[968] Ibid., vol. iii, p. 188. A. Sarrazin, Jeanne d'Arc et la Normandie, p. 386. Guedon and Ladvenu added to their evidence that not long afterwards a certain Georges Folenfant was also given up to the secular arm. But the Archbishop and the Inquisitor sent Ladvenu to the Bailie "in order to warn him that the said Georges was not to be treated like the Maid who was burned without the pronouncement of any definite and final sentence." Trial, vol. ii, p. 9.
[969] Ibid., p. 344.
[970] Falconbridge, in Trial, vol. iv, p. 459. Yet Martin Ladvenu says "until the last hour," etc., which is obviously false.
[971] Trial, vol. iii, p. 53.
[972] Shakespeare, Henry VI, part 1, act i, scene 1.
[973] Trial, vol. ii, p. 6; vol. iii, pp. 53, 191, 375.
[974] Missel Romain, Office des morts. Cf. Le P. C. Clair, Le Dies iræ, histoire, traduction et commentaire, Paris, in 8vo, 1881, pp. 38-142.
[975] Trial, vol. ii, pp. 6, 20.
[976] Ibid., vol. iii, p. 170.
[977] Ibid., p. 186.