flocked in; and the King had scarcely any forces at
his back with which to withstand them. His plans
for the campaign against the league were admirable,
though they were frustrated by the bad faith of his
captains, who mostly sympathised with this outbreak
of the feudal nobility. Louis himself marched
southward to quell the Duc de Bourbon and his friends,
and returning from that task, only half done for lack
of time, he found that Charles of Charolais had passed
by Paris, which was faithful to the King, and was
coming down southwards, intending to join the Dukes
of Berri and Brittany, who were on their way towards
the capital. The hostile armies met at Montleheri
on the Orleans road; and after a strange battle—minutely
described by Commines—a battle in which
both sides ran away, and neither ventured at first
to claim a victory, the King withdrew to Corbeil,
and then marched into Paris (1465). There the
armies of the league closed in on him; and after a
siege of several weeks, Louis, feeling disaffection
all around him, and doubtful how long Paris herself
would bear for him the burdens of blockade, signed
the Peace of Conflans, which, to all appearances,
secured the complete victory to the noblesse, “each
man carrying off his piece.” Instantly
the contented princes broke up their half-starved
armies and went home, leaving Louis behind to plot
and contrive against them, a far wiser man, thanks
to the lesson they had taught him. They did
not let him wait long for a chance. The Treaty
of Conflans had given the duchy of Normandy to the
King’s brother Charles; he speedily quarrelled
with his neighbour, the Duke of Brittany, and Louis
came down at once into Normandy, which threw itself
into his arms, and the whole work of the league was
broken up. The Comte de Charolais, occupied with
revolts at Dinan and Liege, could not interfere, and
presently his father, the old Duke Philip, died (1467),
leaving to him the vast lordships of the House of
Burgundy.
And now the “imperial dreamer,” Charles
the Bold, was brought into immediate rivalry with
that royal trickster, the “universal spider,”
Louis XI. Charles was by far the nobler spirit
of the two: his vigour and intelligence, his
industry and wish to raise all around him to a higher
cultivation, his wise reforms at home, and attempts
to render his father’s dissolute and careless
rule into a well-ordered lordship, all these things
marked him out as the leading spirit of the time.
His territories were partly held under France, partly
under the empire: the Artois district, which
also may be taken to include the Somme towns, the
county of Rhetel, the duchy of Bar, the duchy of Burgundy,
with Auxerre and Nevers, were feudally in France;
the rest of his lands under the empire. He had,
therefore, interests and means of interference on either
hand; and it is clear that Charles set before himself
two different lines of policy, according as he looked
one way or the other.