¶Howe the peace bytwen Englan¦de and Fraūce contynued / and of the maryage of the kynge of Englande with the doughter of Fraunce. Cap. CC.xiii. (Book 213)
YE haue herde here before of the mariage of the french kyn∣ges doughter with the kynge of England / the whiche tyme apro¦ched nere / and bothe parties well wyllynge / excepte duke Thomas of Glouce∣stre / he was nothynge ioyfull therof / for he sawe well that by that maryage / there shulde be great confyderacyons and alyaunces by¦twene the two kynges and their Realmes to lyue in peace / whiche he was lothe to se / for he desyred rather to haue warre. The same sea∣son the duke had aboute hym a knyght called syr Iohan Baquegay a secrete man / and he set alwayes ye duke to haue warre. The same seasone also the duke of Guerles came in to Englande to se the kynge and his vncles / and offred hym selfe to do any lawfull seruyce to the kynge that he myght do / he was bounde therto by faythe and homage / and he wolde gladly that the kynge shulde haue had watre rather than peace. This duke and the duke of Lancastre had great cōmunycacyon togyder of the voyage that the erle of Haynalt and the erle of Ostenaunt his sonne wolde make in to Frese. The same tyme Fyerebrase of Ver∣tayne was in Englande / sente thyder fro the erle of Ostrenant / to gette men of armes and archers to go in that voyage to Frese. The erle of Derby was desyred to go in that voy∣age / in aydinge of his cosyns of Heynalt. The gentle erle hadde therto good affectyon / and sayde howe he wolde ryght gladly go in that voyage / so that it pleased the kynge and his father. Whan the duke of Guerles came fyrst in to Englande / the Duke of Lancastre de∣maunded of him what he thought of that voy¦age in to Frese. He aunswered and sayd that it was a parylous voyage / and ye Frese was a countrey nat lyghtly to be wonne / sayenge howe in tymes past there had been dyuers er∣les of Holande and Heynalte / that haue clay∣med their right there and gone thyder to haue put them in subiectyon / but they haue always lost their lyues there / affyrmynge howe the fresons are people without honour / and haue no mercy. they prayse nor loue no lorde in the worlde / they be so proude / and also their coun¦trey is stronge / for they be enuyroned with the see / and closed in with isses / rockes / and marysshes / no man can tell howe to gouerne them but them selfe. I haue ben desyred to go in that voyage / but I wyll nat / and I coun∣sayle my cosyn your sonne the erle of Derby / nat to entre in to that voyage / it is no iourney for hym. I thynke my fayre brother of Ostre∣nant wyll go / for he hath great desyre therto / and wyll haue a bande of haynowayes with hym / it shall be an aduenture if euer they re∣tourne. Whiche wordes caused the Duke of Lancastre to thynke that his sonne shulde nat go in yt voyage / and so shewed his sonne his entente / and badde hym delaye that mater / for