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A51922 The memorialls of Margaret de Valoys, first wife to Henry the fourth, King of France and Navarre compiled in French by her owne most delicate and royall hand : and translated into English by Robert Codrington ...; Memoires de la roine Margverite. English Marguerite, Queen, consort of Henry IV, King of France, 1553-1615.; Codrington, Robert, 1601-1665. 1641 (1641) Wing M595; ESTC R15539 98,790 238

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insisted on it very strongly but the Queen my Mother did intreate me that I would not give way unto it and assured me that I should receive of the King what I would demand on which I did request them that they would not comprehend me in the Articles and that whatsoever I had conferred on me I had rather receive it from the grace and bounty of the King and Queen my mother beleeving that it would be a course more beneficiall and as assured to me The peace concluded and assurance taken on the one side and on the other the Queen my mother preparing her selfe for her returne I received letters from the King my Husband by which I understood that he had a great desire to see me intreating me that as soone as I saw the peace concluded to sue for leave to come unto him I besought the Queen my mother who rejected my petition and by all means possible indeavored to divert me from it saying That when I received not her proposition to disanull our marriage after the massacre of S. Bartholomew she then commended my resolution because my husband was made a Catholick but now since he hath abandoned the Catholick Religion and is turned Huguenot she could not permit that I should goe unto him and seeing I daily renewed my petition she told me with teares in her eyes that if I returned not with her she should for ever loose her credit with the King adding that the King would beleeve that she had taken me with her for that intent and that she had made a solemn promise to him to bring me back she desired me to stay till my Brothers return which she said should be with speed and that suddainly after she would take order for my dispatch to the King my Husband Some few dayes after we returned to the King to Paris who by reason of the peace received us with great joy yet not well liking the advantageous conditions of the Huguenots and determining with himselfe as soon as he had got my Brother to Court to finde some new Invention to begin the war again and not let them joy in that to which to his grief he condiscended to withdraw my brother from them who stayed yet behind a moneth or two to give order for sending backe the Reisters and for the dismissing of his army He arrived not long after at Court with all the Catholick Nobilitie that assisted him the King received him with all honour seeming to have great joy to see him there and he made very much of Bussi also who came with him for Le Guast was lately dead being slaine by the judgement of God as he was in course of physick he had a body infected with all sort of villanies and subject to a corruption which a long time did possesse it as the Devills did his soule to whom he did homage by Magick and all sort of wickednesse this Brand of fire and division being taken from the world and the King having his thoughts bent only on the ruine of the Huguenots intended to make use of my Brother to command against them to render my brother and them unreconcileable and fearing also that to prevent it I would hasten to the King my husband he entertaind us both as well the one as the other with all the pleasures that the Court could yeeld to make our stay there more delightfull and seeing at the same time that Monsieur de Duras was sent from the King my husband to demand me and with so much importunity I urged to be gone that he no longer could denie me he told me shewing first it was the love he did beare unto me and then the knowledg what a Grace ornament I brought unto his Court which caused him so long to suspend my journey that he would now conduct me himself as far as Poictiers and returned Monsieur de Duras with that assurance Certaine daies after he stayed at Paris deferring and not openly refusing to give me leave to goe till he had all things in readinesse for the declaration of his designed warre against the Huguenots and by consequence against the King my Husband and to give a pretence unto it they caused a rumour to be spread that the Catholicks complained of the advantageous conditions to which they accorded with the Huguenots at the peace of Sens. This murmur and discontent of the Catholicks was blowne abroad that they came to League and unite themselves at Court from all the Cities and provinces of the Kingdome enrouling and signing themselves and making a great noise but privately with the Kings consent that they would choose Monsieur de Guise for Chiefe there was no other thing spoken of from Paris untill you come to Blois where the King had called the States together during the overture of whom the King called my Brother into his cabinet with the Queen my mother and some of the Lords of his counsell and presented there unto him of what importance for his Authoritie and estate was this league which the Catholicks had begun especially if they should come to make themselves heads and to choose those of the House of Guize that it concerned them understanding my brother and himself more then all the rest that the Catholicks had reason to complain and that his duty and conscience did oblige him to discontent the Huguenots rather then the Catholicks he intreated and conjured my Brother as an heire of France and a true Catholick that he would counsell and assist him in this affayre whereon the hazard of his Crowne and the Catholick Religion so much depended adding that it seemed to him to cut off all danger that this League might bring that he himself ought to make the chiefe and both to shew his zeal to his Religion and to debarre them from choosing any other to signe himself first as Chiefe and then to have my Brother signe and afterwards all the Princes Lords and Governours and whosoever had any charge or power in his Kingdome My Brother could not but offer that service which he owed to his Majestie and to the preservation of the Catholick Religion The King having taken assurance of my Brothers assistance which was the principall end to which the artifice of the League did tend did suddenly call all the Princes and Lords together and causing the roll of the said League to be brought unto him he first there signed himself as Chiefe and then my Brother and after him all the rest who had not yet signed The morning following they opened the Estates having taken advice of the three Lord Bishops of Lions of Ambrum and of Vienne who perswaded him that after the oath made at his consecration no oath made unto the Hereticks could be of power the said oath nullifying all other oathes and promises which he could make unto the Huguenots this being pronounced at the opening of the States and warre being proclaimed against the Huguenots the King sent back Genislac
a great green where was a grove of high timber trees in an ovall form round about which my Mother had caused great Neeches to be made and in every Neech she had placed a round table for twelve persons the table only of their Majesties with the cloath of State advanced it self at the upper end of the hall and was mounted on foure steps of green turfes of earth All these tables were served by diverse troupes of Shepheards diversly apparelled with cloath or gold and Sattin according to the diverse habits of all the Provinces of France At the landing of the triumphant boats in which their Majesties wafting from Bayons to the I le were alwaies attended by the way with the Musick of man of the Sea-gods singing and rehearsing verses round about them these Shepheards were on the green troup by troup apart on both sides of a great Alley cast up on purpose for their Majesties to goe to the said Hall every troup playing and dancing according to the fashion of their Country The Poitevines with their Cornets they of Provence dancing lavalt●es with their Cimbals the Burgundians and Champagnians with the Bagpipes Treble viols and Tabers the Brittons dancing loftily with their fine nimble risings and as many turnings with it and so accordingly of all the other Provinces After the service of whom and the Banquet ended the Musitians were discovered with a great troupe of Satyres to enter the great luminous rock shining with artificiall light but sparkling more with the jewells and the beauties of the ladies that sate above who comming down did dance that most curious maske the glory of which the Envie of Fortune not able to endure came storming in with so great a Tempest that the confusion and wrack which among the boates that night had made brought the next morning as great a subject of laughter as the magnificent setting forth of the maske before had brought delight The like was to be seen in all the brave Entries that were made to expresse the Principall Cities of this Kingdom whose Provinces here represented they did visite In the Reigne of the mighty King Charles my Brother some few yeers after the return of the great voyage the Hugenots having begun again the war the King and Queen my Mother being at Paris a Gentleman of my Brothers of Anjou who hath been since King of France arrived to bring tidings from him that he had brought the Huguenots army to such an extreamity that he hoped in few dayes to force them to give him battell before which time hee did beseech them that he might have the honour to see them to the end that if Fortune envious of the glories which in so young an age he had obtained should in that desired expedition after having done good service to his King his Religion and the State conjoyne his funeralls with the triumph of his victories he might depart this world with lesse sorrow having satisfied them both in that charge which they had done him the honor to commit unto him If these words touched the heart of so good a mother who did not live but for her children only to preserve whose lives and estates she every houre abandoned her own you are able to judge Incontinently she resolved to depart with the King taking with her a small and usuall traine of Ladies as the Lady de R●is the Lady de Sauva and my selfe Being borne on the wings of desire and motherly affection she dispatched the way betwixt Paris and Tours in three daies which was not without some inconvenience and many Accidents worthy of laughter occasioned by the poor Mounsieur the Cardinall of Burbon who never did forsake her although he was neither of garbe of humour nor complexion for so great a Presence Arriving at Tours we found my Brother of Anjou with the chiefe Commanders and Captaines of his Army who were the flowers of the Princes and the Lords of France in the presence of whom he made an Oration to the King to give him an account of all the carriage of his charge since his departure from the Court composed with such art and eloquence and delivered with so much Grace that he caused admiration in all the standers by The greennesse of his youth did so much the more advance and make apparent the wisedome of his words that seemed more suitable with a gray beard with an old experienced Captaine than a young Gentleman of sixteen yeers of Age whose brow the Laurells of two Conquests had already crowned and Beauty which gives a greater grace to every Action did so flourish in him as if she were in emulation with Fortune which of them both should render him most glorious The joy which my Mother did receive hereat can no more by words be represented then could the Griefe of the father of Ipbigenia and in any other but her self whose soul was ever wedded to discretion one might easily have perceived the exilience which such an excesse of joy had made but she moderating her actions as well she could demonstrating apparently that the Discreet doe nothing which they would not doe without studdying to proclaime her joyes or stretch in words those prayses which the Actions of so accomplished and deere a childe did merit took only the chiefe points of his oration which concerned the actions of the warre to deliberate on them with the Princes and the Lords there present to take a thorough resolution for the war and to provide things necessary for it for the disposing whereof it was requisite to continue there some certaine daies in one of which the Queen my mother walking in the Parke with some of the Princes my Brother of Anjou in●reated me that we might walke aside into ●n Alley into which being come he thus spake to me Sister the education which we have had together doth no lesse obliege us unto love then the neernesse of our blood and you have understood that among all my brothers sisters I have ever had a greater inclination to wish well to you then unto any of them and I have well observed that your nature hath ever borne to me the same respects of love hitherto we have been guided to it by Nature not by counsell neither hath this Action brought us any profit but only the pleasure we have to converse together This indeed was agreeable to our Infancy but this houre requires that we no longer live like children you see the great and honorable charges to which God hath called me and to which the Queene our good Mother hath advanced me you ought to believe that you being the onely thing in the world whom I doe most affect and cherish I shall not be master of that greatnesse or fortune of which you shall not be partaker I know you have capacity and judgment to doe me good offices with the Queene my mother to preserve me in that Fortune wherein I stand my principall intention is to labour to retaine her favor