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AT AGINCOURT


By G. A. Henty




CONTENTS

PREFACE

AT AGINCOURT

CHAPTER I — A FEUDAL CASTLE

CHAPTER II — TROUBLES IN FRANCE

CHAPTER III — A SIEGE

CHAPTER IV — A FATAL ACCIDENT

CHAPTER V — HOSTAGES

CHAPTER VI — IN PARIS

CHAPTER VII — IN THE STREETS OF PARIS

CHAPTER VIII — A RIOT

CHAPTER IX — A STOUT DEFENCE

CHAPTER X — AFTER THE FRAY

CHAPTER XI — DANGER THREATENED

CHAPTER XII — IN HIDING

CHAPTER XIII — THE MASTERS OF PARIS

CHAPTER XIV — PLANNING MASSACRE

CHAPTER XV — A RESCUE

CHAPTER XVI — THE ESCAPE

CHAPTER XVII — A LONG PAUSE

CHAPTER XVIII — KATARINA

CHAPTER XIX — AGINCOURT

CHAPTER XX — PENSHURST








PREFACE

The long and bloody feud between the houses of Orleans and Burgundy—which for many years devastated France, caused a prodigious destruction of life and property, and was not even relaxed in the presence of a common enemy—is very fully recorded in the pages of Monstrellet and other contemporary historians. I have here only attempted to relate the events of the early portion of the struggle—from its commencement up to the astonishing victory of Agincourt, won by a handful of Englishmen over the chivalry of France. Here the two factions, with the exception of the Duke of Burgundy himself, laid aside their differences for the moment, only to renew them while France still lay prostrate at the feet of the English conqueror.

At this distance of time, even with all the records at one's disposal, it is difficult to say which party was most to blame in this disastrous civil war, a war which did more to cripple the power of France than was ever accomplished by English arms. Unquestionably Burgundy was the first to enter upon the struggle, but the terrible vengeance taken by the Armagnacs,—as the Orleanists came to be called,—for the murders committed by the mob of Paris in alliance with him, was of almost unexampled atrocity in civil war, and was mainly responsible for the

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