Page:Lives of Fair and Gallant Ladies Volume II.djvu/376

Rh P. 24: He called himself René de La Platière, lord of Les Bordes, and was ensign in Field Marshal de Bourdillon's company; he was killed at Dreux. He was the son of François de La Platière and Catherine Motier de La Fayette.

P. 24: Brantôme, in his eulogy of Bussy d'Amboise, relates that he reprimanded that young man for his mania of killing. The woman whom he compares here to Angélique was Marguerite de Valois.


 * Brantôme is unquestionably referring again in this paragraph to Marguerite de Valois and Bussy d'Amboise.


 * Orlando furioso, canto V.

P. 30: That is why Marguerite de Valois turned away "that big disgusting Viscount de Turenne." She compared him "to the empty clouds which look well only from without." (Divorce satyrique.)

P. 30: This is very likely an adventure that happened to Brantôme, and he had occasion to play the rôle of the "gentilhomme content."


 * According to Lalanne, the two gentlemen are Le Balafré and Mayenne. If the "grande dame" was Marguerite, she bore Mayenne no grudge, whom she described as "a good companion, big and fat, and voluptuous like herself."

P. 37: It is Madeleine de Saint-Nectaire or Senneterre, married to the lord of Miramont, Guy de Saint-Exupéry; she supported the Huguenots. She defeated Montal in Auvergne, and according to Mézeray, killed him herself in 1574. (See Anselme, t. IV., p. 890.) In 1569, Mme. de Barbancon had also fought herself; she, too, was formerly an Italian, Ipolita Fioramonti.

P. 39: On the large square with the tower, in the centre of Sienna.

P. 40: Livy, Bk. XXVII., Chap. XXXVII.


 * Orlando furioso, cantos XXII. and XXV.

P. 42: Christophe Jouvenel des Ursins, lord of La Chapelle, died in 1588.

P. 42: Henri II.