[A Popular History of France From The Earliest Times by Francois Pierre Guillaume Guizot]@TWC D-Link book
A Popular History of France From The Earliest Times

CHAPTER XXXV
14/80

Mayenne would not allow Villeroi to accept the offer.

"He had no private quarrel," he said, "with the King of Navarre, whom he highly honored, and who, to his certain knowledge, had not looked with approval upon his brothers' death; but any appearance of negotiation would cause great distrust amongst their party, and they would not do anything that tended against the rights of King Charles X." Renouncing all idea of negotiation, Henry IV.
set out on the 8th of August from St.Cloud, after having told off his army in three divisions.

Two were ordered to go and occupy Picardy and Champagne; and the king kept with him only the third, about six thousand strong.

He went and laid the body of Henry III.

in the church of St.Corneille at Compiegne, took Meulan and several small towns on the banks of the Seine and Oise, and propounded for discussion with his officers the question of deciding in which direction he should move, towards the Loire or the Seine, on Tours or on Rouen.


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