Then appeared, half dressed and wrapped in a large cloak, the young queen, Louise de Lorraine, blonde and gentle, who led the life of a saint upon earth, and who had been awakened by her husband’s cries.
“Sire,” cried she, also trembling, “what is the matter? Mon Dieu! I heard your cries, and I came.”
“It—it is nothing,” said the king, without moving his eyes, which seemed to be looking up the air for some form invisible to all but him.
“But your majesty cried out; is your majesty suffering?” asked the queen.
Terror was so visibly painted on the king’s countenance, that it began to gain on the others.
“Oh, sire!” cried the queen again, “in Heaven’s name do not leave us in this suspense. Will you have a doctor?”
“A doctor, no,” cried Henri, in the same tone, “the body is not ill, it is the mind; no doctor—a confessor.”
Everyone looked round; nowhere was there to be seen any traces of what had so terrified the king. However, a confessor was sent for; Joseph Foulon, superior of the convent of St. Généviève, was torn from his bed, to come to the king. With the confessor, the tumult ceased, and silence was reestablished; everyone conjectured and wondered—the king was confessing.
The next day the king rose early, and began to read prayers then he ordered all his friends to be sent for. They sent to St. Luc, but he was more suffering than ever. His sleep, or rather his lethargy, had been so profound, that he alone had heard nothing of the tumult in the night, although he slept so near. He begged to be left in bed. At this deplorable recital, Henri crossed himself, and sent him a doctor.
Then he ordered that all the scourges from the convent should be brought to him, and, going to his friends, distributed them, ordering them to scourge each other as hard as they could.