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A68416 Severall letters betwixt the French king and the q. mother, concerning the present troubles there vnto which is added, the French king's declaration vpon the departure of the queene mother, and monsieur his brother out of the kingdome : the confirmation of the court parliament of Paris vpon the same / faithfully translated out of the French. Louis XIII, King of France, 1601-1643.; Marie de Médicis, Queen, consort of Henry IV, King of France, 1573-1642. 1631 (1631) STC 16847.5; ESTC S1347 15,251 28

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and repose of your estate assuring my selfe if you follow those divine inspirations in stead of the passionate counsels against me which you have taken ere-while your estate shall therein finde quiet and safety and I the comfort which is so necessary for mee and those effects of love which I ought to expect from you Monsieur my Sonne Your most humble and most affectionate Mother and subject MARIE From Campeigne this last of May 1631. The Copie of a Letter written from PARIS the 7. of August 1631. VPon Monday last the Queene Mother sent hither the Lord De Beno'ville with letters to the Parliament and to the Sheriffes of this City And hee delivered both the one and the other in open and full Assembly and afterward departed againe without contradiction These letters were presently sent to the Kings Majesty without being opened It is confidently reported that the said Letters are manifestly replenished with very unseemely and strange threatnings Thereupon and upon the arrivall of an Ambassador from Bruxels the Kings Majesty having changed his purpose concerning his devotion of our Lady of Liesse is now expected heere in very few dayes to enter into the said Parliament there to open his Declarations against the said Queene and Monsieur It is confidently held that hee will restore the Paulette to the Officers of the Court according to the ancient forme and custome The farther wee doe proceed the more the divisions of this Court doe increase and waxe worse The jealousies which have heere beene conceived concerning the same have cause order to be given for the augmentation and reinforming of the old Regiments and Commissions to be granted for 10000. Foot forces more and 20. Cornet of Horse The Kings Majesty hath given Charge and Commandment to Monsieur de Guyse De Gramont to the Earle of Rochefoucault and to Monsieur de Valencay with all speed and diligence to be present with his Majesty The last of these as wee are informed hath given a flat denyall that hee will not depart out of Calais And if Monsieur bee sure enough without as wee are certified that he shall be it is very credible that the rest will bee no lesse refractory but draw backe as well as he Monsieur the Kings brother hath put away and discharged one of his Secretaries and three of his other Officers who were by the Lord Coigneux suspected of Treason He is yet at Beyancon Wee have received Letters from Bruxels that Forstenbergh and Altringer are about to joyne their Forces vnto those Troupes of the Administrator of Wirtenbergh who so miserably is fallen away from the Conclusion made at the Dyet at Leypsich Since wee have beene informed of this Designe concerning the forenamed Conjunction word was sent to Monsieur de la Force to put the Army of Champeigne into the Field but hee answereth that as yet it is not expedient Monsieur de Loraine hath sent hither the Lord de Ville to make knowne to his Majesty that Loraine is at his Devotion and that if the Gates of Nancy are not large and great enough the very walles shall bee broken downe to give entrance to and to receive his Majesty But all their kind of submissions will not purge and cleere his Highnesse Who is like enough to receive the first stroake of the forces of this estate If so bee that the said Lord doe but enterprize any thing and especially if hee doe give entertainement into his company to the Prince of Phalsbourgh who as it is reported for a certaine is one of his parties The forenamed Ambassador of Bruxels comes to make excuse to his Majesty in that the Infanta being taken on a suddaine could not afford that due honour and respect to the Queene Mother which otherwise she would have done Those of Straesburgh much sorrowing at the miserable and unfaithfull falling of the Duke of Wirtenbergh doe now earnestly implore the succour and aid of our King by the Lord Clafer His Maiesty hath given him all assurance that hee will in no wise forsake them God grant that he may returne home better contented than the Ambassador of S●yeden Who much grieved that he could not receive grant of 4000. men which he required will within few dayes returne home very ill satisfied Neverthelesse he hath received the gift of a Chaine of Diamonds worth the value of five thousand Crownes The Lord Larson Treasurer of the said King of Sweden received a Chaine of two thousand Florens and the secretary of the said Embassador had one given him of one thousand The Lord De Villars hath sould the Government of Honfleur to the Marquis De Sourdis from whom it is like to be taken away He was lately brought in question and accused before the King that his Company of the Guard was not compleat and that he pursed up the Monies of those that were more to pay Whereupon and by reason of some Insolent words which he gave in the presence of his Maiesty his Maiesty plucked from his neck his Corslet and degraded him and disarmed him most shamefully in open Company A Letter written by the Queene Mother to the Kings Maiesty with the Answere of his Maiesty to the same The Letter of the Queene Mother to the King Sir My Sonne I Have thought it my duty diligently to acquaint you by my Lord De la Barre that I am departed from Campaigne as also to declare unto you the reasons and Motives inciting me thereunto which your Maiesty shall find in this Letter If I should alledge no more but the hardnesse and harshnesse of my imprisonment the continuall disquiets and persecutions which I suffered by the Cardinall Richelieu I thinke they might easily be of power to give abundant satisfaction to your good disposition for I know that your inclination is such that you would not have me obey him to the very preiudice of my life And to the preiudice of your pious affection to your Mother which can no longer be preserved nor consist with my obedience to him in this place especially when all those evills and wrong inflicted vpon me are pretended to be done in your name I have hitherto without expresse of my griefe and relating of my teares suffered that which were impossible for a womā of a far baser ranck and degree to suffer with any kind of patience I have beene held from the first beginning as guilty because I would not obey the Cardinals pleasure for this the most veritable letter beares it being the first declaration addressed from Champaigne to the Parliaments and Provinces Since that I have beene used and dealt withall as if I were the greatest Enemy of the whole Kingdome of France not onely in the deniall of my honest and iust requests but even in the misconstruing of my good meaning and intentions And in shutting up in prison my officers and servants as well as my owne person Insomuch that they might not budge out of the City without his warrant that kept and
SEVERALL LETTERS BETWIXT THE FRENCH KING AND THE Q. MOTHER Concerning the present Troubles there Vnto which is added The French Kings Declaration vpon the departure of the Queene Mother and Monsieur his Brother out of the Kingdome The Confirmation of the Court Parliament of Paris vpon the same Faithfully translated out of the French LONDON Printed for NATH BVTTER and NICH BOVRNE 1631. A LETTER OF THE FRENCH KING TO THE QVEENE MOTHER Madame I Cannot sufficiently testifie my griefe for having understood by your Letters and by the report of my Cousin the Marshall of Schomberg and of the Lord of Roijssy the refusall which you have made of all the conditions I have offred you for the change of your abode at Campeigne into some more convenient place for your selfe and lesse suspected for me Were it not a thing altogether necessary for the welfare of my affaires I would not have caused you so much to have beene pressed thereabout And because I have reserved to my selfe to give you shortly to understand the last resolution which I have taken upon so important a businesse I will say no more thereof to you at this present but will answere onely to that which you have written in your last concerning my said Cousin the Marshall of Schomberg and the said Lord of Roijssy It had beene very difficult for mee to have sent you persons of more approved honesty and the report which they made me of your intention at their returne from you is so agreeable to the sense of these Letters you writ unto me by my sayd Cousin the Marshall of Schomberg and the Lord of Roijssy as you have no occasion thereupon to complaine but I rather because my instant and reiterated prayers have had so little power to worke upon you God will inspire into me if it be his pleasure what I ought to doe for the good and quiet of my estate After the which I shall alwayes have the same consideration of you which you can expect Madame from Your most humble and obeisant Sonne LOVIS From Fontainebelleau 28. May 1631. Answer of the Queene Mother to the Kings Letter above-written Monsieur my Sonne I Had deferred to have written you an answere to your Letter the 28. of this Moneth had not mine enemies spred a rumour to my preiudice that I was escaped into Flanders This shall assure you that I am yet here resolved not to depart hence unlesse it bee by force if this be not to vpbraid you with with the respect which a good Mother such as I am to you ought to be in with her Sonne for I never had nor shall have the desire to retire my selfe into any place where you have not absolute-power having God be thanked no crime vpon my Conscience which should give mee occasion to withdraw my selfe thence nor which ought to hinder me from hoping that your goodnesse weary of seeing me thus to suffer will oblige you in the end to restore me to the calme which is due to mine innocency most humbly beseeching you to vouchsafe that for answere to your last vpon this occasion I may tell you that if I had no other consideration of remaining here but mine owne I would long since have rendred you that obedience which you require at my hands of departing hence But if you please to consider what those displeasures are of a Mother so afflicted as I am without having committed any fault against You or your estate you may easily Iudge how unseemely it would be both to you and me that me continuall teares and my extreame affliction should be exposed to the eyes of your Subiects in so long a Iourney I should have to make vnto any one of those places which you have caus'd to be propounded vnto me and that the triumph of mine enemies should be adorned with this spectacle which would be most proper to illustrate their power all the world over and the miserable estate whereto I am reduced If the counsels which are given you vpon this subiect came not from the same persons which have perswaded you to confine me to this place and who doth not thinke knowing me so well as they doe to be subiect to stoppings of breath whensoever I am sicke that I can live 3. dayes to an end You might well know that it is farre more important for your state that the ill vsage which I suffer without cause be concealed heere within foure walles then made knowne to every one in my passage nor would you be so earnest after it in your said Letter nor so much complaine of my refusall of doing it I know well what duty I owe vnto you as you are my King but you also as my Sonne ought to compassionate mine afflictions and not to alledge vnto mee alwayes as you doe the considerations of your estate seeing there is no man that knowes not right well that mine abode here can bring no preiudice therunto that this is none other pretext or artifice then that which was vsed by others heretofore during our former separation for which you were so sorie so soone as you were come home to your selfe after the death of the Constable LVYNES and which is now put in practise to torment me to the end that loosing as I doe my repose my health may be so impaired as I must sinke vnder the burthen and loose my life which they cannot any longer indure As touching the Conditions which have beene offred me I doubt not but they have told you and would make it publikely to be beleeved that they are very advantageous vnto me But if they would describe them as they ought there would be no such Iudgement made seeing that MOVLINS and ANGER 's which have beene propounded vnto me for mine abode are so infected with the Plague as without doubt they have bin chosen by them of purpose to thrust me into the iawes of death which they see doth not seize vpon me heere so soone as they could wish Your disposition is too good to consent to their wicked designes in case you know them but vnder pretext of the duty which you owe to your estate is hidden the poyson which they would have me swallow to ridde their hands of me contrary to your intention God will deliver you from that and your Mother also if he please and will touch your heart to make you know that next your owne selfe I am the person most interested in your preservation and that for this purpose my life imports you more than my selfe There is no honest man in your Kingdome that doth not thinke so For the honesty of my Consin the Marshall de Schomberg mentioned in your Letters I leave the iudgement thereof to God and doe beseech his divine Maiesty to grant both him and me the grace that his counsels may be such as hee is bound in Conscience to give you and that hee will inspire also into you that which you ought to doe for the good
guarded me with two Companies of foot Souldiers 500. Horsmen and unanswerable to all my submissions and the lenity and mildnesse which I manifested in all my treaties and proceedings with you I have beene opposed and set upon with nothing but threatnings violences and insultings Which undoubtedly and infallibly if you respect my naturall disposition would have by this time enterred me in my Tomb if the Lord of heaven himself had not strengthened my courage with a magnanimous and generous resolution and in recompence of my candid and faire proceeding I have beene repaid with tricks and dissimulations The forces that were brought upon the borders of Champaigne were onely retired thither to abuse those good people that did sympathize with my Imprisonment and under shew of the liberty which I had yeelded me to walk abroad to surprise me as it were in Ambush As I have bin well enformed by such as could easily know something concerning the evill intention of the Cardinall against me to prolong my misery and to keepe the people and strangers in suspence and expectation There have beene sent unto me divers Embassadors who noysed abroad that they came to allay all difference and amend the matter But O God! What remedy and amendment did they speake of to me When as some of them have bin so insolent that violating the honour and respect due unto me as did the Marshall of Schomb●rgh greedily raging after me untill the very entrance of my bedchamber The last voyage which my Cousin the Marshall Destree made and the Lord Mesmin was no better than the former for it was onely to threaten me with the returning againe of my guard and againe to make me feare the former violence and the losse of my faithfull officers and servants necessary for the preservation of my life And to yeeld my selfe to their proceedings God knowes to what end and intention As also to propound unto me the iourney of going to Chartres or to Mante where you might see me before I went into Champaigne Which caused me to suspect their proposition Champaign being the way but not Chartres But this was more proper and agreeable to their desire which they had to leade me along in Triumph and shew and with me all Europe where my Children command and raigne more then our mutuall meeting which I desire more than any thing the privation whereof is the greatest and most sensible misery which I suffer how ever the other are cruell enough All these things I have suffered with resignation to testifie to the whole Kingdome of France that I did respect your Authority even in the hands of my Enemies and that I neuer had nor shall have any but wholesome and good intentions toward your State for having matter and subiect enough to compaine of I contained my selfe with all patience fiue monethes together to give you leasure to find out and acknowledge my integrity and innocency And to let it appeare unto you that I never had intelligence nor held Correspondency with any of my Children but your owne selfe However the Cardinall maliciously hath possessed and perswaded you to the contrary to the end that he might attaine to the accomplishment of his owne wicked desires and intentions Which is to chase and expell both Mother and Children out of the Kingdome to attaine to the end of his designes and one day you will find it and acknowledge the same perhaps when it will be to late In meane while now how as the time of my sufferings hath continued long a new to give you an impression of my innocency and that longer time would make me to be esteemed guilty if I did not now have a care for the preservation of my life and the reestablishment of my liberty seeing that my Children cannot dispence with the disgrace and Infamy which should be laid upon me That shall notwithstanding by Gods grace iustifie me in the mind and before the face of all the world for as I have perceived that my body did decrease and my strength was daily abated and I daily weakned and that it was the intention of the Cardinall to have me die within foure walles I was then resolved to save my life and reputation and to give some easement to my sorrowes and sufferings Wherfore I will accept of that good offer made unto me by the Marquis de Verdes who every day since my departure hath wished me to goe to the Capelle of which he is Governour which is a place where your Mai hath absolute power I was then resolved to betake my selfe thither was not come within three leagues from that place but the said Lord De Vardes sends me word by two Gentlemen one of which was the Knight his brother that I could not enter into the said Capelle and that he had delivered up the said place into the hands of his Father I beseech you to consider how I was grieved and anxious when after that I found my selfe thus basely deceived I found also my selfe earnestly pursued by the Cavallerie whereupon I was advised to presse forward and to goe forth of your Kingdome Insomuch that I was constrained to iourney thirty leagues without either eating or drinking And it hath beene Gods pleasure in this occasion as in others also that the cunning devices should be discovered even by the mouth of such as were agents Who have in some manner confessed that the said Cardinall had plotted the businesse and onely intending to make me to stye and abandon your state which was that which he onely desired that which I only feared Being th●● reduced brought to this miserable extreamity I have betaken my selfe into this place of Avennes which belongs to the Archdutchesse being constrained in a strange Countrey to seeke my liberty and safety and protection of my life which I thought easily to have found in some place under your obedience But what was so faithfully profered me was shamefully refused me and as now I perceiue was meerely offered unto me by the stratagemes and devises of my Enemies rather then in any good intention to receive me Now I seeke nothing but onely the confident trust upon Iustice and equity which you deny not to the most miserable and meanest of all your subiects After the same shall have quitted and iustified me although my Enemies should receive no other punishment but the shame of tormenting and persecuting me with the declaraciō of their iniustice yet this wil then hinder all farther evils which might accrew and it will cause the cōplaints of my other Children to cease who have some interest in my sorrowes by reason of their owne reputation and will give satisfaction to all Europe lay an obstacle to whatsoever hereafter may be plotted against me For mine owne part I should not much care but rest contented to sacrifice the remnant of my dayes unto the vengeance of the Cardinall were it not that I desire to make up the breach and to establish
the union and concord betweene your selfe and my sonne D'Orleans which he hath already overthrowne in your mind by his severall devises You may if you please yeeld a remedy against this great evill and hinder any worse proceeding by your good Iudgment and understanding If I may be so happy as to returne againe to you I promise faithfully I will cause you to know that in any thing I ought I have never esteemed any dearer to me then your good and Vtility Since I am MONS my Sonne Your most humble and most affectioned Mother and subiect MARIE Avennes the 21. Iuly 1631. Answer of the King to the Letter of the Queene his Mother MADAME I Am so much the more moued at your resolution which you haue taken to absent your selfe from this State and Kingdome by how much you had lesse ground and cause The imaginary imprisonment the supposed persecutions which you complaine of the apprehensions which you confesse your selfe to haue conceiued in Campagnie concerning your life they haue no more foundation than the pursuite which you say was made after you at your departure and the intelligence which you write vntome hath beene held with the onely Sonne of the Lord de Vardes Their intentions are a deuice somewhat like vnto that feare which you fained to haue three moneths agoe that I would send you backe againe into Italic which you know I neuer thought much lesse euer intended For those proffers which I haue made you of diuers and seuerall dwellings and habitations farre remote from those parts can testifie the contrary Such calumnies and accusations shall not God be blessed disgrace and dis-repute me in Christendome where my actions do sufficiently make me knowne Whatsoeuer you tell me of those that serue me and are neere vnto me hath not so much as an appearance of truth And I wonder and am euen astonished that the Authors of your letters are not ashamed to set before your eyes such things against those vnto whom your conscience knowes that such things cannot be imputed I doe perceiue and know by manifold infallible proofes the affection and sincerity of my Cousen the Cardinall of Richel●●● His religious obedience which hee affords mee his faithfull care concerning whatsoeuer doth concerne my person and estate speakes for him If you please Madame you shall permit and giue me leaue to tell you that the action which you haue so lately done and what hath passed not long since causeth that I cannot be ignorant what hath beene your intention heretofore and what I may expect in the time to come The respect which I bare you makes me forbeare of saying any thing more vnto you I pray the Lord in the meane while to giue you good counsell And that you may alwayes preuaile with his affections who shall alwayes be Madame Yours The French Kings Declaration vpon the departure of the Queene his Mother and Monsieur his Brother out of the Kingdome Confirmed at the Parliament at Paris the 13. day of August 1631. faithfully translated out of the French Copy LEwis by the grace of God King of France and Nanarre to all those vnto whom these presents shall come greeting Wee haue by our Letters of Declaration the 30. of March last past published throughout our whole Kingdome for the causes contained therein declared all those guiltie of Crimen lasa Maiestatis who abusing the facility of our wel beloued and onely Brother the Duke of Orleans did by their euill deuices and pernicious counsels intice and perswade him to withdraw himselfe from vs and to depart out of our Kingdome without our knowledge and permission as also all those that should be found to be his followers if in a certaine prefixed time they did not take recourse to our Grace and Mercie hauing hoped by this meanes to giue them leisure to find out and acknowledge their fault and so to reduce them vnto their duties and thereby cause them to depart and abstaine from all euill wayes and practises which they had begun as well within as without the Kingdome to trouble the rest and peace of the same But in stead of vsing this meanes to repent them of their fault and to take their refuge to our clemencie and fauour they haue persisted in their euill counsels and carried away our Brother against the duty of his birth and the respect which hee oweth vs and instigated him to write vnto vs letters full of bitternesse calumnies impostures and accusations against the Administration and Gouernment of our State striuing and aiming by those said letters full of injuries and falsenesse with other writings of the like nature which they haue caused to be printed euery where to perswade our people to bee ill conceited of vs and by them and other Princes our neighbours to haue sinister opinions of our affaires and gouernment accusing against all truth and reason our welbeloued Cousin the Cardinal Richelieu of infidelitie and of enterprizing against our person and the person of our much honoured Mother his owne and our Estate as also some others which wee do employ in our Gouernment euen about the most weightiest matters of our Estate of adhering to his euill counsels notwithstanding that from them wee doe receiue the greatest contentment that wee can desire Yea they haue beene so bold and audacious as that they did dare to present a request to our Court of Parliament vnder the name of our said Brother against our foresaid Cousin the Cardinall Richelieu in like manner as the former full of falsenes forged calumnies contrary to all humanity reason and truth Which caused vs to answer our said Brother and by our letters the 5. of Iune last published in our Chancery to declare our good intention and meaning and the exceeding satisfaction which we haue receiued by the seruice faithfulnesse and good carriage of our aforesaid Cousin the Cardinall in so many great and weighty occasions in the which wee haue very profitably employed him for the good and greatnesse of our State as also from the rest our chiefe Counsellers All these meanes notwithhanding haue hitherto serued onely to make them the more impudent and insolent and to continue their enterprizes and pernicious designes which they had begun and vndertaken not onely to diuert our said Brother from the obedience which he oweth vs but also he much honored Lady our Mother who since a short space of i me hath suffered her selfe also to be led away and seduced by their mischieuous counsels and to side with our brother in his designes more than did well become her It may be perhaps by reason of the false and euill rumour which some persons haue spred who make profession of curious and euill sciences giues them hopes of some ready change in this Kingdome Wee perceiuing all these their proceedings and seeing that it was a difficult matter to prouide for the safetie of this Kingdome and our owne person if any longer we should suffer them to goe on
in these deuices wayes and practices which they did publiquely attempt euen in our Court by those which did approach neere vnto them We thought good at the same instant when our Brother withdrew himselfe from vs to acquaint the Lady our Mother with the intelligence we had of all their practices and deuices which they vsed to our great prejudice and with our resolution which we had taken for the stopping of that course As namely to take into hold and durance some persons which we knew to participate in their designes and to banish the rest from our Court. Also we desired entreated her to this end to assist vs with her best counsell as formerly shee had done within these few yeares and to leaue separate her selfe from all the secret intelligences which she had or might haue with our foresaid Brother who was then departed from vs. We persisted in this our supplication euen to Campaguis where we made knowne vnto her diuers other instances by our trusty and welbeloued the Lord Chastean-newf Keeper of the Scale and our trusty and welbeloued Cousen the Marshal de Schomb●rgh vnto both which shee answered that shee was weary any longer to intermeddle with our affaires that she would no more haue any share nor be partaker with our Counsels which caused vs too too confidently to vnderstand and beleeue the firme resolution which she had taken to remaine linked and joyned to the designes of our said Brother and to follow and be led by the pernicious counsels which were giuen him Whereupon we resolued and determined to separate our selues for a while from her and to entreate her to withdraw herselfe and retire to Moulins a place which properly belongs vnto her and which place during the time of our minoritie shee voluntarily chose for her owne abode Vnto this she gaue answer that then she would willingly goe thither but a few dayes afterward shee requested vs to thinke it expdient and fitting that shee might betake her selfe to Neuers Which she was so much inclining vnto and did affect because she had a desire to approach and draw neerer to our said Brother who was then as yet at Orleans A while after this learning and perceiuing that our said Brother in his proceedings vsed many deuices and cunning practices striuing and endeauouring to assemble together many warlike troupes wee inuited him by our welbeloued Cousin the Cardinall de Valette to absent and separate himselfe from all those wicked counsels and to returne againe to vs where we promised him that he should receiue all good and fauourable contentment which he refusing to doe and to haue correspondencie and to joyne with our good meaning and intention we journyed as farre as Eltampes where presently we were informed that he was departed from Orleans so to retire and leaue our Kingdome where he was no sooner departed but our said Mother sent vs word that shee would no longer goe either to Moulins or Neuers and that shee desired not to depart out of Champaguie and at the very same time shee and our said Brother did deuise and effect to publish and divulge this rumour that shee was detained in prison notwithstanding shee had all liberty afforded her with her traine either to goe to Moulins or Neuers although in those places there was no Garrison But as this supposed imprisonment serued for a pretence of discontentment vnto those that waited for such an occasion and opportunity so she continued this false complaint notwithstanding that daily our Cousin the Marshall Destree and also the Lord Marquesse of St Sch●●●●out did aduertise her in our behalfe which two wee haue many seuerall times sent vnto her that shee would bee pleased to depart out of Campagnie and to chuse such a place within our Kingdome as shee should thinke most fitting for her abiding offering her to the end shee might abide there with the more respect and authority the gouernment of that Prouince into the which shee would betake her selfe forthwith declaring and making known vnto her that her remaining still in Champagnie gaue vnto vs great cause of jealousie suspicion forasmuch as we were certainly enformed they did perswade her to depart out of our Kingdome vnto which shee would no way condescend nor thereby be perswaded faining many causes of complaint as among others that we would haue sent her vnto Italie and that our Gallyes were ready prepared for the same purpose Then wee sent vnto her our said Cousin the Marshall of Shombergh and the Lord de Roissye Counsellor in our Councell of State to desire her to conforme her selfe to our will and pleasure and to resolue with herselfe to depart out of Champagnie and to choose such a place within our Kingdome which shee might like of for her dwelling onely Champagnie excepted To the end that those pretences might cease of those who had entised our said Brother to forsake our Kingdome and that they might not haue so much as any appearance to ground their reports vpon of our Mothers imprisonment Nay which is more they two in our name proffered vnto her the gouernment of Anion which shee complained shee was bereaued of and that the same was taken from her although indeed shee had of her owne accord abandoned the same for some considerations best knowne to her selfe They vrged also vnto her and shewed her that it was very requisite for the good of our affaires and that it would proue very aduantagious to her selfe if shee would be pleased to conforme her selfe to our will and intentions But whatsoeuer reasons they could lay before her it was impossible to diuert and draw her from her strong resolution which shee had taken to abide in Champagnie for to bring to passe the designe which since that time shee hath executed Notwithstanding all this her resistance to testifie more and more our affection towards her and the earnest desire wee haue to re-unite her vnto vs we caused those troupes to be remoued which we had left in Champagnie and since that did diuers times send to her our said Cousin the Marshall Destree and the Marquis de St Shanmont to reiterate the request which so often we had made vnto her that shee would choose any other place than Champagnie for her abode Yea we proffered her to come and visite her in her house at Monceana or some other place in the way to Blois Anger 's or Moulins if shee went thither to the end that wee might be reconciled together This in appearance shee seemed to agree vnto and willing to embrace which gaue vs great contentment and abundant satisfaction supposing that this also was the way to reduce our said brother to his deuoir and to remoue all those pretences which the foresaid euill Authors of bad counsell did make vse of But when wee beleeued that our said Mother was well contented with vs and was most ready and willing to follow our good intention which wee had for our common good