was bound to renew and prove her accusation also publicly,
and not in secret; furthermore, it was a great piece
of insolence on the part of the exorcists to invite
people of their standing and character to come to the
convent, and having kept them waiting an hour, to tell
them that they considered them unworthy to be admitted
to the ceremony which they. had been requested to
attend; and he wound up by saying that he would draw
up a report, as he had already done on each of the
preceding days, setting forth the extraordinary discrepancy
between their promises and their performance.
Mignon replied that he and Barre had had only one
thing in view,
viz. the expulsion of the, demons,
and that in that they had succeeded, and that their
success would be of great benefit to the holy Catholic
faith, for they had got the demons so thoroughly into
their power that they had been able to command them
to produce within a week miraculous proofs of the
spells cast on the nuns by Urbain Grandier and their
wonderful deliverance therefrom; so that in future
no one would be able to doubt as to the reality of
the possession. Thereupon the magistrates drew
up a report of all that had happened, and of what Barre
and Mignon had said. This was signed by all the
officials present, except the criminal lieutenant,
who declared that, having perfect confidence in the
statements of the exorcists, he was anxious to do
nothing to increase the doubting spirit which was unhappily
so prevalent among the worldly.
The same day the bailiff secretly warned Urbain of
the refusal of the criminal lieutenant to join with
the others in signing the report, and almost at the
same moment he learned that the cause of his adversaries
was strengthened by the adhesion of a certain Messire
Rene Memin, seigneur de Silly, and prefect of the
town. This gentleman was held in great esteem
not only on account of his wealth and the many offices
which he filled, but above all on account of his powerful
friends, among whom was the cardinal-duke himself,
to whom he had formerly been of use when the cardinal
was only a prior. The character of the conspiracy
had now become so alarming that Grandier felt it was
time to oppose it with all his strength. Recalling
his conversation with the bailiff the preceding day,
during which he had advised him to lay his complaint
before the Bishop of Poitiers, he set out, accompanied
by a priest of Loudun, named Jean Buron, for the prelate’s
country house at Dissay. The bishop, anticipating
his visit, had already given his orders, and Grandier
was met by Dupuis, the intendant of the palace, who,
in reply to Grandier’s request to see the bishop,
told him that his lordship was ill. Urbain next
addressed himself to the bishop’s chaplain, and
begged him to inform the prelate that his object in
coming was to lay before him the official reports
which the magistrates had drawn up of the events which
had taken place at the Ursuline convent, and to lodge