[Footnote 14:] [Toutey], p. 387.]

[Footnote 15:] [See] Scott's Anne of Geierstein. This is the man whom the author makes the appointed instrument of the Vehmgericht to slay Charles.]

[Footnote 16:] [Toutey], p. 388.]

[Footnote 17:] [Mémoires], iii., 239.]

[Footnote 18:] [It] is strange that La Marche does not make more of this scene if he were really there. His sole statement is: "The duke remained dead on the field of battle, stretched out like the poorest man in the world and I was taken and others." iii., 240.]

[Footnote 19:] [La] déconfiture de Monseigneur de Bourgogne faite par Monseigneur de Lorraine. Comines-Lenglet, iii., 493.

This brief account was drawn up evidently before the duke's burial was known by the writer. It may have been written solely to please Louis XI. Still there is a simplicity about it that holds the attention, in spite of the fact that the story is not accepted by critical historians.]

[Footnote 20:] [La] Marche, iii., 240.]

[Footnote 21:] [Comines] v., ch. x.]

[Footnote 22:] [Lettres] vi., p. 111.]