[765] Juvénal des Ursins, Histoire de Charles VI, p. 359.

[766] Trial, vol. iii, p. 204.

[767] It seems to have been the fate of the inhabitants of Limousin to be jeered at by the French of Champagne and of l'Île de France. After Brother Seguin we have the student from Limousin to whom Pantagruel says: "Thou art Limousin to the bone and yet here thou wilt pass thyself off as a Parisian." It is the lot of M. de Pourceaugnac. La Fontaine, in 1663, writes from Limoges to his wife that the people of Limousin are by no means afflicted; neither do they labour under Heaven's displeasure "as the folk of our provinces imagine." But he adds that he does not like their habits. It would seem that at first Brother Seguin was annoyed by Jeanne's mocking vivacious repartees. But he cherished no ill-will against her. "The Limousin's good nature does not permit the endurance of any unfriendly feeling," says Abel Hugo in La France pittoresque: Haute-Vienne. Cf. A. Précicou, Rabelais et les Limousins, Limoges, 1906, in 8vo.

[768] Trial, vol. iii, p. 205.

[769] Judges, ch. vi. (W.S.).

[770] Trial, vol. iii, p. 20.

[771] Ibid., pp. 20, 205. Chronique de la Pucelle, p. 278. Journal du siège, p. 49.

[772] Trial, vol. iii, pp. 19, 20.

[773] Ibid., vol. i, p. 95; vol. iii, p. 209.

[774] Mary Darmesteter, Froissart, Paris, 1894, in 12mo, p. 96.