in his power, and with a little patience could have
starved them into submission; instead, he deemed it
his chivalric duty to avenge Crecy in arms, and the
great battle of Poitiers was the result (19th September,
1356). The carnage and utter ruin of the French
feudal army was quite incredible; the dead seemed
more than the whole army of the Black Prince; the
prisoners were too many to be held. The French
army, bereft of leaders, melted away, and the Black
Prince rode triumphantly back to Bordeaux with the
captive King John and his brave little son in his
train. A two years’ truce ensued; King
John was carried over to London, where he found a
fellow in misfortune in David of Scotland, who had
been for eleven years a captive in English hands.
The utter degradation of the nobles, and the misery
of the country, gave to the cities of France an opportunity
which one great man, Etienne Marcel, provost of the
traders at Paris, was not slow to grasp. He fortified
the capital and armed the citizens; the civic clergy
made common cause with him; and when the Dauphin Charles
convoked the three Estates at Paris, it was soon seen
that the nobles had become completely discredited and
powerless. It was a moment in which a new life
might have begun for France; in vain did the noble
order clamour for war and taxes,—they to
do the war, with what skill and success all men now
knew, and the others to pay the taxes. Clergy,
however, and burghers resisted. The Estates parted,
leaving what power there was still in France in the
hands of Etienne Marcel. He strove in vain to
reconcile Charles the Dauphin with Charles of Navarre,
who stood forward as a champion of the towns.
Very reluctantly did Marcel entrust his fortunes
to such hands. With help of Lecocq, Bishop of
Laon, he called the Estates again together, and endeavoured
to lay down sound principles of government, which
Charles the Dauphin was compelled to accept.
Paris, however, stood alone, and even there all were
not agreed. Marcel and Bishop Lecocq, seeing
the critical state of things, obtained the release
of Charles of Navarre, then a prisoner. The
result was that ere long the Dauphin-regent was at
open war with Navarre and with Paris. The outbreak
of the miserable peasantry, the Jacquerie, who fought
partly for revenge against the nobles, partly to help
Paris, darkened the time; they were repressed with
savage bloodshed, and in 1358 the Dauphin’s
party in Paris assassinated the only great man France
had seen for long. With Etienne Marcel’s
death all hope of a constitutional life died out from
France; the Dauphin entered Paris and set his foot
on the conquered liberties of his country. Paris
had stood almost alone; civic strength is wanting
in France; the towns but feebly supported Marcel;
they compelled the movement to lose its popular and
general character, and to become a first attempt to
govern France from Paris alone. After some insincere
negotiations, and a fear of desultory warfare, in