negotiation
would cause great distrust amongst their party, and
they would not do anything that tended against the
rights of King Charles X.” Renouncing all
idea of negotiation, Henry iv. set out on the
8th of August from St. Cloud, after having told off
his army in three divisions. Two were ordered
to go and occupy Picardy and Champagne; and the king
kept with him only the third, about six thousand strong.
He went and laid the body of Henry iii. in the
church of St. Corneille at Compiegne, took Meulan
and several small towns on the banks of the Seine
and Oise, and propounded for discussion with his officers
the question of deciding in which direction he should
move, towards the Loire or the Seine, on Tours or
on Rouen. He determined in favor of Normandy;