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Compare 1577 edition: 1 The English host perceiuing the Frenchmen to withdraw into the towne, drew togither, and stood in order of battell for the space of two houres, and then returned to their lodgings. The next day they remoo|ued to Maillerois le vicount neere vnto Sens, and there they remained two daies, and after drew into Gastinois, and so into Beause. They were coasted all the waie by a great power of men of war, as ma|ny or more in number as they were themselues. But the French king being a politike prince, wiselie con|sidered what losses the realme of France had sustei|ned afore time, by giuing battell to the Englishmen, and therefore was fullie resolued, that in no wise he would giue licence to his people to fight with the earle of Buckingham;The pol [...] [...] the French king. but thought better (as he had learned by good experience) to keepe his townes close against his enimies, and so in the end to wearie them, than by giuing battell to put things in hazard, where|as he knew they could not take from him his coun|tries by this kind of warre, though they sore in dama|ged the same for a time.

Compare 1577 edition: 1 There chanced manie small skirmishes amongst those that rode foorth to discouer the countrie, but no notable incounter at all. For the Englishmen in those daies were cats not to be catched without mit|tens (as Iacob Meir in one place saith) & againe the French men were as warie how they aduentured to come néere them, peraduenture for feare, as in the reigne of king Edward the 3, as C.O. noteth, saieng,

Contra aciem magnam tremebundo corde ValesusIn Angl. [...] sub [...]
In campum adiunctum & vicina coẽgerat arua,
Non tamen Anglig [...]nas aduersum est ausus aperto
Tendere Marte feris confligere fortiter armis.

Compare 1577 edition: 1 2 Onelie they sought how to inclose them vp in the countrie, and to famish them, that they might then fight with them at some great aduantage; but still the English host passed forward, holding on their EEBO page image 427 voiage towards Britaine by Uandosme, Pont Uo|laine,The death of Charles the 5 French king. and so ouer the riuer of Sartre. In this meane while the French king Charles the fift was taken with a sore sicknesse, whereof he departed this life the same daie that the English armie passed ouer the ri|uer of Sartre, which was on the six and twentith of September, his brethren the dukes of Aniou, Ber|rie, Burbon, and Burgognie were at Paris with him at the houre of his death, where as a little before they had béene abroad in the countrie with their powers, to defend the cities and townes of impor|tance against the Englishmen, and meant indeed (if they could haue espied their aduantage, and gotten licence thereto of the king) to haue giuen their eni|mies battell. But now they were otherwise occupi|ed: howbeit they had left their men abroad in the countrie to coast the Englishmen as they had doone before. All the French power was assembled in the citie of Mans, vnder the leading of the duke of Bar, the lord Coucie, and others.

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