Page:Lives of Fair and Gallant Ladies Volume II.djvu/389

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
NOTES

P. 316: Alesandro de Medici, killed, in 1637, by his cousin Lorencino.

P. 314: According to Rabelais, poultre (filly) is the name given to a mare that has never been leapt. So Bussy was not speaking with strict accuracy in using the term in this case.

P. 317: Mme. de Chateaubriant.

P. 318: Perhaps Marguerite de Valois and the ugly Martigues. P. 321: The one-eyed Princess d'Kboli and the famous Antonio Perez.

P. 323: Jeanne de Poupincourt.

P. 324: Anne de Berri, Lady de Certeau, at the court in 1583. Helene de Fonsèques.

P. 324: This princess was very ugly.

P. 330: In the sixteenth century it was customary to whip lazy people in bed. See Marot's epigram: Du Jour des Innocens.

End of Volume Two