Sully: “I know not what is the meaning of
it, but my heart tells me that some misfortune will
happen to me.” He was sitting on a low
chair which had been made for him by Sully’s
orders at the Arsenal, thinking and beating his fingers
on his spectacle-case; then all on a sudden he jumped
up, and slapping his hands upon his thighs, “By
God,” he said, “I shall die in this city,
and shall never go out of it. They will kill
me; I see quite well that they have no other remedy
in their dangers but my death. Ah! accursed
coronation! Thou wilt be the cause of my death.”
“Jesus! Sir,” cried Sully, “what
fancy of yours is this? If it continue, I am
of opinion that you should break off this anointment
and coronation, and expedition and war; if you please
to give me orders, it shall soon be done.”
“Yes, break off the coronation,” said
the king: “let me hear no more about it;
I shall have my mind at rest from divers fancies which
certain warnings have put into it. To bide nothing
from you, I have been told that I was to be killed
at the first grand ceremony I should undertake, and
that I should die in a carriage.” “You
never told me that, sir; and so have I often been astounded
to see you cry out when in a carriage, as if you had
dreaded this petty peril, after having so many times
seen you amidst cannon-balls, musketry, lance-thrusts,
pike-thrusts, and sword-thrusts; without being a bit
afraid. Since your mind is so exercised thereby,
if I were you, I would go away to-morrow, let the
coronation take place without you, or put it off to
another time, and not enter Paris for a long while,
or in a carriage. If you please, I will send
word to Notre-Dame and St. Denis to stop everything
and to withdraw the workmen.” “I
am very much inclined,” said the king; " but
what will my wife say? For she hath gotten this
coronation marvellously into her head.”
“She may say what she likes; but I cannot think
that, when she knows your opinion about it, she will
persist any longer.”
Whatever Sully might say, Mary de’ Medici “took
infinite offence at the king for his alarms:
the matter was disputed for three days, with high
words on all sides, and at last the laborers were sent
back to work again.”
Henry, in spite of his presentiments, made no change
in his plans; he did not go away; he did not defer
the queen’s coronation; on the contrary, he
had it proclaimed on the 12th of May, 1610, that she
would be crowned next day, the 13th, at St. Denis,
and that on Sunday, the 16th, she would make her entry
into Paris. On Friday, the 14th, he had an idea
of going to the Arsenal to see Sully, who was ill;
we have the account of this visit and of the king’s
assassination given by Malherbe, at that time attached
to the service of Henry IV., in a letter written on
the 19th of May, from the reports of eye-witnesses,
and it is here reproduced, word for word.
[Illustration: The Arsenal in the Reign of Henry
IV.——143]