BOOK TENTH.
CHAPTER 5. THE RETREAT IN WHICH MONSIEUR LOUIS OF FRANCE SAYS HIS PRAYERS.
(continued)
Meanwhile, the king thrummed gayly with his fingers on the
arm of his chair, the March of Pont-Audemer. He was a
dissembling prince, but one who understood far better how to
hide his troubles than his joys. These external manifestations
of joy at any good news sometimes proceeded to very
great lengths thus, on the death, of Charles the Bold, to the
point of vowing silver balustrades to Saint Martin of Tours;
on his advent to the throne, so far as forgetting to order his
father's obsequies.
"Hé! sire!" suddenly exclaimed Jacques Coictier, "what
has become of the acute attack of illness for which your
majesty had me summoned?"
"Oh!" said the king, "I really suffer greatly, my gossip.
There is a hissing in my ear and fiery rakes rack my chest."
Coictier took the king's hand, and begun to feel of his pulse
with a knowing air.
"Look, Coppenole," said Rym, in a low voice. "Behold
him between Coictier and Tristan. They are his whole court.
A physician for himself, a headsman for others."
As he felt the king's pulse, Coictier assumed an air of
greater and greater alarm. Louis XI. watched him with some
anxiety. Coictier grew visibly more gloomy. The brave man
had no other farm than the king's bad health. He speculated
on it to the best of his ability.
"Oh! oh!" he murmured at length, "this is serious indeed."
"Is it not?" said the king, uneasily.
"Pulsus creber, anhelans, crepitans, irregularis," continued
the leech.
"Pasque-Dieu!"
"This may carry off its man in less than three days."
"Our Lady!" exclaimed the king. "And the remedy, gossip?"
"I am meditating upon that, sire."
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