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A10586 A legendarie, conteining an ample discourse of the life and behauiour of Charles Cardinal of Lorraine, and of his brethren, of the house of Guise. Written in French by Francis de L'isle; Legende de Charles, cardinal de Lorraine et de ses frères, de la maison de Guise. English La Planche, Louis Régnier de, ca. 1530-ca. 1580. 1577 (1577) STC 20855; ESTC S115805 138,427 198

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The voyce went the same time and the Admiral whome the Marshal of Montmorency had sent for to the ende to assiste him both with counsayle and helpe affirmed the same to the chiefe of Paris that there was a letter which came from the Guisians sent into Normandy conteining these wordes The readiest way to restore in France those to whom the Crowne doth appertayne by right to expulse the house of Valois is to sacke the Huguenots who doe support the same and therefore we must sel their woods to gather therewith money weapons in the ende was added that the said Huguenots that would goe to law neede not care for taxing their charges It was not vnknowen also that in sundry places the Catholickes made collections of money to what end let all men iudge While the Admiral was at Paris the Duke d'Aumale being hūgrye seking to catch some odde Crowne withdrew him selfe to Annet with his mother in lawe whither he brought the garde which was allowed him for the gouernement of Bourgundie and there quaked for feare lest the Marshall of Montmorency because it was in his gouernement and besides for that his said garde did many extorsions vnto their neighbours would send to apprehende him Wherefore he writ euery way to his friendes desiring them to come and succour him and to helpe him to get away so that he might goe to his charge At this summons some came others made no great accompt of those that came there taryed not twenty by reason of a certaine declaration wherewith a gentleman of Normandy reduced them all to their right wits For how would you said he to the Duke of Aumale that we should take weapon against a Marshall of France who with his only worde is able to take the same from vs and catch vs in his danger Yea if he should commaund vs to turne against you what should we doe vnlesse we would be rebels and disobedient to our King Againe the aunswer of a gentleman of Maine who could not come at his summons which was intercepted is worthy the noting in respect of the French freedome of speche vnto such as know not them selues wherein is to be seene what iudgement we are to giue of true Princes The wordes of this letter in this poinct were these I said not my lorde that you were no Prince either that I am not your seruant But peraduenture I affirmed that I knew no french man that did acknowledge you for a Prince of the blood or of the crowne wherein I doe not think that I did amisse but rather should haue offended in aduowing the same yea I neuer heard or knew that either you or any of yours did pretend thereunto As for seruice in as much as your messenger said that you accompted me vnthankefull I tolde him in deede that I was subiect to none but to the King neither ought any obedience but to him and his officers euery man in his vocation Thus much wil I now adde that I neuer was seruant to other then the Princes of the blood neither did owe any duety to other man liuing except of free heart and that so long as I listed neither doe I beleeue my lord that you doe otherwise thinke of me For you know that I haue spent twelue thousand franckes of my owne goods in following the late Lorde your father my lorde your brother and your selues and yet neuer tooke wages of any of you all or receaued benefite or aduantage at any of your handes I am I thanke God a gentleman and yet neuer did deede strayng therefro and bouldly I may say without wrong to any that I am to none but to the King his Princes my friendes and my selfe for at this day I haue no other master that nourisheth me or payeth my wages then my selfe Not that I meane vtterly to renounce doyng you seruice or that of courtisie I be not your seruant so long as you take it of a free hearte without any kinde of bonde that I owe vnto you For it is not vnknowen vnto you that there be manye who vnder the like auctority as yourselfe would pretend as much interest in me which to dye for it no man shal forcibly compel me to aduowe for so should I doe iniury vnto those to whom all seruice is dewe and vnto all french Nobilitie who iustly might reproche it vnto me This was the speache of a true French gentleman which all such as doe beare this title haue not marcked according as they ought The Duke d'Aumale being escaped thence as well as he might went into Champagne where he deuised new practises wherewith to keepe the water thicke and the fiue and twentieth of February 1565 which was six weekes after the Cardinals entry into Paris he writ a letter to his brother the Marquise d'Ellebeufe therein detecting the Guisians affections and their desire neuer to suffer France to be in quiet In this letter hauing touched all that had passed at Paris and scorned the King and Queen saying that it was their custome to giue out the fayrest speaches and promises in the worlde he addeth this In the meane time brother whiles you continue there namely in Touraine I think you were best to visite the lorde of Montpensier to whom I wil write a letter bearing credite according to your request And it were your wisest with him and other Lordes our friendes thereabout to practise some good associatiō which should haue bene long agoe compassed if euery man had done his endeuour I know some who were the motioners and yet when it came to effect they bledde at the nose as also in many other things for if euery man would for his owne parte take paynes we should soone come to some good ende considering what good occasions are now offered vs But they whom it toucheth as neere as me doe not accoumpt of it as I could wishe they did I would be very loth the fault should be in me at the least if God lend me life I wil let them vnderstande the contrarie and sorye would I be to lose that reputation whereunto I haue so long aspired as I hope I shall not I haue already often written to the lordes of Montpensier Estampes Martigues and Chauigny so that they might plainely perceiue how fayne I would be reuenged and how desirous I am of the association that you speake of and sufficiently doe foresee how necessarye it were not for vs only but for all honest men whome nowe they are more bent against then euer and therefore brother I would thinke it excellent well if the said Lordes would hearken thereunto and leaue the walled townes because there is no certaintye in the people This he speake●● by the people of Paris who when they saw how the Marshal of Montmorency had assayled and in maner vnarmed the Cardinal did seeme to mislike of his enterprise as lately I did perceiue But with the Nobilitie I am fully resolued and
other trompets of seditiō who greatly aduanced the Guisians practises In deed vpon the first noise of these broyles the Kings letters patents were sent forth to al iudges royal in the Realme with straite defence that no man should molest other by the name either of Papist or Huguenot wherby to prouide for the suretie libertie of either sort The court of Parliament of Paris which consisteth most of the seruants of the house of Guise sent earnest declarations vnto the priuie council as touching this Edict but al was but a new practise whereby to shuffle the cardes as we say and so to heape one discord vpon another vnder the goodliest title in the worlde namely of Religion In the meane time the Cardinal wayted for the yong King at Reims who was brought thither to be anointed wheras the Duke of Guise was so presumptuous as to steppe in betwene the King of Nauarre and the Duke of Montpensier so to march after the King and by such sleyghtes to become equal vnto the princes of the blood There the Cardinal finding his strength sufficient hauing wonne this point to propound Religion as a cloke to his ambition did then grieuously complayne of the protestantes declaring that during the parly concluded vpō concerning the determination of these controuersies the King ought not to permit any kinde of innouation and that for the more assured prouision thereagainst it was requisite to make an inuiolable law also to the same end to assemble in the Parliament of Paris the Princes Lords others of the Kings priuie counsaile there to frame an arrest which euer after should solemnely be obserued But al this was no other sauing a newe policie whereby to hasten the practises of the house of Guise Now the Cardinal knew wel that in this assēbly of the Prelates for the determination of matters of Religion there would be nothing dispatched also that while things hung thus in suspense the King should be called vpon to permit the excercise of the Religion openly which being once granted the prince of Condye and the Chastillōs would step in afterward to withstād him for the withstanding wherof he supposed that in preuenting this parly through an other assemblie at Paris where he had men enough at commandement he might get somewhat or at the least so bend the one sort against the other that him selfe should lose nothing This was the cause of the assignation of that assemblye whereunto the Queene mother agreed almost for the same considerations and the contrary parties in hope it would redound to the commoditie of the whole realme Here may the readers consider what iourneys to and fro the Guisians practised as well within the realme as without also how they for their owne maintenance remoued both heauen and earth The Spaniarde and diuers Italian Princes were daily aduertised of the estate of the affaires and then did the Queene mother stand the Guisians in steade of a secretarie to the end to make out goodly dispatches in the Kings name against the Princes of the blood whome in the meane time they seemed greatly to fauour For at that time namely the 13 of Iune 1561. did the Parliament of Paris al the chambers being assembled in their red gownes in the great chamber of pleas in the presence of the Duke of Guise the Cardinals of Lorraine and Guise with others pronounce their sentence concerning the innocencie of the Prince of Conde also about the end of August following was the atonement made betwene the said Prince and the Duke of Guise During these matters the Edict of Iuly was published in this assemblie of the Princes and Lords of the Parliament of Paris wherby the Protestants enioyed more freedome and libertie then euer before they had had There was it againe concluded that the prelates should be called and the ministers of the Religion should haue safe conduictes to the end to seeke some meanes of agreement Then began the Cardinal to hope wel of his owne matters for he was sure to finde a readie way how to bende the Churches of the Confession of Ausbourg against the reformed Churches of France by reason of the Supper This being brought to passe besides that he should bring the ministers into derision he should also hinder the Prince of Conde and the Chastillons who openly fauoured them from all prouision to withstand such driftes and preparatiues as the Duke of Guise and his adherents began to frame wherby to giue vp their accoūts vpon the speares pointe for so they might haue no succour of the Germanes who would easilie be persuaded that al these troubles in the Realme proceeded only of Religion The Guisians would faine haue found some meanes so to bring the Prince of Condie on sleepe that he might haue bene drawen from the Chastillons But their consciences did so reproue them because of so manie displeasures as they had done vnto him that they left him being sufficiently contented with setting the Constable and others against him Howbeit before they came to handle blowes they deemed it necessarie yet to strike one stroke more They perceiued the King of Nauarre and his brother the Prince of Conde to agree wel enough and supposed as it was most true that so long as these two Princes should continue in vnitie together al the French nobilitie and communaltie notwithstanding Religion would bend to them to the end to expel the Guisians or els to bring them to accompts so consequently restore the Realme to her pristinate brightnes dignitie They also persuaded the Queene mother how dangerous the vnion of these Princes might be vnto her she therfore requested thē to prouide so much as in thē lay and promised of her owne part not to be slacke in the matter as in deede she was not but vsed such dishonest meanes as in the discourse of her gouernment are at large set downe Now the Guisians during the raigne of Francis the second had gottē to their seruice the Lord of Escars the King of Nauarres chamberlaine through the same espie had discouered al his masters secrets who finally hauing manifestly detected the said d'Escars through certaine letters which he had written did for the same turne him away Then did he halfe bend him self vnto the Guisians factiō who sent him word to endeuour to come again into fauour with his old master there to do thē such seruice as before time namely to entertaine his said master in al his pleasures doing his messages vnto the Ladies of the court so cōsequently withdrawing him frō al Religion which required an vtter abandoning vnto al wantonnes abominations therupon so many men were set on worke that finally the King of Nauarre reuoked the said Descars wherat many begā to foresee great mischiefs likely to follow and assuredly it is said that the Cardinal of Lorrain hearing of this his calling againe began to laugh as his custome was clapping one hand within the other said
greatly commended the sayd gentleman and laughed to scorne him who vndertooke the person of a prince of his blood This Duke pinched to the quicke and did extremely persecute diuers marchantes of the best townes of France but finally beginning with the marchants of Paris who hitherto were not accustomed vnto the rasor the whole citie tooke vpon them the matter and caused his commissions to be reuoked imprisoning some of his promoters whereat the rest vanished away like snow against the sunne for which cause he cōceiued so grieuous an hatred against the inhabitants therof that neither for dearth or plenty what abundance of corne wine or other victuals so euer there were within the coūtrey of Champagne or Bourgundy during his gouernement of either of them the said citie of Paris could euer come by any either for money or loue without plentie of letters of marte which were sweetely payed for and deerely bought howbeit by that meanes he neuer after durst deale with any whole estate or communalty not that he therefore quite quayled but still hauked after confiscations here and there and so lightely mette with one or other wherefore his whole rigourous force he executed ouer the inhabitants of his owne iurisdiction whom he euen flaied with al extremitie which was the cause that King Henry through his fathers aduice would neuer after commit vnto him any matter of weight although his two eldest sonnes the Duke of Guise and the Cardinal of Lorraine did beare great sway for he was at that staye that cōducting his children vnto the court gate he there left them and so returned backe againe whereof I doubt whether the father or children ought most to haue bene ashamed Finally this man dyed through poyson and as became a good Christian pardoned those persons who mistaking him for an other had hastened the course of his dayes His childrē did his brother Cardinal Iohn aduāce who seing him selfe furnished with many benefices chose Charles to be his successour whom a fewe yeres he maintained in the college of Nauarre from whence he was preferred to the gouernment of the Dauphine For although in France were no want of men farre more meet to vndertake such a charge and execute that function yet did the credit of his vncle Iohn procure this fauour at the handes of the great King Francis together with some tokens of his quick wit and capacitie herein al which notwithstāding during the reigne of the said great King Francis they were not of any estimatiō For this Charles was simplie named lord of Reims his brother Frācis Earle of Aumale their father being yet liuing the rest of the brethrē were forced to preferre thrust thē selues forward with might maine Again King Francis was not ignorant that these men might stirre vp coales and procure some broiles vnder pretence of the counties of Prouence and Anjou and so trouble the state vpon which causes he credited them no further then needes he must In deede he so highly honoured the beautie of their eldest sister as that he permitted her at the entrie of Queene Eleanor to be attired in Princesse araye although afterward perceiuing these strangers to preuaile as if they had alreadie bene Princes of France he denied the wife of the Marquise of Maine of the mantel royal It is not also vnknowen how the same King toward his end made but smal accompt of the Constable who therefore withdrew him self vnto his owne house the chiefe occasion of which displeasure arose of that that through the commendation of the said Constable his sonne the Dauphine Henry had reteined into his fauour the said Lords of Guise the consequence whereof he doubted Their alliāce also vnto the daughter of the great Seneschal of Normandie whom al that time the said Dauphin kept caused that the same King Francis who before had highly fauoured her did now also disdaine and mislike her This Ladie who was called the great Seneschal was daughter vnto the late lord of S. Valliers and with her owne maydenhead redeemed her fathers life but afterward to the great reproche and slander of our France after she was halfe spent was giuē to the Dauphine Henrie whose hearte she so stedfastly wonne as that finally she was created Duchesse of Valentinois and in effect became Queene of France Wherupon the house of Guise accompting her as a conuenient bridge by the which they might passe ouer into France did think it meete to take holde of so good an occasion although it were in effect but an homelie shift and therefore procured the marriage of their thirde brother afterward Duke of Aumale vnto the yongest daughter of this said Seneschal by whose meanes they the further insinuated them selues into King Henries fauour vpon whom in the meane time they practised two seueral drifts wherein we may as in a glasse behold the rest of their behauiours toward the estate of France First by meanes of this Seneschal they presumed so farre as to attempt to wrest from the Dauphine Henrie a promise of restauration vnto the counties of Prouence and Anjou as part of a dowrie toward this their brothers marriage Howbeit as God doeth for the most part euen by the simplest persons abate the pride and crueltie of the mightiest so likewise did he now cause the onely countenance of the Lord de la Chesnay to force thē most shamefully and euen as it were in despite of their hearts to release this grant being in this only respect to be accompted happie that through the throwing of the same into the fire they did also therewithal consume and reduce into ashes the assured proofe and manifest detection of their trayterous fellonie considering that in case King Francis had but once had anie inckling of the same it would haue bene the vtter extirpation and vndoing not onlie of them selues but of the great Seneschal also Let vs now therefore proceede vnto the second point which was this On the one side King Francis not long before his deceasse was much accompanied with two persons of whome he made great accompt The one was the Cardinal of Tournon chanceler of the order and Master of his chappel The other was the Lord Annebaut Marshal and Admiral of France and besides both these there was the Constable also who notwithstanding he came not to the court yet did he reteine the office of great Master of France On the other side the Dauphine was entangled with the Ladie great Seneschal vpon whom two of the brethren of Guise did continually attend namely Francis Earle of Aumale and Charles Lord of Reims because of the alliance aforesaid al which notwithstanding yet was he most addicted vnto the Lord of S. Andrews whose father had bene his gouernour Now then seing that the sicknes whereof the late King Francis the first died was long and in most of the phisitions opinions in maner incurable the Lords of Guise persuaded the aforesaid Dauphine that so sone as he had gotten possession
of the crowne he should set forth an edict the contents whereof were that no man should from thence forth retaine in his hands two offices by meanes of the which they promised vnto them selues the spoyle of the noble men aforesaide besides that vnder colour therof they might haue free accesse vnto the handling of the whole estate and so in time atteine vnto their aspiring drifts purposes and that the rather because they perceiued none of the Princes of the blood ouer hastie to intrude them selues thereinto Howbeit now before we go any further we haue to cōsider two other notable chāces which happened presently at the death of King Francis afore named This King lying on his death bed called for his sonne the Dauphine to the end familiarly to talke with him In which communication like as the soule approching vnto his departure is for the most part more free and deuoyde of worldly cares earthly burdens and al other transitorie affaires and so consequently lesse tied vnto the bodie also that in maner al men in that extremitie time and place do entreat vpon more mystical and heauenly matter then before time they are wont yea diuers through a certaine prescience of things to come which surpasseth mans natural vnderstanding and reason do prognosticate of that that is most likely to happen euen so now among diuers other aduertisements and notable instructions which this King gaue vnto his sonne one was that he desired yea and charged him not to deale with the Children of Guise neither to permit them to haue any rule in the affayres of the estate For saith he I haue manifestly perceiued and am wel assured that the whole stock of thē is naught also that in case you transgresse this my precept they are to strip you into your doublet your subiectes into their shirtes This admonition deserued both to be marked put in excution but the simplicitie of the Dauphine being bewitched by this Seneschal together with Gods heauy displeasure against Frāce would not permit the childe to followe his fathers counsaile which in this case proued but ouer true for his affirming the whole race of them to be naught did shortlye after proue it selfe certaine The same day that this great King Francis let his life at Rambouillet whereas the Dauphine for very sorowe and griefe seeing his father lie in such extremitie and therewithal being in a maner ouercome was layed downe vpon his wiues bed who the whiles sat vpon the floore shewing great tokens of anguish and heauines the great Seneschal the Duke of Guise who yet was but Earle of Aumale walked there also although contraryly affected for she was very pleasant and ioyful seeing the time of her triumph drawe on and he stil from time to time walked to the doore to hearken after newes vsing alwayes at his returne this phrase Now the yonker goeth his waies but had not that yonker seing it pleased him so to tearme him bene both he and the rest of his whole familie had bene but simple vnderlings in Lorraine still But now to our former matter let vs marke the execution of the forenamed edict concerning retaining of sundrie offices The same being concluded vpon King Frācis dead was put in practise before it was eyther sene or published For presētly the Lord of Reims displaced the Cardinal of Tournon of his office of Chanceler of the order who in displeasure resigned to thē his mastership of the chappel also The Admiral d' Annebaut loste his office of Marshalship likewise nowe therfore I wil procede to the Great Mastership for the obteining whereof the Guisians were importunate mouing King Henry to write vnto the Constable that before his cōming to the court he should by proxy resigne one of his offices either the Cōstableship or els the great mastership for they supposed that he would stil kepe the Constableship as being of greate auctority credite But were it that the King was at that time determined to exempt his gossippe from their ambition or els that he sought through the others voluntarie resignation to cōferre the said office vnto the Marshal of S. Andrewes to whome he had already broken his minde to the end by such ordinary meanes to suppresse some part of the furious attemptes of the Earle of Aumale and his brother or what other occasion soeuer there were yet certain it is that he wrote to the said Cōstable with al speed to repaire to him but not to resigne any of his estates referring that vnto their owne priuate communication at their next meeting After his cōming the King who before euen burned with earnest zeale desire to see the said Constable who so long had bene absent out of his sight was now so farre frō taking from him any of his estates that contrariwise at their first embrasings he professed him self to be ashamed that he had in his hands no office worthy his person therefore in respect of such default the more to honour his welcōming he yelded and presented vnto his said gossip his owne person Now the Lord of Reims had gotten the great seale and the Earle of Aumale had seased vpon the keies of the castle as a seasine fallen to him euen by succession But hearing the King call to the one to render the keyes and command the other to carry the seale vnto the great master whereby they should be driuen necessarily to slepe vnder the locke of the said great Master walke at the cōmandement of the Constable not in any wise to deale in matters of estate without the said gossips permission it may be easy for eche man to comprehende into what part the affections of these brethren were bent Seeing also at the same instant an other estate of Marshal of France erected to the behoofe of Iames of Albon lorde of S. Andrews which was euen the last office that remained in the Kinges hands vpon the which as vpon his last refuge the Earle of Aumale had fixed his whole hope and truste This therfore hath bene one of the foūdations rootes of their quarell against the Constable and his progenie wherein besides their manifest iniurie offered vnto their owne persons in this respecte they haue also shewed them selues verye vnthankful toward the said Constable For it is not vnknowen vnto all those who duringe the reigne of the great King Francis had anie dealings in matters of estate that as wel the father as also the vncles of the said Lords of Guise had neuer any more assured or faithful friend in France then the said Constable who long before their comming into that country was alreadie in great creditte and estimation with his Prince and afterward with incredible fauour did succeede two great masters of France the one the Lord of Boisy his cousin germaine the other the Duke of Sauoy his Father in Law and finally atteined vnto the hiest degree next vnder the Princes of the kings blood that
of the renewing of the offices of the whole realme which summe if all at once it should be disboursed would surpasse the prodigalitie of al Princes that euer were hoping after her to enioye the same them selues During these matters the Lord of Reims gaping after more promotions whereby he might the better order his intents through the meanes of the aforesaid Seneschall obteyned fauourable letters from King Henry to Pope Paul the thirde who in that time curryed fauour with all Christian princes to the end through their ayde to be reuenged of the Emperour Charles the fifth for the death of his abominable sonne Peter Lewes whereby also the Lord of Reims whome the Seneschal called but master Charles filled his own bagges with the sale of his masters fauour By meanes therefore of these letters about the end of Iulie in the yeare 1547 he was created Cardinal vpon occasion whereof vnder pretence as wel of the Council of Boulogne as also of many other affaires which him selfe deuised he vndertooke a voiage into Italie through other two principal motions The first was for the concluding of the mariage aforesaid of his brother vnto the Duke of Ferara his daughter The other to the end to shew his persō and so be knowen in Rome whereby he might in time to come the better order his driftes and deuises Being there he tooke vpon him the title of Cardinal of Anjou but into what peril through that presumptuous folly he brought him selfe most men do knowe For had not the great Seneschal stood his friend he neuer durst haue shewed his face in France any more albeit howsoeuer it came to passe he was compelled to leaue his title of Anjou beyond the Alpes and at his returne to accept the surname of his ancestours and country whereupon we shal hereafter cal him as him selfe hath especially after his vncles deceasse done the Cardinal of Lorraine At his cōming home to the court he so laboured king Henry that the Earledome of Aumale was erected into a Duchie therby to hasten the marriage of his brother Francis vnto the aforenamed Duke of Ferraras daughter which shortly after was consummate After this time began they to procure their owne aduancements and to lay the foundation of their tyrannie ouer al men both riche and poore in France We wil therefore begin with their vncle Cardinal Iohn who was the instrument to translate master Charles from the College of Nauarre vnto the Courte Not forbearing vntil that through his decease he might enriche them with his benefices they neuer left especially master Charles to pluck frō vnder his elbow al that possibly they could through a kinde of importunatenes not farre different frō meere violence This good nephue found meanes to make his vncle desirous to forsake the courte procuring vnto him such seruants as pleased him and frustrating him of those which were the most faithful vnder whatsoeuer colour he thought best and delt with him in such maner as that to his power he stripped him euen into his shirt in so much that shortly a soden death for he liued ouer long for his nephues commoditie caried him away at his returne from the election of Pope Iulius the third in the yere 1550. At that time did his nephue become famous in Rome procuring a Cardinals hat for his brother the Cardinal of Guise the ouerliuer of al the six brethren at which time also was ended consummate the aforesaid marriage of the eldest brother vnto the daughter of Ferrara Hauing thus vnclothed their vncle before he were ready to goe to bed let vs consider how they handled him after his death This man dyed indetted vnto many marchants but especially of Paris leauing such welth in moueable goods as was great yea and more then sufficient to haue discharged al. After his deceasse his creditors drew toward his nephue the Cardinal of Lorrain who together with the Cardinal of Guise had raked vp al his liuings but himselfe alone had seased vpon al the moueables to whom he answered that he was not his heire For such men doe neuer accompt him heire who seaseth vpon the goods as the practitioners do tearme it do medle with the inheritance but him onely who saith I am he But now no man spake that word for the Cardinal of Lorraine ment to haue the goods of free cost and as for his brethren they would not pay because they had not the goods Againe it is not vnknowen that benefices by a certain rigour of Law are not chargeable with the dettes If therefore the said Cardinal of Lorraine had at the first willed most of them to looke for nothing yet in losing of their dettes they should haue bene good gainers for then should they haue saued both their time and cost which they wasted in wayting almost two whole yeres to know the end of this fetch which he caused one of his men to playe to whome he gaue cōmission to peruse the dettes of the party deceased and the same to verifie and set in order as he tearmed it with other such like tearmes of practise which stil were in this commissioners mouth In the meane time they do make an inuentory saith one a description saith an other a remembrance sayth another but whatsoeuer it were among al the dead mans mouables was to be found in the end nothing by the report and conscience of his nephue saue a few olde stooles and settles with a litle rotten tapestrye good to make sport with al which to be briefe was the whole inuētory of al that that the Cardinal would not haue But the sport was to heare his talke hereupon Whensoeuer the merchants of Paris came in his presence Me thinketh would he say these fleas do bite me an other time Tush they be Englishmen Saluters or giuers of good morowes Againe comming to the particulars To one he is an vserer of Paris to an other he hath not yet deliuered his wares to an other he sould it for six times more then it was worth to another he hath receiued some money in part of payment to another Nothing is dewe signifying you get nothing which title comprehended the greatest nomber But vnto those to whome he shewed greatest fauour he vsed to say Help to paye your selues not meaning Hold forth your hands and take but giue and acquite For when a man had forgiuen halfe or two third partes yea three quarters and more yet looking vpon his booke he should finde no more receiued then that which he had acquitted and forgiuen And for the rest Aske would he say some composition some right or priuiledge or some other thing of the King and I wil healpe you vnto it which was as good as if he should haue sayd to the merchāts Go euery one of you kil one or two and I wil procure your pardons for the sale of the settels stooles and tapestry was put of vntil the day after domes day Wherevpon two notable
treasurer of the purse to pay him the most part of a summe of fiftene thousand francks which he pretended to be due vnto him Throughout the whole realme there remained not so meane an artificer or so poore a citizen who was not contributorie vnto the Kings reliefe and for the same cause was not most extreemely delt with al whilest in the meane time the Cardinal becomming a sergeant executed King Henry in the chiefest time of his miserie and when his affaires were in greatest danger dalying with the spoyled King with such impatiēcie that he would not forbeare vntil the said treasurer of the purse had gathered vp so much money but draue him to borowe the same summe wherwith to satisfie his request Also at the same time the king obteined in the name of a gift of the citie of Paris the summe of three hundred thousand franckes whereof the Cardinal had the disposing which how or whereabout they were employed God knoweth Let this therefore be sufficiently spoken for a simple proofe of infinite such like practises wherby it is to be doubted in which of these two the Cardinal did most exceede either in vnreasonably hoarding together or in excessiue appetite to wast al France which he had chosen as a pray conuenient for his ambition But how was the Duke of Guise occupied in Italie while the French nobilitie was in the King of Spaines prisons in laying the foundation of the greatnes though inuisible of these our Lords and masters The Duke had led with him a reasonable number of noble men and had dried vp al the Kings reuenues endeuoring in the meane time nothing in Italie sauing that for the augmentation of his brothers credite and the practising of conspiracies vnder colour of simplicitie he went with his famous principalitie to prostitute the dignitie of one of the king of France his lieutenants general in Rome to dallie among priests to make vp a lower messe and last seruice at the table of Cardinals of whome the chiefe part are but the Popes Marmosets and Apes Whereupon sundrie haue commended the free stomacke of one of the masters of requests that accompanied him in the said voyage who misliking of the said Duke of Guises behauiour without anie leaue of the Cardinalitie sate downe gallantly by the Dukes side least it should haue bene reproched vnto the Frenchmen that the Kings lieutenant general had serued as a cloke bearer vnto such lickorous griediguttes of the Popes cauldron who vpon their owne dunghil do so lightly accompt of Christian Kings and Princes But what of this It was necessarie that France with the cost and losse of men should put vp yet two iniuries more in Italie The one by the said Lord of Guise who left his campe idle and his masters busines vndone to the end to loyter and daūce after the Popes court there to create as the Cardinals hope was he would some and so manie new Cardinals after his brothers minde that in case the Papaltie should be voyd he might be as certaine to succeede in the said roume as a Cardinals faith could extend The other through the follie of the said Duke of Guise in that in his owne person being a lieutenant general he permitted his Kings honour and reputation so shamefully to decay The enemies of the crowne laughed hartily at such his folishe ambition the wisest Frenchmen supposed that the King the Constable had suffred thē selues to be intangled in such enterprises to the end to be released of an intolerable burden hanging cōtinually vpon their armes through such continual alarmes as the inconstancie couetousnes vaine glorie of the Guisians did daily minister vnto the Kings affaires exceeding the cost of two such conquests Now the Cardinals drift was so sone as he were Pope to transport the warres into Naples Sicil which conquest was the way to haue ouerthrowen their whole race or els in achiuing their enterprise wherein France should haue wonne more then by keeping them vpon her hands as she hath done to haue bound them selues for their life time about their neckes a bonde of the maintenance and keeping of their new conquered dominions Howbeit vnder this pretence the Cardinal pinched at al assaies insomuch that for this cause and others he iested with them in good earnest who so cunningly turned the letters of the name of Charles of Lorraine that thereby he found this which truely we might reproch vnto him to be most true RACLE AS L'OR DE HENRIE signifying Thou hast scraped away al Henries golde But hereof we wil speake some what more particularly Proceding therefore in our matter after the losse of so manie men at S. Laurence battaile together with the taking of the Constable and other contrarie chances the Cardinal finding as he supposed the best occasion possible offered for the aduancement of his familie displaied at that present his whole witte toward the execution of his purposes The first was by making his brother in effect during the reigne of King Henrie a King The other so wel to wrappe his yuie about the pinakle that finally the one might ouerthrow the other which was by motioning a double alliance the one of his niece Marie Stuard Queene of Scots vnto Francis King Henries eldest sonne the other was of his cousin Charles Duke of Lorraine vnto the Ladie Claude of France Againe the Constables absence of whome the Cardinal stoode in great awe and feare whom also marueilously he hated did altogether hearten him on As for the first point the affayres being troubled in Picardie and the realme voyde of forces the Cardinal thought it best to cal home those that before were sent into Italie the whiles to watch least any other shuld haue vndertaken the superintendence ruling of the affaires hoping seing the Constable detained to cōmit the same into the hands of his brother the Duke of Guise presently vpon his returne who about the same time had bene repulsed from before Ciuitella so that this commandement came fitly to him The esquire Scipio also was sent to hasten him away and to wil him to bring his power with him being come the Cardinal caused him presently to be sent to Compiegne there to muster the armie whither as the King shortly after followed him publishing in the presence of his knights of the order and Captaines of his armie that the Duke of Guise was come in fit time to preserue his realme and minded to haue made him Viceroy or vnder King of France but forasmuch as that title seemed strange he commanded to dispatch him a warrant for the Kings lieutenant generalshippe throughout al the said Kings dominions the which du Thyer secretarie of commandements soone made in such maner as it pleased the Cardinal to deuise being also afterward receiued and verified by the court of Parliament of Paris and sundrie other Parliaments of the Realme whereby the Princes of the blood were contemptuously put backe as also after the taking of Calais