Margaret, naturally inclined to pity,
hastened to this woman, asked her why she was weeping, and encouraged
her to tell her whether she wished for anything. Then the nun began to
lament still more loudly, and looking at the Queen, told her that she
was deploring her ill-fortune. When Margaret heard these words she
turned towards those who were with her, and said to them, 'You were
hiding the King's death from me, but the Spirit of God has revealed it
to me through this maniac.' This said, she turned to her room, knelt
down, and humbly thanked the Lord for all the goodness He was pleased to
show her." (1)
After losing her brother, Margaret remained in retirement at the convent
of Tusson. She stayed there, says Brantome, for four months, leading
a most austere life and discharging the duties of abbess. She still
continued in retirement on her return to Beam, mainly occupying herself
with literary work. It was in 1547, subsequent to the death of Francis,
that John de la Haye, her secretary, published at Lyons her _Marguerites
de la Marguerite_, poems which she had composed at various periods, and
which De la Haye probably transcribed at her dictation.
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