71/104 426).] [Footnote 680: Pasquerel alone of the witnesses mentions this (_Trial_, vol.iii, p. 103). Cf. the anecdote of the Sire de Boissy related by P.Sala in his collection, _Les hardiesses des grands rois et empereurs_ (_Trial_, vol.iv, p. 278).] The King's Counsellors, knowing little of the damsel, decided that they must have her before them to examine her concerning her life and her belief.[681] [Footnote 681: _Trial_, vol.iii, p. |