Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: in new colors. Such kings had the prophetic vision. The king who came after this Louisthe true discoverer of Havrewas the very prince of royal adventurers. In love, in war, in captivity, in magnificence, and in the art of leading his people out from the lingering bondage of medieval darkness to riot in the full sun of Renaissance splendor, who can rival Francis I? In the Louvre, in Paris, you may look upon the face of this great king, one that Havre grew to know as well as the faces of her own fisherfolk. That long oval, that fine Gallic brow, the prodigiously elongated straight nosethe nose even Titian must render distinctive rather than distinguishedthe bearded cheeks and chin, the full Roman lips, and above all, the eyedark, protruding, voluptuously liddedthe seeing eye of the lover of art and of a beautiful womanhere before you on the canvas you, too, grow to know, with an intimate sense of satisfaction, the countenance as well as much of the nature and character of the man who opened the great doors on France's Vita Nuova, on her new, on her truly modern career. Francis I had come from Italy, flushed with his triumph. He was fresh from his victoryhe had won Milan from the Sforzas. His mind was saturated with the Renaissance spirit; he was still warmed with the glow of her intellectual activities, with the power and splendor of her artistic development. KING FRANCOIS THE FIRST From a painting by Titian Francis I brought to France, as he was to prove in his enterprises at Havre, a new view of kingly conduct. This was the gift he brought from Italy with which to enrich his own kingdomand Havre. He had seen the great Italian and Venetian ports crowded with shipping. What had France to show compared to these great world centers of maritime power? Two ...