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                     The king, struck with such a collection of
                   circumstantial evidence against Macaire, de-
                   termined to refer the decision to the chance
                   of battle; in other words, he gave orders for
                   a combat between the chevalier and the dog.
                   The lists were appointed in the Isle of Notre
                   Dame, then an unenclosed, uninhabited place;
                   Macaire's weapon being a great cudgel.
                     The dog had an empty cask allowed for
                   his retreat, to enable him to recover breath.
                   Every thing beinig prepared, the dog no
                   sooner found himself at liberty, than he ran
                   round his adversary, avoiding his blows, and
                   menacing him on every side, till his strength
                   was exhausted; then springing forward, he
                   griped him by the throat, threw him on the
                   ground, and obliged him to confess his guilt
                   in the presence of the king and the whole
                   court. In consequence of which the chevalier,
                   after a few days, was convicted upon his own
                   acknowledgement, and beheaded on a scaf-
                   fold in the Isle of Notre Dame.
                     The above curious recital is translated
                   from the Memoires sur les Duels, and
                   is confirmed by many judicious critical
                   writers; particularly Julius Scaliger and
                   Montfaucon, neither of whom have ever been
                   regarded as fabricators of idle stories. On
                   this narrative the melo-drame of the Forest
                   of Bondi is founded.