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A51199 The commentaries of Messire Blaize de Montluc, mareschal of France wherein are describ'd all the combats, rencounters, skirmishes, battels, sieges, assaults, scalado's, the taking and surprizes of towns and fortresses, as also the defences of the assaulted and besieg'd : with several other signal and remarkable feats of war, wherein this great and renowned warriour was personally engag'd, in the space of fifty or threescore years that he bore arms under several kings of France : together with divers instructions, that such ought not to be ignorant of, as propose to themselves by the practice of arms to arrive at any eminent degree of honor, and prudently to carry on all the exploits of war.; Commentaires de messire Blaise de Monluc. English. 1674 Monluc, Blaise, seigneur de, 1500?-1577.; Cotton, Charles, 1630-1687. 1674 (1674) Wing M2506; ESTC R37642 835,371 442

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ran to the end of the hollow and fell in desperately amongst them In the mean time Ydrou and Tilladet charg'd Monsieur de Trinitat and put him to rout and our Harquebusiers and theirs threw themselves altogether into the hollow but ours had the upper hand and our Pike men had thrown away their Pikes and were fallen to 't with the Sword and so couragiously fighting we came all up to the Wagons Captain Mons and all which were all overturn'd in a moment and all their men put to flight towards two houses which stood in the bottom of the plain where still pursuing our Victory and the Horse still firing amongst them very few of them reach'd the houses At the houses some particular men were taken to Quarter but of the rest very few were sav'd and those who were left alive were so grievously wounded that I do verily believe they had little benefit of their mercy Our Gens d' Armes in those days wore great cutting Fauchions wherewith to lop off armes of Male and to cleave Morions and indeed in my life I never saw such blows given As for the Cavalry they were all taken running away towards Fossan Monsieur de Trinitat excepted and five others who being better mounted than the rest escaped though young Tilladet with two others only pursu'd him within two Harquebuze shot of Fossan and took one who attended one of the Colours which the Ensign that carried it had thrown upon the neck of him who carried off his horse Presently after we began to march leading off the Wagons and Baggage which were of necessity to return by the same way they had come from Marennes forasmuch as the Carriages could pass no other way and there I saw so great a disorder amongst our people that had twenty of the Enemies horse turn'd back upon us we had certainly been defeated for all the Soldiers both Foot and Horse were so laden with Baggage and with horses they had taken that it had been impossible for Captain Mons to have rallyed so much as one Launce or I two Harquebusiers insomuch that we left all the dead unrisled and untouch'd but the Country people of Marennes came thither presently after and performed that office for them and have since several times told us that they got there above two thousand Crowns for not above three or four days before those two Captains had muster'd for three months The booty is very often the occasion of ruine wherefore Captains ought to be exceeding careful especially when they know there are enemies Garrisons near at hand that may sally out upon them though it is a very hard thing to take order in for the avarice of the Soldier is such that he oftentimes quails under his burthen and no reason will serve his turne After this defeat we return'd to Savillan where we found that two Country fellows had given an Alarm to Monsieur de Termes having brought him news that we were all defeated and indeed we found him almost at his wits end but afterwards he was the most overjoy'd man that ever he had been in his life There a man might have had flesh enough good cheap for we took above forty German Whores and more than twenty Spanish which kind of Cattel was the greatest cause of our disorder We had an intention to have shar'd all the spoil equally amongst us and found that we were but an hundred forty and five men and fifty horse but every one begg'd that he might keep what he had gotten promising upon that condition to make me a present forasmuch as I had not made it my business to look after spoyl which I consented to seeing every one was content and they gave me six hundred Crowns as also the horse presented Captain Mons but how much I am not able to say and this we did that day in the Rear of their Camp Of our people there was slain upon the place one Soldier only belonging to Captain Baron with five or six more hurt and one Corporal of mine who all recovered There are a great many both of the Horse and Foot yet living who were present at this business who when they shall read this Book I am certain will not give me the lye I cannot remember which I wonder at my self for whether Monsieur de Caillac was with us at the engagement or no or whether Monsieur de Termes did not detain him at home but I am sure that if he was not there he was in Savillan and may very well remember all this to be true Now the design of the Marquis de Guast soon discovered it self which was to put himself into Carignan and there to raise a Fort and leave in it a strong Garrison of Foot as he did and the very day that I gave them this defeat he encamp'd at a Village near Carmagnolle on the right hand of the Road from Recoins to the said Carmagnolle I have forgot the name and at midnight sent the greatest part of his Cavalry to get over the Bridge at Lombriasse over which an hour or two before there had passed two Light horse of Monsieur de Termes who had been with us at the fight and were stollen away with their booty fearing they should be made to discount who gave intelligence to Monsieur d' Aussun and Signior Francisco Bernardin who were both at Carignan sent thither by Monsieur de Boitieres on purpose to dismantle that place calling to mind that Monsieur de Termes and the said Signior Francisco had told him four months before that the Marquis would do so and possess himself of it in order to the raising of some Fortifications there which would be very prejudicial to the Kings Service I had nothing to do to write this if it were not for a caution to the young Captains who shall read this Book that they must never attempt to retreat at the head of an Army to which they are not strong enough to give Battel But as I was saying so soon as these Light horse had spoke with Monsieur d' Aussun and told him of the defeat we had given them he had a great mind as his heart was in a right place to do something also before he retir'd but the said Signior Francisco understanding by these Light horse where the Enemy was presently concluded that by break of day they would certainly be upon them which made him very importunate with Monsieur d' Aussun to retire but he would by no means hearken to him and so soon as day appear'd they saw the Marquis de Guast all the Infantry and part of the Horse marching all along the side of the River when the Marquis advancing he caus'd Monsieur d' Aussun to be talk'd withal only to hold him in play which Signior Francisco perceiving call'd out to him that the Marquis did only this to amuse him but he was deaf as before and would believe nothing a man cannot avoid his Destiny
that the greatest shame can befal them is to have a Coward to their husband and thus Monsieur le Gouvernor you who have lost your place you will be in a marvellous happy condition when you shall be curss'd in your own bed But what shall we say of your Children people will not only reproach them that they are the sons of a Cowardly father but they will moreoever themselves see his name in Print and the mischiefs of which his Cowardize has been the cause For a Town is never lost let it be never so considerable that it does not draw a great deal of inconvenience along with it It brings so mighty an inconvenience upon your children that to extinguish your ill repute and to raise their own to some tollerable degree of esteem they must hazard their lives upon all occasions without either fear or wit and few escape being kill'd who by this means to wipe off the stain from their family would signalize themselves How many have I seen in my time who by endeavouring to repair some notorious fault have lost themselves and expos'd themselves to death upon the first occasion has presented it self being asham'd to live And though your children should escape these dangers yet will the King be afraid what great reputation soever they may have acquir'd to trust a Town to their custody left the Son should take after the Father as it ordinarily comes to pass Thus shall you not only ruine your selves but your whole Family To avoid and to break the neck of your ill fortune and of all these mishaps there is a good remedy which I have learn'd my self and am willing to ●each it you if you know it not already First you ought to consider all this that I have told you and set on the one side the shame and on the other the honor you will obtain if you bravely defend your place remaining victorious or at the least having done all that a man of Honour could do to come off Triumphant and like a Conqueror though you be overcome as you see I did in this Siege Imagine still that you see your Prince and Master before you and what countenance you ought to hope for if by your Cowardize you lose his place And seeing nothing ever had a beginning but that it had likewise an end consider from the beginning what the end is like to be and remember that your Master has not entrusted this place in your hands to deliver it up but to defend it that he has put you into it not to live there only but to dye there also bravely fighting if occasion be If you ask him at your going away to your Command Sir must I dye before I surrender the place you have given me in trust he will tell you that you are to fight to the last moment of your life for being you are his Subject your life is his The Seigneur de Iarnac one day told the King that it was the greatest craft and Policy that ever Kings found out to make their Subjects believe that their lives were theirs and that it was the greatest honor they could have to dye for their service but that it was a great simplicity in us to believe it and to keep such a clutter with this fine bed of honor It is nevertheless true that our lives and estates are the Kings our souls belong to God and our honour is our own for over my honor the King has no power at all To return to what I was saying before if in accepting the charge committed to you you have not this resolution within your selves you would do a great deal better to make an excuse There are ways enow to put it off and there will be enow who will be glad to accept of what you refuse If you accept it with a resolution to bring it to a handsome issue do one thing never think of dying ` T is for a Coxcomb to fear death till he see it within three inches of him and yet cannot he forbear representing it to his imagination though it be a hundred Leagues off On the contrary meditate how to kill your Enemy for if you once enter into an apprehension and fear of death you may assuredly give your place for lost for that is to take away your understanding and your judgement which is the best piece in your harness T is to much purpose to be valiant if this fail you at need which if you intend to preserve you must by no means enter into this fear of dying for fear is of it self and by the fra●lty of our own nature ●oo apt to intrude upon us without our needing to assist it with our own imagination If then it present it self before you you must reject it and have sudden recourse to the intention of the King and to what end he plac'd you there Think of the shame and dishonor you are running into Read often or cause to be read to you Books that speak of the honor of great Captains principally those of our own times as for example Langey and another who has writ in Italian I cannot think of his name who has writ to well since King Charles the eight I have often read him and he is a very good Author Would to God that all of us who bear arms would take up a custom to write the things we see and do for I am of opinion it would be better done by our own hands I mean as to feats of war than by those letter'd men for they too much disguise the truth and this relishes of the Clerk Read then these Books and meditate with your selves if I do like Antonio de Leva at Pavie the Sieur de Lude at Fontarabie the Signeur de Bouillon at Peronne the Signior de Sansac at Miranda and Montluc at Sienna what will they say of me what honor shall I carry back to my own house and on the contrary if I surrender what shame and infamy for me and mine Then apply your selves to Almighty God and beg of him that he will defend you from falling into these misfortunes resigning up all things into his hands After this assist your selves with all that he has put into the power of men as you see I did in this Siege and above all things be always diligent and vigilant evermore mindful of your charge if you do this forgetting withal death and danger you will find means to defend your place though it were but a Dove-Coat and though it should be lost you having perform'd your duty you must conclude it to be by the hand of God We must however always trie for I have seen a place lost that was never suspected to be in danger and such a one sav'd as has been given over for gone If you there die in your defence you will neither dishonor your selves nor your posterity but shall be laid in your grave with an immortal renown which is
to the utmost of what you are able to perform and enter into the place with safety than walking at your case to be kill'd and not to enter into it wherein your selves will be the cause of your own death and the loss of the place and where you might by your d●ligence gain a brave reputation you will by loytering at your ease finish your life and your 〈◊〉 together and never excuse your selves upon the Souldiers nor make the Enterprize seem difficult unto them but always easie and above all things be sure to carry provision along with you especially bread and wine wherewith to refresh them by the way for as I have said before humane bodies are not made of iron always speaking chearfully to them by the way and encouraging them to go on representing to them the great honor they will acquire to themselves and the signal service they shall perform for the King and doubt not but proceeding after that manner men will go as far and farther than horses I advise you to nothing that I have not often done my self and caus'd to be done as you will find in the reading my Book for after horses are once tir'd you shall not make them budge a step with all the spurs you have but men are supported by their courage and require not so much time for refreshing they eat as they go and chear one another upon their march It will therefore Fellow Captains stick only at you do then as I have often done forsake your horses and fairly on foot at the head of your men shew them that you will undergo the same labour they do by which means you will make them do any thing you will and your example will enflame the courages and redouble the Forces of the most tir'd and overspent of all the Company Two or three days after the King mov'd with all his Army directly towards Amiens and in his first or second days march arriv'd the Gentleman from the Governor of Corbie who found his Majesty marching his Army in the field where he brought him news that Captain Brueil was entred safe into Corbie which was a great satisfaction both to his said Majesty and the whole Army to know that this place was secured whereupon his Majesty merrily said to Monsieur de Guise Who shall be the first to tell Montluc this news for I for my part will not be he Nor I neither said Monsieur de Guise for so soon as he shall hear it he will so crow there will be no dealing with him which they said because they had all of them been of opinion that it was impossible for foot to perform so long a a journey The next day his Majesty was advertised that the King of Spain had made a halt a little League from Corbie and made no shew of having any intention to besiege that place which made the King think that by reason of the succours it had receiv'd he would make no attempt against it and thereupon it presently came into his head that he would march directly to Amiens which having no more than one or two foot Companies in Garrison he immediately sent away the Marquis de Villars who is yet living with three hundred men at arms to go in extreme diligence and put himself into it commanding me to send away other seven Ensigns to follow after him with all the haste they possibly could make which I accordingly did and gave the charge of conducting them to Captain Forces who is yet living and being the Captains and Souldiers had all heard what commendations both the King and all the Army had given Captain Brueil for the haste he had made in going to relieve Corbie they would do the same and arriv'd as soon as the said Marquis at Amiens for nothing so much excites men of our Trade as glory and the desire to do as well or better than another Two or three days before this his Majesty had sent three Companies also into Dourlans and so with all great ease provided for the safety of these three important places So soon as the King was come to Amiens the King of Spain's Army also arriv'd and encamp'd within a League the River betwixt them and there the Treaty of peace was set on foot of which the Constable and the Mareschal de S. Andre had made the first overtures during the time of their imprisonment in Spain in order to which I think there was a truce from the beginning because nothing of action past on either side at least that I remember for I fell very sick of a double Tertian Ague which I got not by excess of revelling and dancing but by passing the nights without sleep sometimes in the cold sometimes in the heat always in action and never at rest It was well for me that God gave me an able body and a strong constitution for I have put this carcass of mine as much to the proof as any Souldier whatsoever of my time After all the going to and again that lasted for above two months the peace was in the end concluded to the great misfortune principally of the King and generally of the whole Kingdom This peace being cause of the surrender of all the Countreys conquer'd and the Conquests made both by King Francis and Henry which were not so inconsiderable but that they were computed to be as much as a third part of the Kingdom of France and I have read in a Book writ in Spanish that upon this accomodation the King deliver'd up an hundred fourscore and eighteen Fortresses wherein he kept Garison by which I leave any one to judge how many more were in dependance and under the obedience of these All we who bear Arms may affirm with truth that God had given us the best King for Souldiers that ever Reign'd in this Kingdom and as for his people they were so affectionate to him that not one of them ever repin'd to lay out his substance to assist him in the carrying on of so many Wars as he had continually upon his hands I shall not condemn those who were the Authors of this peace for every one must needs believe they did ●t to good intent and that had they foreseen the mischiefs that ensu'd upon it they would never have put a hand to the work for they were so good servants of the Kings and lov'd him so well as they had good and just reason to do that they would rather have dy'd in Captivity than have done it which I say because the Constable and the Mareschal de S. Andre were the first movers and promoters of it who themselves have seen the death of the King and themselves shar'd in the mishaps that have since befallen this miserable Kingdom wherein they both dyed with their swords in their hands who otherwise might yet perhaps have been alive by which any one may conclude that they did not make this peace foreseeing the
ever been assisting to me I will carry this reputation along with me to my Grave This is a marvelous contentment to me when I think upon it and call to mind how I am step by step arriv'd to this degree of honor and thorough so many dangers am come to enjoy the short repose that remains to me in this world in the calm and privacie of my own house that I may have leisure to ask God forgiveness for the sins I have committed Oh if his mercie was not infinitely great in how dangerous a condition were all those that bear arms especially that are in command for the necessity of war forces us in despite of our own inclinations to commit a thousand mischiefs and to make no more account of the lives of men than of a Chicken to which the complaints and outcries of the people whom we are constrain'd in despite of us every day to swallow up and devoure and the Widows and the Fatherless that we every day do make load us with all the curses and execrations misery and affliction can help them to invent which by importuning the Almighty and daily imploring the assistance of the Saints 't is to be fear'd lye some of them heavie upon our heads But doubtless Kings shall yet have a sadder account to make than we for they make us commit those evils as I told the King in discourse at Tholo●ze and there is no mischief whereof they are not the cause for seeing they will make warres they should at least pay those who venture their lives to execute their passions that they may not commit so many mischiefs as they do I think my self then exceedingly happy in that God has given me leisure to think of the sins I have committed or rather that the necessity of war has enforc'd me to commit For I am not naturally addicted to mischief above all I have ever been an enemie to the vice of impurity and a sworn adversary to all disloyalty and treason I know very well and confess that my passion has made me say and do things for which I now cry Meaculpa but 't is now too late to redress them and I have one that lies heavier upon my heart than all the rest But had I proceeded otherwise every one would have s●irted me on the nose and the least Consul of a Village would have clapt too his Gates against me had I not alwaies had the Canon at my heels for every one had a mind to Lord it God knows how fit I was to endure such affronts but all 's done and past my hand was ever as prompt as my tongue and it was but a word and a blow I could have wisht could I have perswaded my self to it never to have worn a sword by my side but my nature was quite otherwse which made me carry for my device Deo Duce Ferro Comite One thing I can truly say of my self that never any Kings Lieutenant had more commiseration of the ruine of the people than I in all places where ever I came But it is impossible to discharge those Commands without doing mischief unless the King had his Coffers cramm'd with Gold to pay his Armies and yet it would be much to do I know not if those that succeed me will do better but I do not believe it All the Catholicks of Guienne can witness if I did not alwaies spare the people for I appeal from the Hugonots I have done them too much mischief to give me any good testimonie and yet I have not done them enough nor so much as I would my good will was not wanting Neither do I care for their speaking ill of me for they will say as much or more of their Kings But before I put an end to this Book of mine which my name will cause to be read by many I shall desire all such as shall take the pains to read these Commentaries not to think me so ingrate that I do not acknowledg after God to hold all I have of Estate and Preferment of the Kings my Masters especially of my good Master King Henry whom God absolve And if I have in some places of my Book said that wounds were the recompence of my service it is not at all intended to reproach them with the blood I have lost in their quarrels On the contrary I think the blood of my Sons who died in their service very well employed God gave them to me and he took them from me I have lost three in their service Marc Anthony my eldest Bertrand to whom I gave the name of Peyrot which is one of our Gascon names by reason that Bertrand did not please me and Fabian Seigneur de Montesquieu God gave me also three o●hers For of my second Son I had Blaize and of my youngest Adrian and Blaize whom God preserve that they may be serviceable to their Kings and Country without dishonouring their Race that they may well study my Book and so imitate my life that if possible they may surpass their Grandsire and I beseech your Majestic be mindful of them I have left them amongst my Papers the Letter your Majestic was pleased to write to me from Villiers dated the 3. of December 1570 which conteins these words Assure your self that I shall ever be mindful of your many and great services for which if you shal● in your own person fall short of a worthy recompence your posterity shall reap the fruits of your merit as also they are such and have so well behav'd themselves in my service that they have of themselves very well deserv'd my acknowledgment and that I should do for them what I shall be very ready to do whenever an opportunity shall present it self Sir this is your Majesties promise and a King should never say or promise any thing but he will perform I do not then by any means reproach my Misters and I ought also to be satisfied though I am not rich that a poor Cadet of Gascony is arriv'd at the highest Dignities of the Kingdom I see several at this day who murmur and repine at their Majesties and for the most part those who have done little or nothing make the greatest complaints In others who have really deserv'd something it is a little more pardonable all that we have of what degree soever we are we hold it of the Kings our Masters So many great Princes Lords Captains and Soldiers both living and dead owe to the King the honors they have receiv'd and their Names shall live by the Employments they have receiv'd from the Kings they serv'd and were not only enterr'd with those honorable Titles but have moreover honour'd those who are descended of them and mention will be made of their virtue whilst any Records of honor remain in the world I have listed a good number in my Book and have my self had Soldiers under my Command who have been no better in their
very reserved prudence which he discover'd upon the most sudden and surprizing occasions in the management of affairs of an admirable memory and so rich as the like is rarely to be found of a great facility of speech strong and bold and full of incitements of honor in the ardours of Battel and in affairs of State of a grave and temperate eloquence heightned and illustrated with Propositions Reasons and Arguments and all accompanied with so clear and lively a judgment that although be was destitute of Letters the beauty of his natural parts notwithstanding darkned the splendor of those who to a long experience in affairs had joyn'd a perfect and exact knowledg of the profoundest Arts and Mysteries both of books and men The greatest part of you who knew him and have often fought under his Ensign stand in need of no other testimony than your own knowledg but the younger sort who never had the good fortune to see this great man besides what they may have gather'd by report will perfectly know and understand him by his own commentaries the actions whereof you have seen him perform when living and which he dictated when sick and languishing of that great Harquebuze shot which shatter'd his face at the Siege of Rabasteins where for a farewel to Arms he serv'd his Prince in the quality of Pioneer Soldier Captain and General at once after which from his Bed to his Grave this generous soul could never find any rest which he was wont to say was his capital Enemy and gave him occasion towards his end to command this Distick to be engrav'd upon his Tomb. Cy dessous reposent les Os De MONTLUC qui n'eust onc repos Here with repose Montluc lies blest Who living never could find rest Seeing then that assisted by your valours he has so fortunately perform'd so many glorious feats of Arms I conceiv'd it but reasonable that this Dedication should address it self to you that you might enjoy the fruits and have the pleasure of reading those actions repeated in his Writings and of seeing the names of your noble Ancestors recorded to posterity in a Chronicle of Honor. And if I mistake not there will hardly be found a History more repleat with variety more grateful to the Reader and more rich in instructions for the conduct and direction both of Peace and War than this where I fancy at least the difference betwixt a History compil'd by a sedentary man bred up tenderly and de●icately in the dust of old Studies and old Books and one writ by an old Captain and a Soldier brought up in the dust and smoak of Armies and Battels will easily be discern'd I know not what ancient Histories have the vertue in a little spac● to render those who read them with the greatest diligence and observation very wise and circumspect leaders but if any such there be this above all others will easily obtein the precedence and enform you generous Nobless of all the good and evil events that attend the fortune or misfortune the valour or the cowardize the prudence or inconsideration of him who is Chief or General of an Army or who is Prince or Sovereign of a mighty Kingdom You have here wherewith to delight your fancy to discretion your valour to martialize your wisdom and to form the true honor of a School of War The Commentaries of this second Caesar will make you Doctors in Military Discipline and will serve you for Model Mirror and Exemple they have no fictitious lustre no affected artifice no foreign ornament of borrowed beauty 'T is nothing but simple Truth that is nakedly presented before you These are the conceptions of a strong sound and healthful digestion that rellish of their original and native soil bold and vigorous conceptions reteining yet the breath vigour and fierceness of the Author This is he who having the first arriv'd to the highest step of all the degrees and dignities of war has highly promoted the honor of your Country both by his Sword and his Pen and to such a degree that the name of the Montluc's shall gloriously live in the memory of a long and successful posterity manifesting without envy to succeeding Ages that your Captain and Historian as he knew how prudently to enterprize and bravely to execute what he had design'd was no less good at his Pen but equally eminent in that faculty to record with truth and judgment what he had acted before with the greatest courage and conduct On the brave Mareschal de Montluc and his Commentaries writ by his own hand MONTLVC how far I am unfit To praise thy valour or thy wit Or give my suffrage to thy fame Who have my self so little name And can so ill thy worth express I blushing modestly confess Yet when I read their better lines Who to commend thy brave designs Their Panegyricks have set forth And do consider thy great worth Though what they write may be more high They yet fall short as well as I. Whose is that Pen so well can write As thou couldst both command and fight Or whilst thou foughtst who durst look on To make a true description None but thy self had heart to view Those Acts thou hadst the heart to do Thy self must thy own deeds commend By thy own hand they must be pen'd Which skill'd alike in Pen and Sword At once must act and must record Thus Caesar in his Tent at night The Actions of the day did write And viewing what h 'ad done before Emulous of himself yet more And greater things perform'd until His arm had overdone his will So as to make him almost fit To doubt the truth of what he writ Yet what he did and writ though more Than ere was done or writ before Montluc by thee and thee alone Are parallel'd if not outdone And France in Ages yet to come Shall shew as great a man as Rome Hadst thou been living and a man When that great Ceasar overran The antient Gauls though in a time When Soldiery was in its prime When the whole world in plumes were curl'd And he the Soldier of the world His conqu'ring Legions doubtless had By thy as conqu'ring arms been stayd And his proud Eagle that did soar To dare the trembling world before Whose Quarry Crowns and Kingdoms were Had met another Eagle here As much as she disdain'd the Lure Could fly as high and stoop as sure Then to dispute the worlds Command You two had fought it hand to hand And there the Aquitanick Gaul Maintain'd one glorious day for all But for one Age 't had been too much T' have had two Leaders and two such Two for one world are sure enow And those at distant Ages too If to a Macedonian Boy One world too little seem'd t' enjoy One world for certain could not brook At once a Caesar and Montluc But must give time for either's birth Nature had suffer'd else and th' Earth That truckled under each alone Under them
r. of which p. 355. 1. 47. r. and had they l. 49 r. they had had p. 357. l. 45. r. one near unto Tholouze p. 358. l. 12. r. the best friends I had p. 359. l. 25. He has indeed p 363. l. 8. r. the Coins were broken p. 364. l. 53. r. to the Hole of the wall p. 365. l. 38. r. and that in case I should p. 376. l. 15. r. I am sure mine never did p. 382. l. 32. r. subjects l. 53. r. your blood p. 389. l. 13. r. all other employments p. 391. l. 49. r. My Lord. p. 395. l. 44. r. t●an to Bourdeaux p. 403. l. 44. r. It was A Catalogue of some Books Printed for Henry Brome since the dreadful Fire of London THE History of the Life of the Duke Espernon the great Favourite of France wherein the History of France is continued from 1598 where D'Avila leaves off down toour times 1642 in fol. price 16 s. Horace a French Tragedy Englished with a Song at the end of every Act price 1 s. 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THE COMMENTARIES OF Messire Blaize de Montluc MARESCHAL of FRANCE The First Book BEing at the Age of threescore and fifteen retir'd home to my own House there to seek some little Repose after the infinite Pains and Labours I had undergone during the space of above fifty years that I bore Arms for the several Kings my Masters in which Service I past all the Degrees and through all the Orders of Soldier Ensign Lieutenant Captain Camp-Master Governour of Places his Majesties Lieutenant in the Provinces of Tuscany and Guienne and Mareschal of France finding my self maimed in almost all my Limbs with Harquebuz-Shots Cuts and Thrusts with Pikes and Swords and by that means rendred almost useless and good for nothing without strength or hope ever to be cured of that great Harqu●buz Shot in my Face and after having resign'd my Government of Guienne into his Majesties hands I thought fit to employ the Remainder of my Life in a Description of the several Combats wherein I have been personally engag'd in the space of two and fifty years that I had the Honour to command assuring my self that the Captains who shall take the pains to read my Life will therein meet with Passages that may be useful to them in the like Occasions and of which some Advantage may be made to the acquiring of Honour and Renown And although I have in the several Engagements I have undertaken and some of them perhaps without great Reason on my side justifie my Proceedings been exceedingly fortunate and successful beyond all humane Aim I would not yet any one should conceive that I attribute the Success or the Glory thereof to any other than to God alone and indeed whoever shall consider the Dangers and Difficulties I have gone through and overcome cannot but therein acknowledge his Almighty and immediate Arm. Neither have I ever fail'd to implore his Assistance in all my Undertakings and that with great Confidence in his Grace and Mercy and Assurance of it wherein his Divine Majesty has been pleased so far to be gratiously assisting to me that I have never been defeated nor surpriz'd in any Exploit of War where I have been in command but on the contrary have ever carried away Victory and Honour And it is very necessary and fit that all we who bear Arms should ever consider and always confess that we of our selves can do nothing without his Divine Bounty which inspires us with Courage and supplies us with Strength to attempt and execute those great and hazardous Enterprises which present themselves to our Undertaking And because some of those who shall read these Commentaries for it will be very hard to please all though some will set a just value upon my Book may perhaps think it strange and accuse me of Vain-Glory for writing my own Actions and say that I ought in Modesty to have transferred that Work to another Hand I shall tell such once for all that in writing the Truth and attributing to God the Glory thereof there will be no harm done Neither besides that the Testimonies of several Men of Honour yet living will justifie the Truth of what I shall deliver can any one give a better Account of the Designs Enterprizes and Exe●ntions and the Actions happening thereupon than my self who was an Eye-witness and an Actor in them all and who also design not herein to deprive any one of his due and particular Honour The greatest Captain that ever liv'd was Caesar and he has led me the way having himself writ his own Commentaries and being careful to record by Night the Actions he performd by Day I would therefore by his Exemple contrive mine how rude and impolisht soever as coming from the hand of a Soldier and moreover a Gascon who has ever been more solicitous to do than to write or to speak well Wherein shall be comprehended all the Exploits of War in which I have either been personally engaged or that have b●en performed by my Direction and those beginning from my greener years when I first came into the World to signifie to such as I shall leave behind me how restless I who am at this day the oldest Captain in France have ever been in the Search and Acquisition of Honour in performing Services for the Kings my Masters which was my sole and only end ever flying all the Pleasures and Delights which usually divert young men whom God has endowed with any commendable Qualities and who are upon the point of their Advancement from the Paths of true Virtue and
be done but when I came I still found them put me off with so many delayes that I was forc'd to return as wise as I came I think they had a mind to have had me done it at my own expence and that the advantage and the profit should only have accru'd to them and in truth by the offers I made any one might plainly see I was willing to advance something of my own for I defray'd all the Gentlemen that did me the honor to go along with me at my own charge without putting the City to the expence of a Hen. This in truth was the reason why the Enterprize upon Bl●y was not put into execution I am very sure there was nothing in Guienne could have hindred me from effecting my design At the time when Des Rois besieg'd it I had taken an exact survey of the place and it is no such choak-pear as they make it Besides at that time the Hugonots scarce shew'd their heads and Guienne was quiet enough for all those who were able to bear arms went into the main body to the Admiral who after the death of the Prince of Condé caus'd himself to be declar'd Head of the Faction the Prince serving him only for a shadow It was that nevertheless that so much upheld the said Admiral and his Party for a Prince of the Blood can do much and the Son of the said Prince of Condé though he was very young was a great support to him also for without them and their authority he had never been able to have maintain'd the War so long The End of the Sixth Book THE COMMENTARIES OF Messire Blaize de Montluc MARESCHAL of FRANCE The Seventh Book SEeing I have taken in hand to leave to posterity an account of my life and to give a true relation whether good or bad of all that ever I have done in so many years that I have born arms for the Kings my Masters I am unwilling to omit any thing of action how little and inconsiderable soever and although the last little Victories I gave an account of were neither the Conquests of Naples nor Millan I have not however thought it ●it to leave them wholly out for inconsiderable as they are such may read them as they may be useful to and Captains and Soldiers may begin their Prentice-age with such little feats of arms as those it being by such that they first take Lesson and even those who have the Government of Provinces committed to their charge may by what I have perform'd take exemple of what was well if there be any such thing and avoid the evil I had so ●lipt the wings of the Hugonots that they were capable of doing no great matters in Guienne nor of attempting any other than very slight Enterprizes neither consequently was I in any capacity of performing any notable exploits both because there was not much of that nature in the Province left to do and also by reason I had on the other side sent away most of the Forces to the Monsieurs Army and did reserve all the money for his use I have moreover another reason why I am thus particular in my writing which is to the end that if the King shall vouchsafe the pains to read my Book and I think he reads some worse his Majesty may then see how much they have spoken against the truth who have said that I had now no other care nor meditated on any other thing but how to live quietly and at ease in my own house God knows these people understood me very ill Had I had the means I desir'd and that some might have supply'd me withall and that I might have had my own swing without being curb'd by those per●icious Edicts I should have prevented the Hugonots from reigning in Guienne and perhaps have rooted out the whole Race But to pursue the thread of my discourse and give a tr●e account of what has been the ruine of this poor Province I shall proceed to tell you that some time after the execution of these Enterprizes the Monsieur sent me a Letter containing these words Monsieur de Montluc Monsieur the Mareschal d' Anville has been here and is going into his Government to put some designs he has th●re into execution if therefore ●e shall stand in need of any thing in your Government let me entreat you to assist him the best you can This letter was del●ver'd to me at St. Foy and with it there came another to Monsieur de Sainct●rens wherein he was commanded to come and bring his Company along with him to the Army which was because his Highness had given Monsieur de Fontenilles leave to return home to refresh himself and to recruit his Company his said Highness sending me word not long after that I should keep Monsieur de Fontenilles with me without suffering them to stir out of the Country and that I should have a special regard to Bourdeaux assisting Monsieur de Terride with what I could in order to his Conquest of Bearn and that as to himself he was going down into Poictou This was heavy news to me although I was very glad of the coming of the Mareschal d'Anville and may I perish if I was not really as glad of it as if almost the Monsieur himself had come for I fancied that the Hugonots in Langutdoc and Guienne would not be able to stand two moneths before us The said Mareschal staid some dayes by the way and being arriv'd in Avergne dispatcht a Courrier to me to give me notice he was come and to tell me that he was glad of his Commission to come to make war in those parts as well for the satisfaction he should have in seeing me as out of the hopes he had we should do something to the purpose in these Countries of Languedoc and Guienne and that he was going through Albigeois directly to Tholouze I sent him back his Messenger in all haste desiring him by no means to go that way but that he would come to Rhodes and into Quercy and that I would come to meet him at Cahors for the Court de Montgomery was arriv'd about Castres where he was drawing a Party together so that he could not pass that way but he must be in danger of falling into the midst of the Enemy I had no answer from him till he came to Tholouze from whence he dispatcht a Courrier to me to advertize me of his arrival sending me word that he had past in the very beard of the Enemy but that none of them had presented themselves to oppose his way I was very glad to hear of his safe arrival and in his letter he entrea●ed me that we might meet and see one another to the end that being together we might take a good resolution to do the King some signal piece of service and that he would do nothing without my advice I had at that time a d●●luxion fall'n
are some who are men of very great judgment and who have no inclination to discountenance either good writings or good men that decry this Book for one of the vainest pieces that ever was writ and indeed they have reason on their side there being a continued thread of vanity and ostentation throughout the whole work ou par tout on trouvera les Gasconades a bon marché But the Author being a Gascon to which Nation bragging is as natural as bravery and the things he relates of himself being undeniably true I conceive he ought to be excus'd and the rather because it is for the most part in vindication of himself from the ill offices and slanders of those little Monsieurs of the Court of whom he so often complains and gives himself the best description a sort of vermin that in truth have evermore insinuated themselves into all Courts of Princes especially that of France where the worthiest men in all Ages have ever been subject to the clandestine malice and private calumny of such as durst not so much as have lookt on to have beheld the brave actions perform'd by those they were not afraid to traduce and bespatter at the distance of an hundred leagues and under the protection of their Master's presence and favour After all these objections which I have here set down as well to prevent others as to excuse my self I am now to tell you that had I not for all this thought this Book a very good one I should have found my self something else to do and I may venture to declare I think it so since it has had so great a reputation with almost all sorts of men that the truth of it in no one particular that I ever heard of was ever disputed by any and that it has been allowed by all to be the best Soldiers Book that is the best Book for the instruction of a Soldier that ever was writ Never certainly were Enterprizes design'd with more judgment and resolution nor ever carried on with greater bravery and conduct than all his were besides the labour hazard and diligence with which they were ever executed were such as perhaps had never been practis'd before nor for ought I ever heard or read ever imitated by any Frenchman since from whence I am apt to conclude that either Monsieur de Montluc was the greatest Soldier of a Subject that ever was in France or that the Historians of that Kingdom have not been so just to the rest as he has been to himself I cannot deny but that to an invicible spirit and an indefatigable constancy in suffering all the hardships of war the fierceness of his nature prompt and perfectly Gascon or else his zeal to Religion and the service of his Prince or both made him sometimes do things which seem'd bloody and cruel but the necessity of the time and the growing faction of the Hugon ots would have it so neither do I think I know not how discreet I am in declaring so much that Sacriledge and Rebellion can be too roughly handled and severity must needs appear a virtue where clemency would evidently have been a vice As to the rest the Reader will find his Harangues well fitted to the several occasions his Deliberations prudent and well grounded his Instructions sound his Arguments rational his Descriptions plain and intelligible and the whole well enough coucht from a hand that was better acquainted with a Sword than a Pen and by a man whose design as well as profession was rather to do things worthy to be written than to write things worthy to be read To conclude I shall beg of the Reader in the behalf of the brave Author to consider him a poor Gentleman bred up to Arms by which alone he pusht on his fortune to the highest degree of honor without any addition of Letters or other advantages of education the ordinary foundations of greatness than what he forg'd out of his own courage and form'd out of his own natural parts which were notwithstanding such as approv'd him a Captain of extraordinary valour and conduct and made him moreover allow'd to be a man of wit Characters which all the Historians do generally allow him and particularly Davila though he only here and there glances upon his name For my self I have nothing to say but this that although this be no elegant it is nevertheless if I mistake not an useful piece and though we have lost the use of Bows and Targets yet design and diligence will be in fashion so long as the Practice of Arms shall endure I expose my share of it then to every ones mercy and good nature such as will buy the Book will keep me in countenance 't is no matter whether they take the pains to read it or no for by that means my Bookseller's business will be done and as to the rest I shall not be much disappointed my design being in plain truth though I should be glad I confess and proud it might take chiefly to pass away my own time and to please my self THE French Printer TO THE NOBLESS OF GASCONY GENTLEMEN AS we see certain Countries yield particular fruits in great abundance which are elsewhere rarely to be found so it also seems that your Gascony does ordinarily produce an infinite number of great and valiant Captains as a fruit that is natural and peculiar to that Climate and that comparatively the other Provinces are in a manner barren 'T is to her Womb that the World stands oblig'd for those noble and illustrious Princes of the House of Foix Albret Armagnac Cominge Candalle and Captaux de Buch. 'T is to her that we stand indebted for Pothon and la Hire two happy Pillars and singular Ornaments of the Arms of France 'T is she who in our dayes has acquainted the remotest Nations with the names of de Termes de Bellegarde de la Vallette d'Aussun de Gondrin Terride Romegas Cossains Gohas Tilladet Sarlabous and divers other brave Gentlemen of the pure and true Soil of Gascony without mentioning those at this day living who generously enflam'd with the Trophies and Atchievments of their brave Predecessors are emulous of their glory and put fair for an equal share of renown 'T is your Gascony Gentlemen that is the Magazine of Soldiers the Nursery of Arms the Flower and choice of the most warlike Nobless of the whole Earth and the Mother of so many renowned Leaders as may dispute the precedency of valour with the most celebrated Captains of the Greeks and Romans that ever were But of all those who descended from your noble Families have adorn'd the practice of Arms no one for Prowess Experience or Resolution did ever excel this invincible Cavalier Blaize de Montluc Mareschal of France That Prerogative of Honor cannot be disputed with him no more than the gifts Heaven was pleased to conferre upon him of a prompt and marvelous vivacity of understanding of a present and nevertheless a
both had sunk and gone Yet though their noble Names alike With wonder and with terror strike Caesar's though greater in Command Must give Montlnc's the better hand Who though a younger Son of Fame A greater has and better Name With equal courage but worse cause That trampled on his Country's Laws And like a bold but treacherous friend Enslaved those he should defend Whilst this by no ambition sway'd But what the love of glory made With equal bravery and more true Maintain'd the right that overthrew His Vict'ries as th' encreast his power Laid those for whom he fought still lower Abroad with their victorious Bands He conquer'd Provinces and Lands Whilst the world's conqu'ring Princess Rome Was her own Servants slave at home Thy courage brave Montluc we find To be of a more generous kind Thy spirit loyal as 't was brave Was evermore employ'd to save Or to enlarge thy Country's bounds Thine were the sweat the blood the wounds The toyl the danger and the pain But hers and only hers the gain His wars were to oppress and grieve Thine to defend or to relieve Yet each to glory had pretence Though such as shew'd the difference By their advantages and harms 'Twixt Infidel and Christian Arms. France Piedonont Tuscany and Rome Have each a Trophy for thy Tomb Sienna too that nature strain'd Only to honor thy command Proud of thy name will be content It self to be thy monument But thine own Guienne will deny Those noble Relicks elsewhere lye But there enshrin'd now thou art dead Where to its glory thou wert bred O fruitful Gascony whose fields Produce what ever Nature yields Fertile in valour as in fruit And more than fruitful in repute How do I honor thy great Name For all those glorious Sons of Fame Which from thy fair womb taking birth Have overspread the spacious Earth Yet stands the world oblig'd for none Nor all thy He●oes more than one One brave Montluc had crown'd thee Queen Though all the rest had never been Past times admir'd this General The present do and future shall Nay whilst there shall be men to read The glorious actions of the dead Thy Book in Ages yet unborn The noblest Archives shall adorn And with his Annals equal be Who fought and writ the best but thee Charles Cotton On the Commentaries of Messire Blaize de Montluc To the Worthy Translator HE that would aptly write of Warlike Men Should make his Ink of bloud a Sword his Pen At least he must Their Memories abuse Who writes with less than Maro's mighty Muse All Sir that I could say on this great Theme The brave Montluc would lessen his esteem Whose Laurels too much native Verdure have To need the praises vulgar Chaplets crave His own bold hand what it durst write durst do Grappled with Enemies and Oblivion too Hew'd its own Monument and grav'd thereon It 's deep and durable Inscription To you Sir to whom the valiant Author owes His second Life and Conquest o're his Foes Ill natur'd Foes Time and Detraction What is a Strangers Contribution Who has not such a share of Vanity To dream that one who with such Industry Obliges all the world can be oblig'd by me Thomas Flatman On the Commentaries of Montluc translated I Never yet the French Tongue understood Which may what e're their Fashions are be good Yet such as I by your industrious hand Come now them and their State to understand This and your well-translated Espernon Make those brave Histories of France our own Sir these are noble Works and such as do Name you Translator and the Author too You are our Author and our thanks to you As yours to their Historians are due Nay ev'n the French themselves must thank you too For we and we are the major part who know Nothing of them but what is noise and shew Hard names for damn'd course Stuffs stinking Meat Adulterate Wine strange Habits Legs and Faces Might justly look on France not to speak worse To be of these the Mother or the Nurse But us you undeceive and do them right By these exact Translations which you write And we who understand no French now find You are both just to them and to us kind R. Newcourt ERRATA PAge 1. line 20. r. to justifie p. 2. l. 24. r. and yet p. 4. l. 50. r. the charge and honor p. 5 1. 7. r. not for p. 8. l. 32. r. and the. p. 11. l. 51. r. in in p. 12. l. penult r. a fugitive p. 15. l. 47. r. they p. 19. l. 4. r. dine aboard p. 22. l. 6. r. not d●ign p. 24. l. 17. r. by burning p. 28. l. 43. r. de Montpezat p. 29. l. 22. r. at that time l. 38. r. de Tande p. 31. l. 25. r. de Montpezat p. 32. l. 29. r. de Fonterailles p. 39. l. 23. r. and me to Savillan p. 41. l. 24. r. Monsieur d' Aussun l. 50. r. knew the. p. 42. l. 14. r. could avoid p. 45. l. 16. r. 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Commands p. 233. l. 2. r. to p 242. l. 25. r. deliver'd to him p. 246 l. 9 r. Coral p. 281. l. 49. r. la Masquere p. 289. l. 54. r. Cabinet l. 58. r. the Children p. 290. l. 45 r. repulst p. 312. l. 40. r. best Curtall p. 313. l. 28 dele that p. 314. l. ult r. Chalosse p. 320. l. 2. r. suffering him l. 34. r. to the friendship p. 321. l. 23. r. I here p. 322. l. 2. Comma● after Field l. 29 r. had told p. 323. l. 19. r. l' Isle p. 325. l. 40. r. he and p. 340. l. 48. r. we should p. 344. l. 9. r. see the wife p. 345. l. 26. r. and would never p. 348. l. 13. r. Clergy would l. 32.
undisputed Greatness A Book not intended however for the Learned Men of the World they have Historians enough of their own but for a Soldier and wherein a Captain and perhaps a Lieutenant of a Province may find something that may be worth his Observation At the least I can affirm that I have written the Truth having my Memory as good and entire at this instant as ever and being as perfect in the Names both of Men and Places as if all things had past but yesterday as yet I never committed any thing to Paper for I never thought at such an Age as this to undertake any thing of this kind which whether I have well or ill performed I refer my self to such as shall do me the Honour to read my Book which is properly an Account of my own Life To you therefore Captains my Companions it is that this Treatise does principally address itself to whom peradventure it may in some measure be useful And you ought to believe that having so many years been in the same Command wherein you now are and having so long discharg'd the Office of a Captain of Foot and thrice that of Camp Master and Colonel I must needs have retein'd something of that Condition and that in a long Experience I have seen great Honours confer'd upon some and great Disgraces befal others of that Degree There have been some who in my time have been cashier'd and degraded their Nobility others who have lost their Lives upon a Scaffold others dishonoured and dismist to their own Houses without ever having been more regarded either by the King or any other And on the contrary I have seen others who have trail'd a Pike at six Francs pay arrive at great Preferments performing things so brave and manifesting themselves men of so great Capacity that several who in their Original have been no better than the Sons of poor labouring Men have rais'd themselves above many of the Nobility by their Prowess and Virtue Of all which having my self been an Eye-Witness I am able to give a precise and a true Account And although I my self am a Gentleman by Birth yet have I notwithstanding been rais'd to that degree of Honour wherein I now stand as leisurely and as much step by step as any the poorest Soldier who has serv'd in this Kingdom these many years For being born into the World the Son of a Gentleman whose Father had made sale of all his Estate to only eight hundred or a thousand Livres yearly Revenue and being the eldest of six Brothers that we were I thought it principally concern'd me to illustrate the Name of Montluc which is that of our Family as I have also done with as much Peril and as many Hazards of my Life as Soldier or Captain ever did and that without ever having the least Reproach from those by whom I was commanded but on the contrary with as much Favour and Esteem as ever any Captain had who bore Arms in the Armies wherein I had the Honour to serve Insomuch that whenever there happened any Enterprise of Importance or Danger the Kings Lieutenants and Collonels would as seon or sooner put me upon it as any other Captain of the Army of which the ensuing pages will give you sufficient Testimony From the time therefore that I was first advanc'd to the Degree of an Ensign I made it my business to understand the Duty of an Officer and to learn to be wise by the Exemple of such as committed Oversights or were otherwise negligent in their Command To which purpose I first totally wean'd my self from Play Drink and Avarice as knowing well that all Captains of that Complexion are so unfit ever to arrive at any thing of Great as to be much more likely to fall into the b●fore-nam'd Misfortunes That Knowledge it was that made 〈◊〉 positively resolve against all these three things which Youth is very prone unto and which are very prejudicial to the Reputation of a Chief Of these Play is of such a Nature that it subjects a man neither to do nor intend any other thing and that whether he win or lose for if you win you are evermore solicitous to find out new Gamesters being prepossest with an Opinion that you shall still win more and continue in that Error until all be lost Being reduc'd to this point you run almost into Despair and m●ditate nothing day nor night but where and how to get more money to play again and to try to recover your Losses by a better Hand In which Condition how can you think to acquit your self of the Charge the King has put into your hands when you shall wholly bend your Study and employ your whole time in another thing and instead of co●triving how to over● reach your Enemy by laudable Stratagems of War you plot nothing else but how to ruin your Camrade and Friend by an infamous Cheat at Cards or Dice This must of necessity wholly divert you from your Duty whereas you ought to be continually amongst your Soldiers and so frequent as if possible to know every man by his distinct Name and that for these two Ends first to prevent any Acts of Insolence in their Quarters for which you may expect and fear a just Reproach from the Lieutenant of the Province or your own immediate Colonel And in the next place to take care that there happen no Mutiny amongst them nothing being more pernicious to a Company nor of more dangerous Consequence to an Army than mutinous Spirits And how can you possibly have an Eye to s●ch Disorders or give any tolerable Account of the Trust reposed in you when your Heart shall be wholly bent upon Play that will alarm you a hundred and a hundred times a day and put you besides your self Fly then my dear Companions fly I beseech you this hateful Vice which I have often known to be the Ruine of many not only in their Fortunes but which is more and that ought to be dearer in their Honour and Reputation Now for what concerns Wine if you be subject to debauch you cannot avoid falling into as many and as great Inconvenienc●s as he that Plays for nothing in the World so much stupefies the understanding of a Man and that inclines him so much to sleep as Wine If you drink but little you will consequently not eat too much for Wine calls upon the Appetite to eat that you may the longer enjoy the Pleasure of Drinking So that in the end being full of Meat and Drink before you rise from Table it will be necessary to go sleep and perhaps at such a time when you ought to be amongst your Soldiers and Companions near your Colonel and Camp-Master to enquire what News or Orders they have received from the Kings Lieutenant that you may know when any Occasion is presented wherein you may employ your Valour and Wisdom To this Excess in Wine brings along with it another and extreme Danger
was no sooner come to my Quarters but that a Gentleman was sent from Monsieu● de Lautrec to bring me to him who entertained me with as much kindness and respect as he could have done any Gentleman in the Kingdom saying to me these words in G●scon Montluc mon amic you a● oublideray jamai lou service qu'abes fait au Roy m'en seviera tant que you vivrai Which is Montluc my friend I will never forget the service you have this day performed for the King ●ut will be mindful of it so long as I live There is as much honor in an handsom retreat as there is in good fighting and this was a Lord who was not wont to caress many people a fault that I have often observ'd in him nevertheless he was pleas'd to express an extraordinary favour to me all the time we sate at supper which he also continued to me ever after insomuch that calling me to mind four or five years after he dispatch'd an express Courrier to me from Paris into Gascony with a Commission to raise a Company of Foot entreating me to bear him company in his expedition to Naples and has ever since put a greater value upon me than I deserved This was the first action I was ever in the quality of a Commander and from whence I began to derive my reputation You Captains my Camrades who shall do me the honor to read my Life take notice that the thing in the world which you ought most to desire is to meet with a fair occasion wherein to manifest your courage in the first Sally of your Arms for if in the beginning you shall prove successful you do amongst others two things First you cause your selves to be praised and esteemed by the great ones by whose report you shall be recommended to the knowledg of the King himself from whom we are to expect the recompence of all our Services and Labours And in the next place when the Soldier shall see a Captain who has behav●d himself well and performed any notable thing at his first trial all the valiant men will strive to be under his command believing that so auspicious a beginning cannot fail of a prosperous issue but that all things will succeed well with him and that under such a man they shall never fail to be employ'd for nothing can more spite a man of courage than to be left at home to burn his shins by the fire whilst other men are employ'd abroad in honorable action So that by this means you shall be sure always to be follow'd by brave men with which you shall continue to get more honor and proceed to greater reputation and on the contrary if you chance to be baffled in the beginning whether through your Cowardise or want of Conduct all the good men will avoid you and you will have none to lead but the Lees and Canaille of the Army with whom though you were the ●eroe of the world there will be no good to be done nor other than an ill repute to be acquir'd My Exemple upon this occasion may serve for something wherein though perhaps there were no great matters perform'd yet so it is that of little ●xploits of War great uses are sometimes to be made And remember whenever you find your selves overmatch'd with an Enemy that you can bridle and hold at bay with the loss of a few men not to fear to hazard them Fortune may be favourable to you as she was to me for I dare confidently say that had not I presented my self to lead on these hundred Foot which all play'd their parts admirably well we had certainly had all the Enemies Caval●y upon our hands which had been a power too great for so few as we were to withstand The Enemies Camp soon after retir'd into Navarre whereupon Monsieur de Lautrec disbanded the one half of his Companies reserving only the two Ensigns of Monsi●ur de Cauna and that of the Baron Iean de Cauna consisting each of only three hundred men the first time they had ever been reduc'd to that number they having formerly consisted of five hundred or a thousand a device whereby the King's Treasury was very much relieved as it sav'd the pay of so many Lieutenants Ensigns Serjeants and other Officers but withall the command of a good number of men usually invited men of Condition and Estates into the Service who at present disdain to accept of Commissions where they see so many pitiful Captainetts who are admitted into Command without ever having strook a stroke At this time you must know Monsieur de Lautrec bestow'd my Captains Company upon me though I was then but twenty years of age and leaving four Companies in Bayonne took Post and went away to Court which departure of his encouraged the Enemy to renew his Camp and to lay Siege to Fontarabie which they also took before his return The loss of this place was occasioned either through the indiscretion or the treachery of a Nephew to the Constable of Navarre and Son to the late Mareschal de Navarre who having been banish'd from Spain for siding with Henry King of Navarre was together with a Garrison of four hundred men Exiles like himself put into this City where he was at this time so well solicited by his Uncle that he revolted to his side by which means this place was lost which otherwise had been impregnable though the Enemy had made two great breaches in it but being I was not there present and that ● will deliver nothing upon report I shall say no more but this that Captain Frangett who surrendred it up to the Spaniard and who for so doing laid the blame to the said Don Pedro was afterwards for his pains degraded at Lyons The loss of this place depriv'd us of very good footing we had in Spain It was here that some years before Monsieur de L●de won immortal glory by enduring a whole years Siege in all the extremities that mankind can undergo and he for so doing carried away honor and reward but Frangett infamy and ruine thus goes the world and fortune In the mean time if any of the Princes or the Kings Lieutenants shall vouchsafe to peruse this Book of mine and perhaps they may read worse let them take notice by this exemple and others that I have seen and that I may perchance make mention of hereafter that it is very dangerous to make use of a man that has once abandon'd his own Prince and natural Soveraign not that he is to be rejected when he flies into a mans arms for refuge and protection but he ought not by any means to have a place entrusted to him with which he may at any time make his own peace and restore himself to his Princes favour Or if they shall think fit to trust him it ought not to be however till after by a long tryal he shall have so manifested his fidelity that there is no
de Porrieres arriv'd the King sent for him into his Cabinet where after he had read his letters of Credence and his other dispatches finding therein no syllable of this affair and Monsieur de Porrieres making no mention of it neither his Majesty said to him And what Monsieur de Porrieres is Montluc heard of yet he has made a pretty piece of work on 't To which he made answer that he had left me at Rome whereupon the King proceeded and said that he knew that I had lost all the Popes Cavalry and was my self run away Monsieur de Porrieres was very much astonish'd at this news and replied that if this had hapned after his departure it might be so and yet he had been no more than nine dayes in coming His Majesty then made them look how long it was since this news came which they did and found it to be four dayes at which the King said he thought it was only a lye and Banker's news enquiring of Monsieur de Porrieres what piece of folly it was I had committed who thereupon made answer as he has himself told me since Sir I will tell you and I make no doubt but your Majesty will laugh at it at much as we did after which he related to him the whole story and what I had said at my return to the Mareschal de Strozzy Cardinal Caraffa and the Duke of Paliano at which I do assure you I have been told his Majesty laughed very heartily and more than he had been seen to do of a great while before as also did the Constable and all the rest that were present insomuch that I was told the King above eight dayes after seeing Monsieur de Porrieres said to him Well Porrieres has Montluc purchased those places about Paris and never call'd the story to mind but he laughed And as to what I say in my Book that for these hundred years never any man was more fortunate in War than I have been I pray examine and see if you will not acknowledge me to be so in these three occasions which in eight or nine dayes time befell me one after another besides several others you will meet with in this life of mine to have escaped without loss three such dangers which were no little ones A few dayes after the Duke of Alva understood that Monsieur de Guise was coming into Italy to succour the Pope which made him to retire his Camp a little nearer to the sea and afterwards he came and sate down before Ostia The Mareschal then march'd out of Rome with some Ensigns of Italians two of Germans and five or six of French but the Pope would by all means that he should leave him for his defence my Son Marc Anthony and Captain Charry with their Companies The Mareschal went then and encamp'd on this side the Ty●er over against Ostia where he entrench'd himself The Duke of Alva before his arrival had made his bridge and erected a Fort above Ostia on the same side where the Mareschal was encamp'd I then sent to him to know if he would have me come to him with five or six Italian and French Ensigns but he would not permit me so to do for fear left the enterprize of Montalsin might not as yet be fully sifted to the bottom And because the said Mareschal with those Italian and French Companies he had with him had not been able to discover the Enemies Fort to see if there was water in the ditch or no he was in the greatest perplexity imaginable for the Duke of Alva was departed from Ostia and retir'd towards the Kingdom of Naples having left only four Italian Ensigns in the Fort and as m●ny in Ostia and therefore had caus'd Artillery to come from Rome to batter the said Fort and had sent to intreat the Pope that my Son and Captain Charry might come to him which the Pope also granted to my great misfortune and the ruine of my poor Son who so soon as he and Captain Charry came before the Mareschal he complain'd to them that he had not been able to discover the Fort. The next night it being m● Sons turn to mount the Guard he determin'd with himself to effect that wherein 〈◊〉 had fa●l'd and communicated his design to Captain Charry and the Baron de Begnac who was also at that time upon the Guard He fail'd not accordingly to execute his resolution for the next day seeing the Enemies sally out according to their custom to fetch in Bavins he follow'd them and without fear of the Harquebuze shot pu●sued them fighting to the very ditch of the Fort where he discovered as exactly and with as much judgement as he had been an old Captain but in his return a cursed shot hit him in the Body notwithstanding which he went upon his own feet to the said Mareschals quarters saying that before he dyed he would give an account of what he had seen The said Mareschal so soon as he arriv'd at his Tent laid him upon his own bed where the poor Boy almost expiring told him what he had seen assuring h●m that the ditch was dry whatever he might have been told to the contrary presently after which he gave up the Ghost The Mareschal the next day sent his body to the Cardinal of Armagnac and the Sieur de Lansac to Rome who enterr'd him as honorably ●s he had been the Son of a great Prince The Pope the Cardinals and all the people of Rome exprest great sorrow for his death Had God been pleased to have preserv'd him to me I had made him a great Souldier for besides that he was very stout I ever observ'd in him a discretion above his age Nature had done him a little wrong for he was but little but strong and well knit and as to the rest el●quent and desirous to learn If the Mareschal de Cosse be yet living Marc Anthony serv'd under him at Mariamburg and he if he pleases can testifie should any one contradict what I write whether I lye or no and though it does not very well become Fathers to commend their own children yet being he is dead and so many witnesses of the truth of what I deliver I shall I conceive appear excuseable and worthy to be pardon'd Now to execute the command the King had given me in Tuscany I ask'd leave of the Pope to go to Montalsin who after great importunity would permit me but for fifteen days only making me leave my great horses and all my baggage behind which Monsieur de Strozzy was fain to send out after me saying they were his own and by his own servants The Cardinal of Armagnac also sent me out my Sumpter Mules cover'd with his own Sumpter-cloths pretending to send them to the house of another Cardinal where he us'd to stay sometimes twelve or fifteen days together by which means I got all my things out of Rome During the
late Prince of Condé and Monsieur de Guise together with them I could make them confess that something else than Religion mov'd them to make three hundred thousand men cut one anothers throats and I know not if we have yet made an end for I have heard there is a Prophecy I know not whether in Nostradamus or no that their Children shall shew their Mothers as a wonder when they see a man so few shall be left having kill'd one another But let us say no more of it it goers my heart to think on 't mine who have the least interest and who am shor●ly going into the other world Should I repeat all the Traverses and Charities that I have read of in the Roman Histories I should never have done which Histories I have formerly delighted to read wondring why and what should be the reason that we are not as valiant as they I shall only ●eckon one or two and begin with that I have read in I know not what Book of Camillus a great Roman Captain who after he had won many Battels and enlarg'd the Roman Empire with the addition of a larg● extent of Dominion was in the end call'd to judgment for having dedicated the spoil of his Conquests to the foundation of Temples wherein to sacrifice to their Gods of which spoil the one half belong'd of right to the Soldier but that the Gods might assist them in their Battels and Conquests he presented them this gift saying That the Soldiers stood as much in need of the assistance of the Gods as he So that upon his return to Rome for the reward of the great services he had perform'd and the famous Victories he had obtain'd for the Common-wealth they brought him to his Tryal yet did they not nevertheless put him to death but sent him into exile to a City the name whereof I do not remember for it is long ago since I read Livie not in Latin of which I have no more than my Pater Noster but in French Now when he had remain'd sometime in this City there came two or three Gaulish Kings with a mighty Army and took Rome killing almost all the Citizens saving some few who retir'd into the Capitol and there held out for some time Livie reports that one night those who were thus retir'd into the Capitol were all asleep and the Enemy had already gain'd a part of the Capitol when a Goose begining to cackle awak'd the Guards who thereupon enter'd into a combat with the Enemy and repell'd them At this time the said Camillus gathering together all the men he could took the field where the Enemy finding nothing more to plunder nor provisions to maintain their pleasures in Rome having dispersed themselves all over the Country ten or twelve leagues distant from the City he ●lew in the fields seven or eight thousand of them when I was at Rome in the time of Pope Marcellinus I caused those fields to be shew'd me taking great delight in viewing the ground where so many brave Battels had been fought for me-thought I saw before my eyes the things I had heard of and read but notwiths●anding I saw nothing either like or any way resembling the great Camillus The rumour of this defeat having run thorough all the neighbouring Cities caused several gallant men to repair to Camillus's Camp by which means finding himself strong enough he march'd directly to Rome possessed by an infinite number of Gauls whom he defeated and sav'd a vast summe of money which those who were retir'd into the Capitol had promised to give and was afterward call'd the second Founder of Rome The Historians can give a better account of this story than I who perhaps mistake it it being above thirty years since I have so much as taken a book in hand and much less dare to read now by reason of my ill eyes and the wound in my face In Spain the two Scipio's were defeated by Asdrubal in thirty dayes time and within thirty leagues of one another to wit Pub. Scipio the first and his Brother Cornelius Scipio afterwards and of both the one Army and the other some escap'd away who all retir'd to the Garrisons where they had lain all Winter where being come they found that all their Colonels were slain and were therefore necessitated to choose one whom they call'd the New Captain Asdrubal having intelligence that this new General had rallied the Roman Soldiers who were escap'd from the two defeats went immediately to assault them but was stoutly repus'd and constrain'd to retire himself to a certain place where this valiant Captain fell upon him by night and not only defeated the Army he had there with him but another also that lay in another place hard by insomuch that by his valour he not only sav'd those few Romans who were escaped from the two lost Battails but moreover both the Spaynes for the people of Rome which but for him had been lost to Rome for ever Now the Senate in the mean time continued a great while without hearing any news of the Scipioes or of their affaires but had at length intelligence brought of the loss of the two Scipio's together with the victories of this new Captaine I do not remember his name before he was created and call'd the new Captain the Historians will better remember it than I who have not seen the book of so many years which so soon as the Senate had notice of they sent away Scipio the younger to command the the Army I think son to the first Scipio who had been slain and withall commanded the new Captain to Rome whom so soon as he came instead of rewarding his service they call'd to judgment accusing him that he had accepted the Soldiers Election and taken upon him the command of the Army from them and not by Commission from the Senate and I think put him to death at least I find no more mention of him in Livy Oh how many other great Captains have been recompenced with such rewards in the time of the Roman● the H●storians are full of such exemples and the Judicature of France being rul'd and govern'd by the Laws of the Romans 't is to be expected that the Kings of France sh●uld govern themselves by their Customs Would to God the King would perpetuate his own glory and leave such a m●morial of his prudence as should for ever be commended that i● that he would burn all the Books of the Laws by which his Judicature determines of affairs and erect a new equal and upright Judicature for I dare be bold to say th●re is not a Monarch in Chr●stendom who is govern'd by his Laws the Kings of France excepted all the rest have Laws made by themselves to cut off all ●edious Suits so much as even in Bearn and Lorrain which are in two Corners of the Kingdom that no Suit might be above two years depending If his M●jesty would please to do
I have not implor'd his Divine assistance and never passed over day of my life since I arriv'd at the age of man without calling upon his Name and asking pardon for my sins And many times I can say with truth that upon sight of the Enemy I have found my self so possest with fear that I have felt my heart beat and my limbs tremble let us not make our selves braver than we are for every man upon earth apprehends death when he sees it before his eyes but so soon as I had made my prayer to God I felt my spirits and my strength return The prayer which I continually used from my fi●st entring into Arms was in these very words My God who hast created me I most humbly beseech thee to preserve my Iudgment entire that this day I may not lose it for it is thou that gavest it me and I hold it from no other but thee alone If thou hast this day appointed me to die grant that I may fall with the resolution of a man of honor which I have sought for through so many dangers I ask thee not my life for I desire nothing but what pleases thee Thy will be done I resigne all things to thy divine wisdom and bounty After which having said my little Latin prayers I declare and protest in the presence of God and men that I suddenly felt a heat creep over my heart and members so that I had no sooner made an end but that I found my self quite another man than when I began I was no more afraid and my understanding again return'd to perform its Office so that with promptitude and judgment I discern'd what I had to do without ever losing it after in any Engagement wherein I have ever been How many are departed this life who were they now living could witness if ever they saw me astonisht or lose my judgment in any action of war whether at an Assault or in any other Rencounter or Battel Messieurs de Lautrec de l' Escut de Barbezieux de Monpezat de Termes du Bié de Strozzy de Bourdillon de Brissac d' Angu●en de Boitieres and de Guise could have given testimony of me for they had all had me under their Command and have all seen me in a thousand and a thousand dangers without the least sign of fear or amazement Who could they again return to life would be good witness of the truth of what I have deliver'd and yet they are not all dead under whom and by whom I had the honor to serve and to be commanded who although they were much younger Captains than I it was nevertheless fit I should obey them Monsieur le Duc d' Aumale and the Mareschaux de Cossé and de Vielle Ville are of this number and I beseech you my noble Lords if my Book peradventure fall into your hands to do me right and declare whether what I have here deliver'd be true or false for you have been eye-witnesses of part of it and I fancie that after my death you will be curious to see what I have writ There are others also who are able to give me the lye if I have said ought but true namely Signior Ludovico de Biraga and Monsieur le President de Birague who never abandoned that brave Mareschal de Brissac Several others are yet living who have been my Companions in Arms and many others who have serv'd under my Command all which are able to affirm the truth of what I have said and whether whenever there was a debate about any Execution I did not alwayes think nothing impossible but on the contrary concluded things feasible which others concluded impossible to be effected I undertook it and brought it about having evermore that stedfast assurance in God that he would not forsake me but open the eyes of my understanding to see what was to be done to make my Enterprize succeed I never thought any thing impossible but the taking of Thionville of which the honor is to be attributed to Monsieur de Guise alone and in truth there was more of fortune than reason in that success though the said Sieur de Guise was ever confident he should carry it and so he did Fellows in arms how many and how great things shall you perform if you put your whole trust in God and set honor continually before your eyes discoursing with your selves that if it be determin'd you shall end your dayes in a Breach ' t is to much purpose to stay behind in the Graffe Vn bel morir sayes the Italian tuta la vita honora 'T is to die like a beast for a man to leave no memory behind him Never go about to deprive another man of his honor nor ever set avarice and ambition in your prospect for you will find that it will all come to nought and end in misery and disgrace I do not say this that I have any mind to play the Preacher but meerly out of respect to truth How many are there in the world who are yet living and whom I shall forbear to name that have had the reputation of valiant men and yet have been very unfortunate in their undertaking Believe me the hand of God was in this and though they might implore his divine ayd their devotion was not right which made the Almighty adverse to them If therefore you would have God to be assisting to you you must strip your selves of ambition avarice and rancour and be full of the love and loyaltie we all owe to our Prince And in so doing although his quarrel should not be just God will not for all that withdraw his assistance from you for it is not for us to ask our King if his cause be good or evil but only to obey him And if you are not rewarded for the services you have performed you will not stomack your being neglected by reason it was not your intention nor design to fight upon the score of ambition and greatness nor out of a thirst of riches but upon the account of fidelity and duty that God has commanded you to bear to your Prince and Sovereign You will rejoyce to find your selves esteem'd and belov'd by all the world which is the greatest Treasure a man of honor ought to cove● For great Estates and high Titles perish with the body but a good Reputation and Renown are immortal as the Soul I now see my self drawing towards my end and languishing in my bed towards my dissolution and 't is a great consolation to me that in spite of Death my name shall live and flourish not only in Gascony but moreover in foreign Nations This then is the end of my Book and of thus far of my life which if God shall please longer to continue to me some other may write the rest if ever I shall again be in place where I shall perform any thing worthy of my self which nevertheless I do not hope for finding