[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 XXXVIII
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Louis XIII.

slowly took the road back to Fontainebleau in the cardinal's litter, which the latter had lent him.

The prisoners were left in the minister's keeping, who ordered them before long to Lyons, whither he was himself removed.

The grand equerry coming from Montpellier, M.de Thou from Tarascon, in a boat towed by that of the cardinal, and the Duke of Bouillon from Pignerol, were all three lodged in the castle of Pierre-Encise.

Their examination was put off until the arrival of such magistrates "as should be capable of philosophizing and perpetually thinking of the means they must use for arriving at their ends." That was useless, inasmuch as the grand equerry "never ceased to say quite openly that he had done nothing to which the king had not consented." Louis XIII.


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