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- <title>
- The Project Gutenberg eBook of the
- History of the Reformation in Europe in the Time of Calvin.
- Vol 2 (of 8)
- by J.H. Merle D'Aubigné
- </title>
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of History of the Reformation in Europe in the
-time of Calvin. Vol. 2 (of 8), by Merle d'Aubigné
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: History of the Reformation in Europe in the time of Calvin. Vol. 2 (of 8)
-
-Author: Merle d'Aubigné
-
-Release Date: August 23, 2019 [EBook #60152]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF REFORMATION IN EUROPE, VOL 2 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Brian Wilson, David Edwards, Colin Bell, Chris
-Pinfield and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div id="tnote">
-
-<p>Transcriber's Note:</p>
-
-<p>Obvious printer errors have been corrected silently.</p>
-
-<p>Hyphenation has been rationalised. Inconsistent spelling (including
-accents) has been retained.</p>
-
-<p>Running headers, at the top of each right-hand page, have been moved
-in front of the paragraphs to which they refer and surrounded by
-=equal signs=.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="front">
-
- <p class="x-small">LONDON<br />
- PRINTED BY SPOTTISWOODE AND CO.<br />
- NEW-STREET SQUARE</p>
-
-<h1><span style="font-size:100%">HISTORY</span><br />
- <span style="font-size:50%">OF</span><br />
- <span style="font-size:100%">THE REFORMATION IN EUROPE</span><br />
- <span style="font-size:75%">IN THE TIME OF CALVIN.</span></h1>
-
- <p>BY J. H. MERLE D'AUBIGNÉ, D.D.</p>
-
- <p class="x-small">AUTHOR OF THE<br />
- 'HISTORY OF THE REFORMATION OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY' ETC.</p>
-
-<p><span style="font-size:80%">'Les choses de petite durée ont coutume
-de devenir fanées, quand elles out passé leur temps.</span></p>
-
-<p><span style="font-size:80%">'Au règne de Christ, il n'y a que le
-nouvel homme qui soit florissant, qui ait de la vigueur, et dont il
-faille faire cas.'</span></p>
-
-<div class="right2"><span style="font-size:80%"><span class="smc">Calvin.</span></span></div>
-
- <p>VOL. II.</p>
-
- <p><span class="smc">GENEVA and FRANCE.</span></p>
-
- <p>LONDON:<br />
- LONGMAN, GREEN, LONGMAN, ROBERTS, &amp; GREEN.<br />
- 1863.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="contents">
-
- <h2>CONTENTS<br />
- <span style="font-size:50%">OF</span><br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE SECOND VOLUME.</span></h2>
-
- <p>BOOK II.<br />
- FRANCE. FAVOURABLE TIMES.</p>
-
- <p style="margin-top:1.5em">CHAPTER XIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">JOHN CALVIN, A STUDENT AT THE UNIVERSITY
- OF ORLEANS.</span><br />
- (1527-1528.)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Calvin's Friend—The Students at Orleans—Pierre de l'Etoile—Opinions
-concerning Heretics—Calvin received in the Picard Nation—Calvin
-nominated Proctor—Procession for the Maille de Florence—Distinguished by
-the Professors—His Friends at Orleans—Daniel and his Family—Melchior
-Wolmar—Calvin studies Greek with him—Benefit to the Church of God</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_1">1</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XIV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CALVIN, TAUGHT AT ORLEANS OF GOD AND MAN, BEGINS TO
- DEFEND AND PROPAGATE THE FAITH.</span><br />
- (1528.)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Wolmar teaches him about Germany—Orleans in 1022 and 1528—Calvin's
-Anguish and Humility—What made the Reformers triumph—Phases of Calvin's
-Conversion—He does not invent a new Doctrine—I sacrifice my Heart to
-Thee—His Zeal in Study—He supplies Pierre de l'Etoile's place—Calvin
-sought as a Teacher—He seeks a Hiding-place for Study—Explains the
-Gospel in Private Families—His first Ministry.</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_14">14</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CALVIN CALLED AT BOURGES TO THE EVANGELICAL WORK.</span><br />
- (1528-1529.)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Calvin at his Father's Bed-side—His first Letter—Beza arrives at
-Orleans—Calvin goes to Bourges—Brilliant Lessons of Alciati—Wolmar and
-Calvin at Bourges—Wolmar calls him to the Evangelical Ministry—The
-Priest and the Minister—Calvin's Hesitation—He evangelises—Preaches at
-Lignières—Recalled by his Father's Death—Preachings at Bourges—Tumult</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_27">27</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XVI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">BERQUIN, THE MOST LEARNED OF THE NOBILITY, A MARTYR
- FOR THE GOSPEL.</span><br />
- (1529.)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Margaret's Regret—Complaints of Erasmus—Plot of the Sorbonne against
-Berquin—His Indictment prepared—The Queen intercedes for him—Berquin at
-the Conciergerie—Discovery of the Letter—He is imprisoned in a strong
-Tower—Sentence—Recourse to God—Efforts of Budæus to save him—His Earnest
-Appeals to Berquin—Fall and Uprising of Berquin—Margaret writes to the
-King—Haste of the Judges—Procession to the Stake—Berquin joyous in the
-presence of Death—His Last Moments—Effect on the Spectators—Murmurs,
-Tricks, and Indignation—Effect of his Death in France—The Martyrs'
-Hymn—The Reformer rises again from his Ashes</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_41">41</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XVII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">FIRST LABOURS OF CALVIN AT PARIS.</span><br />
- (1529.)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Calvin turns towards a Christian Career—His old Patrons—Calvin's Sermon
-and Hearers—Determines to go to Paris—Focus of Light—Coiffart's
-Invitation—Professor Cop goes to see him—Visit to a Nunnery—An Excursion
-on horseback—Devotes himself to Theology—Speaks in the Secret
-Assemblies—Movement in the <i>Quartier Latin</i>—Writings put into
-circulation—Calvin endeavours to bring back Briçonnet—Fills the Vessels
-with costly Wine—Efforts to convert a young Rake—Beda attacks the King's
-Professors—Calvin's Scriptural Principles—Small Beginnings of a great
-Work</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_63">63</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XVIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">MARGARET'S SORROWS AND THE FESTIVITIES OF
- THE COURT.</span><br />
- (1530-1531.)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Margaret promotes Unity—Progress of the Reformation—Death of the Queen's
-Child—Orders a <i>Te Deum</i> to be sung—Marriage of Francis I. and
-Eleanor—Crowd of learned Men—Margaret in the Desert—The Fountain Pure
-and Free—Fatal Illness of Louisa of Savoy—Margaret's Care and
-Zeal—Magnificent but chimerical Project</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_82">82</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XIX.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">DIPLOMATISTS, BACKSLIDERS, MARTYRS.</span><br />
- (1531.)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Charles V. accuses the Protestants—The German Protestants to Francis
-I.—The King sends an Envoy to them—The Envoy's Imprudence and
-Diplomacy—Queen Margaret's Prayer-book—Lecoq's Sermon before the
-King—<i>Sursum Corda</i>—Lecoq's Interview with the King—Lecoq's
-Fall—Fanaticism at Toulouse—Jean de Caturce finds Christ—Twelfth-night
-Supper—Caturce arrested—His Degradation—He disputes with a Monk—Two
-Modes of Reformation</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_93">93</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XX.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CALVIN'S SEPARATION FROM THE HIERARCHY:
- HIS FIRST WORK, HIS FRIENDS.</span><br />
- (1532.)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Daniel tries to bind Calvin to the Church—Calvin resists the
-Temptation—His Commentary on Seneca's <i>Clemency</i>—His Motives—His
-Difficulties and Troubles—Zeal in making his Book known—Calvin's Search
-for Bibles in Paris—An unfortunate <i>Frondeur</i>—Calvin receives him
-kindly—Various Attacks-The Shop of La Forge—Du Tillet and his
-Uncertainty—Testimony rendered to Calvin—Relations between Queen
-Margaret and Calvin—He refuses to enter the Queen's Service—The Arms of
-the Lord</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_110">110</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">SMALKALDE AND CALAIS.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">March to October 1532.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">William du Bellay and his Projects—Luther opposed to War—Alliance of
-Smalkalde-Assemblies at Frankfort and Schweinfurt—Luther's Opposition to
-Diplomacy—No Shedding of Blood—Du Bellay's Speech—Du Bellay and the
-Landgrave—The Wurtemberg Question—Peace of Nuremberg—Great Epochs of
-Revival—Francis I. unites with Henry VIII.—Confidential Intercourse at
-Bologna—Plan to emancipate his Kingdom from the Pope—Message sent by
-Francis to the Pope—Christendom will separate from Rome</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_126">126</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">A CAPTIVE PRINCE ESCAPES FROM THE HANDS OF
- THE EMPEROR.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Autumn 1532.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Alarm occasioned by this Conference—Christopher of Wurtemberg—His
-Adversity—The Emperor and his Court cross the Alps—Christopher's
-Flight—He is sought for in vain—Claims the Restoration of Wurtemberg</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_142">142</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE GOSPEL PREACHED AT THE LOUVRE AND IN THE
- METROPOLITAN CHURCHES.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Lent 1533.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Roussel invited to preach in the Churches—His Fears—Refusal of the
-Sorbonne—Preachings at the Louvre—Crowded Congregations—Effects of these
-Preachings—Margaret again desires to open the Churches—Courault and
-Berthaud preach in them—Essence of Evangelical Preaching—Its
-Effects—Agitation of the Sorbonne—They will not listen—Picard, the
-Firebrand—Sedition of Beda and the Monks—The People agitated—God holds
-the Tempests in his Hand</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_150">150</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXIV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">DEFEAT OF THE ROMISH PARTY IN PARIS, AND MOMENTARY
- TRIUMPH OF THE GOSPEL.</span><br />
- (1533.)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">The Chiefs of the two Parties imprisoned—Beda traverses Paris on his
-Mule—Indignation of the King—He insults the Deputies of the
-Sorbonne—Duprat imprisons Picard—Priests and Doctors summoned—Francis
-resolves to prosecute the Papists—Condemnation of the three Chiefs—Is
-the Cause of Rome lost?—Grief and Joy—Illusions of the Friends of the
-Reform—A Student from Strasburg—The four Doctors taken away by the
-Police—Belief that the Reform has come—The Students' Satire—Their Jokes
-upon Cornu—Appeal of the Sorbonne—Fresh Placards—Progress of the
-Reform—If God be for us, who can be against us?—Agitation—Siderander at
-the Gate of the Sorbonne—Desires to speak to Budæus—Fresh Attacks
-prepared</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_165">165</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CONFERENCE OF BOLOGNA. THE COUNCIL AND
- CATHERINE DE MEDICI.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Winter 1532-1533.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">The Parties face to face—The Emperor demands a Council—Reasons of the
-Pope against it—Moral Inertia of the Papacy—The Pope's
-Stratagems—Italian League—Tournon and Gramont arrive—They try to win
-over the Pope—A great but sad Affair—Catherine de Medici—Offer and
-Demand of Francis I.—The Pope's Joy—Thoughts of Henry VIII. on the
-proposed Marriage—Advantages to be derived from it</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_188">188</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXVI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">INTRIGUES OF CHARLES V., FRANCIS I., AND CLEMENT VII. AROUND
- CATHERINE.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Winter 1532-1533.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Doubts insinuated by Charles V.—Let the Full Powers be demanded—The
-King's Hesitation—The Full Powers arrive—The Emperor's new Manœuvres—His
-Vexation—Charles V. demands a General Council—Francis I. proposes a Lay
-Council—Importance of that Document—True Evangelical Councils—Charles
-condemns and Francis justifies—Secularisation of the Popedom—The Pope
-signs the Italian League—Cardinals' Hats demanded—Vexation of Charles V.—
-Projected Interview between the King and the Pope—The Marriage will
-take place</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_202">202</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXVII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">STORM AGAINST THE QUEEN OF NAVARRE AND HER
- MIRROR OF THE SOUL.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Summer 1533.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Uneasiness and Terror of the Ultramontanes—Plot against the Queen of
-Navarre—<i>The Mirror of the Sinful Soul</i>—Beda discovers Heresy in
-it—Denounces it to the Sorbonne—Assurance of Salvation—The Queen
-attacked from the Pulpits—Errors of Monasticism—The <i>Tales</i> of the
-Queen of Navarre—Search after and Seizure of the <i>Mirror</i>—Rage of
-the Monks against the Queen—Margaret's Gentleness—Comedy acted at the
-College of Navarre—The Fury Megæra—Transformation of the Queen—
-Montmorency tries to ruin her—Christians made a Show</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_219">219</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXVIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">TRIUMPH OF THE QUEEN OF NAVARRE.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Autumn 1533.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Montmorency—The Prior of Issoudun—The Police at the College—Arrest of
-the Principal and the Actors—Judgment of the Sorbonne denounced to the
-Rector—Speech of Rector Cop—The Sorbonne disavows the Act—Le Clerq's
-Speech—The University apologises—Reform Movement in France—Men of
-Mark—New Attacks</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_236">236</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXIX.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CATHERINE DE MEDICI GIVEN TO FRANCE.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">October 1533.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">The Marriage announced to the Cardinals—Stratagems of the Imperialists
-to prevent it—The Swiss—The Moors—The Pope determines to go—Catherine in
-the Ships of France—The Pope sails for France—Various Feelings—The
-Pope's Arrival at Marseilles—Nocturnal Visit of the King to the
-Pope—Embarrassment of the First President—Conferences between the King
-and the Pope—The Bull against the Heretics—The Wedding—Catherine's
-Joy—What Catherine brings—The Pope's Health declines—The Modern Janus</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_247">247</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXX.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">ADDRESS OF THE RECTOR TO THE UNIVERSITY
- OF PARIS.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">November 1533.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Calvin and Cop share the Work—Inaugural Sitting of the University in
-1533—Calvin's Address—The Will of God is manifested—Effect of the
-Address—Indignation of the Sorbonne—One only Universal Church—The
-University divided—Interest felt by the Queen—Calvin summoned by the
-Queen—No one shall stop the Renewal of the Church—The Rector going in
-State to the Parliament—Stopped by a Messenger—Cop's Flight—Order to
-arrest Calvin—He is entreated to flee—Calvin's Flight—Disguise—
-Probability of the Story—Goes into Hiding—Many Evangelicals leave
-Paris—Margaret's Farewell</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_264">264</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXXI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CONFERENCE AND ALLIANCE BETWEEN FRANCIS I. AND PHILIP
- OF HESSE AT BAR-LE-DUC.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Winter 1533-1534.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Christopher applies to Francis—Will the King unite with the
-Protestants?—Du Bellay urges him—Du Bellay passes through
-Switzerland—His Speech to Austria—Christopher's Friends—Du Bellay pleads
-for him—His Threats—The French Envoy triumphs—The Landgrave's
-Projects—Luther opposes them—Conversation between Luther and
-Melanchthon—Their Efforts with the Landgrave—Conference between the
-Landgrave and the King—Philip and Francis come to an Understanding—
-Francis asks for Melanchthon—The Treaty signed—Contradictions in
-Francis I</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_285">285</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXXII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">TRIUMPH AND MARTYRDOM.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Winter 1533-1534.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">The Churches of Paris closed against the Gospel—Private
-Assemblies—Dispersed by Morin—New Attack against the Faculty of
-Letters—Lutherans threatened with the Stake—Three hundred Evangelicals
-sent to Prison—Disputation between Beda and Roussel—Beda's Book
-exasperates the King—Margaret intercedes for the Evangelicals—They are
-set at liberty—Alexander at Geneva and in Bresse—He preaches at
-Lyons—His Activity and Prudence—He is believed to possess Satanic
-Powers—Margaret at Paris—The Populace hinder Roussel from
-preaching—Alexander preaches at Lyons at Easter—Seized and condemned to
-Death—Journey from Lyons to Paris—Appears before the Parliament—Put to
-the Torture—Sacerdotal Degradation—Martyrdom—Testimony rendered to
-Alexander</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_303">303</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXXIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">WURTEMBERG GIVEN TO PROTESTANTISM BY THE
- KING OF FRANCE.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Spring 1534.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Interview between Du Bellay and Bucer—The great Fusion is
-preparing—Francis I. aids it—His Hopes—Fears and Predictions in
-Germany—Austria invokes the Help of the Pope—Sanchez's Interview with
-Clement VII.—Consequences of the Temporal Power—The Landgrave advances
-with his Army—Melanchthon's Trouble—The Landgrave's Victory—Terror at
-Rome—Joy at the Louvre—Wurtemberg restored to its Princes—Religious
-Liberty established by the Treaty—Accessions to the Reform</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_326">326</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXXIV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">SITTING AT THE LOUVRE FOR THE UNION OF
- TRUTH AND CATHOLICISM.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Summer 1534.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">A Student of Nismes arrives at Wittemberg—Melanchthon's Letter to
-Margaret—Conversation between Margaret and Baduel—Francis I. sends
-Chelius into Germany—Melanchthon's Anguish—Chelius received with
-Joy—Melanchthon's Zeal—Diverse Opinions on the Union—Bucer's Approval
-and Sincerity—Memoirs of the three Doctors—Sitting at the Louvre—Bucer
-and Melanchthon denounce the Blemishes of Popery—Moderation—The Church
-must have a Government—One single Pontiff—Justification and the Mass—The
-Sacraments—Protest against Abuses—Melanchthon's Prayer</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_342">342</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXXV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE GHOST AT ORLEANS.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Summer 1534.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Death of the Provostess of Orleans—The Provost and the Friars—Vengeance
-invented by the Cordeliers—First Appearance of the Ghost—Second
-Appearance—The Provostess tormented for her Lutheranism—The Official's
-Investigation—The Students in the Chapel—The Provost appeals to the
-King—Arrest of the Monks—They are taken to Paris—The Novice confesses
-the Trick—Condemnation—End of the Matter</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_361">361</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XXXVI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">FRANCIS I. PROPOSES A REFORMATION TO
- THE SORBONNE.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Autumn 1534.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Francis acknowledges his Mistakes in Religion—Promises Help to the
-German Protestants—French Edition of the Articles communicated to Rome
-and the Sorbonne—Alarm of the Sorbonne—The French Spirit—Discussion
-between the King's Ministers and the Sorbonne—The Bishops and the Roman
-Pontiff—Indifferent Matters—Prayers to the Saints and Saints' Days—The
-Mass-mongers—Restoration of the Lord's Supper—Communion with Christ by
-Faith—Transubstantiation and the Monasteries—An Assembly of Laymen and
-Divines—Peril of Catholicism—England and France—Fresh Efforts of the
-Sorbonne—Is Protestantism to be feared by Kings?—Uneasiness of Calvin's
-Friends—Dangers of these Conciliations—An Event about to change the
-State of Things</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_375">375</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>BOOK III.<br />
- FALL OF A BISHOP-PRINCE, AND FIRST EVANGELICAL
- BEGINNINGS IN GENEVA.</p>
-
- <p style="margin-top:1.5em">CHAPTER I.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE RENAISSANCE, THE REFORMATION,
- THE MIDDLE AGES.</span><br />
- (1526.)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">The Crisis—The Means of Salvation—The Nations behindhand—New Position of
-Geneva—The Castles and the neighbouring Seigneurs—Pontverre against the
-Swiss Alliance—The Gentlemen on the Highway—Violence and Contempt—
-Sarcasms and Threats—The Genevans under arms—Moderation of the
-Genevans towards the Disloyal—Favre's Mission to Berne—Cartelier's
-Condemnation—Pardoned by the Bishop—The Bishop's Hesitation and Fear</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_397">397</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER II.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE GOSPEL AT GENEVA AND THE SACK OF ROME.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">January to June 1527.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Laymen and Ecclesiastics—Councillor Ab Hofen, the Friend of Zwingle, at
-Geneva—His Christian Conversations—The Priests—The Politicians—Zwingle's
-Encouragement—He cheers up Ab Hofen—Opposition and Dejection—Ab Hofen's
-Departure, Death, and Influence—The Sack of Rome—Effects of this
-Catastrophe—The Genevans compare the Pope and their Bishop—Union of
-Faith and Morality</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_412">412</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER III.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE BISHOP CLINGS TO GENEVA, BUT THE
- CANONS DEPART.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Summer 1527.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">The Bishop desires to ally with the Swiss—The Swiss refuse—Plot of the
-Duke against the Bishop—The Duke's Scheme—Preparations and Warning—The
-Bishop escapes—Failure of the Plot—Terror of the Bishop—The Huguenots
-wish to get rid of the Canons—The Bishop puts the Canons in prison—The
-Bishop desires to become a Citizen—The Syndics call for Lay
-Tribunals—The Bishop grants them—Joy of the Citizens—Prerogatives of the
-Bishop questioned—The Duke's Irritation—A Ducal Envoy releases the
-Canons—They quit Geneva—Various Opinions about their Departure</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_425">425</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER IV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE BISHOP-PRINCE FLEES FROM GENEVA.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">July and August 1527.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Bishopers and Commoners—Complaints against the Priests—A Young Woman
-kidnapped by the Bishop—The People compel him to restore her—Right of
-Resistance—Quarrels of the two Parties—The Duke's Threats—The Bishop's
-Fears—He determines to quit Geneva—His Night Escape—He arrives at St.
-Claude—Hugues returns in safety—The Hireling abandons his Flock</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_443">443</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER V.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">EXCOMMUNICATION OF GENEVA AND FUNERAL
- PROCESSION OF POPERY.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">August 1527 to February 1528.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">The Duke tries to gain the Bishop—The State of Geneva constituted—The
-Ducal Arms fall at Geneva—Geneva excommunicated—Geneva interdicts the
-Papal Bulls—Funeral Procession of Popery—Complaints of the
-Priests—Attempt to deprive Bonivard of St. Victor's—Bonivard on
-Excommunication—The Duke claims Authority in Matters of Faith—Resolute
-Answer of the Genevans—Canons sharply reprimanded by the Duke—Intentions
-of Charles</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_456">456</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER VI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE KNIGHTS OF THE SPOON LEAGUE AGAINST
- GENEVA AT THE CASTLE OF BURSINEL.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">March 1528.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Complaints of Bonivard about Geneva—Certain Huguenots go to St.
-Victor's—Bonivard's Address to them—Faults to be found in it—Huguenots
-eat Meat in Lent—The Meeting at Bursinel—Pontverre and the Spoon—The
-Fraternity of the Spoon—Alarm in Geneva—Rights of Princes and
-Subjects—Bonivard defends Cartigny—The Savoyards take the
-Castle—Bonivard fails to retake it—Progress of the Gospel in Geneva—Duke
-and Bishop reconciled—The City looks upon the Bishop as an Enemy</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_469">469</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER VII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">INTRIGUES OF THE DUKE AND THE BISHOP.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Spring and Summer 1528.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">The Bishop desires to withdraw the Criminal Administration from the
-Syndics—Noble Answer of the Genevans—The Bishop's Irritation—His furious
-Reception of a Genevan Envoy—Calm of the Genevans—The Duke convokes a
-Synod—Speech of Bishop Gazzini—Coldness of the Swiss—Ducal Intrigues in
-the Convents—The Order of the Keys—The Syndics at the Dominican Convent</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_484">484</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">DEATH OF PONTVERRE.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">October 1528 to January 1529.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Pontverre plunders Bonivard—Convokes the Fraternity at Nyon—Insolence of
-Pontverre when passing through Geneva—Conference at the Castle of
-Nyon—Resolutions adopted there—Pontverre desires to take Geneva by
-Treachery—Again attempts to pass through Geneva—His Insolence, Jests of
-the Genevans—Struggle on the Rhone Bridge—Pontverre flees—Last Struggle
-and Death—Act of Divine Justice—Honours paid him—Violence of the Nobles
-increases—Courageous Enterprise of Lullin and Vandel—A Genevan
-crucified—The Night of Holy Thursday—The Day of the Ladders</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_495">495</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER IX.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE REFORMATION BEGINS TO FERMENT IN GENEVA, AND THE OPPOSITION
- WITHOUT.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">April 1529 to January 1530.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Disorders and Superstitions in Geneva—Speech on the Saints'
-Bodies at St. Gervais—The Souls from Purgatory in the Cemetery—Protest
-at St. Gervais—Negative Reform—Representations
-of the Bishop—Genevans trust in God—The Cantons cool
-towards Geneva—The Swiss propose to revoke the Alliance—Energetic
-Refusal of the Genevans—They incline towards the
-Reform—Gazzini asks an Audience of the Pope—His Speech
-about Geneva and Savoy—The Pope's Answer—Letter of
-Charles V. to the Genevans—Emperor and Pope unite against
-Geneva</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_513">513</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER X.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">VARIOUS MOVEMENTS IN GENEVA AND SECOND IMPRISONMENT OF
- BONIVARD.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">March to May 1530.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">The Procurator-Fiscal's Complaints to the Council—Penalty denounced
-against the Lutherans, and against Impure Priests—Building the Wall of
-St. Gervais—Discourse of the Evangelical Swiss—Vandel wishes for a
-Preacher at St. Victor's—Bonivard claims his Revenues—His difficult
-Position—The Duke covets St. Victor's—Bonivard visits his sick
-Mother—Bonivard's Enemies at Geneva—He goes to Friburg—Determines to
-give up his Priory—Bellegarde welcomes Bonivard—Bonivard and his Guide
-in the Jorat—He is treacherously arrested—Bonivard at Chillon—His Future</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_529">529</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE ATTACK OF 1530.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">August, September, October.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Arrest of the Fiscal Mandolla—The Bishop takes his part—Hastens his
-Plans against Geneva—Bishop's Appeal to the Knights—He gives them their
-Instructions for the War—Crusade to maintain the Holy Faith—Prisoners in
-the Castles—Projects at Augsburg and Gex—De la Sarraz at the head of the
-Knights—Troops march against Geneva—Plans of the Enemy—A Friburg Herald
-maltreated—The Savoyard Army occupies the Suburbs—Preparations for the
-Assault—The Emperor receives Intelligence of the War—The Army
-retires—What is the Cause?—The Mercy of God—15,000 Swiss
-arrive—Soldierly Controversy—Burning of the Convent of Belle Rive—Good
-Catholics quartered at St. Claire—Mass at St. Claire; Preachings at St.
-Pierre—Castles taken and burnt—Devotedness of the Nuns of St.
-Claire—Truce of St. Julian</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_547">547</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">GENEVA RECLAIMED BY THE BISHOP, AND AWAKENED BY THE
- GOSPEL.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">November 1530 to October 1531.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Emperor's Letter to the Genevans—Their Answer—Fresh Armaments of the
-Duke—Decision of the Diet of Payerne—Pardon and Pilgrimage to St.
-Claire—Pilgrims sent back—Fresh Pardon; Religious Liberty—Repasts of the
-Pilgrims and Sarcasms of the Genevans—Angels protect St. Claire—The
-Pardon followed by an Awakening—<i>De Christo meditari</i>—Farel watches
-Geneva—Comprehends its Wants—Desires to send Toussaint to Geneva—He
-shrinks from the Struggle—Zwingle's Prayer; Fears of the
-Genevans—Examination of the Suspected—Friburg and Berne—Allies of the
-two Parties at Cappel</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_573">573</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">DANGERS TO WHICH THE DEFEAT AT CAPPEL
- EXPOSES GENEVA.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">October 1531 to January 1532.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Geneva attacked because elected of God—Defeat of Cappel—Triumph of the
-Romanists—Berne turns her back on Geneva—The Duke and his Army
-approach—Reply of Geneva to Berne—Seven Black Knights without Heads—God
-prepares Geneva by Trials—Effects produced within by Evils from
-without—The Swiss Patricians desire to rescind the Treaty—Geneva appeals
-to the People of Berne—The Great Councils are for Geneva—Retirement and
-Death of Hugues</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_591">591</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XIV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">AN EMPEROR AND A SCHOOLMASTER.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">Spring 1532.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">The Emperor desires to give Geneva to the Duke's Son—Zeal of the Duke,
-Firmness of the Genevans—The two Spheres of Christianity—Insufficiency
-of Negative Protestantism—Olivétan at Chautemps' House—His Piety, Zeal,
-and Courage—Conversations and Sermons—Olivétan's Discourse—The
-Judge—Carnal Men—Intellectual Men—Redemption by Blood—The Spirit of
-Jesus Christ—The Pioneer—Olivétan's Work</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_603">603</a></div>
-</div>
-
- <p>CHAPTER XV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE PARDON OF ROME AND THE PARDON OF HEAVEN.</span><br />
- (<span class="smc">June and July 1532.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="gist">Roman Jubilees—Fermentation at Geneva—A Power which devours everything
-that is given to it—Gospel Pardon of all Sins—Tumult around the
-Placards—Fight in the City—Catholic Intervention of Friburg—The Council
-strives to give Satisfaction—Reaction of the Evangelicals—Order to
-preach without Fables—The Nuncio and the Archbishop at Chambéry—Joy of
-the Evangelicals out of the City—The little Flock of Payerne—Letter of
-the Lovers of the Holy Gospel—The Standard-bearers of the Gospel of
-Christ—The Standard raised in Geneva—Geneva attacked by both
-Parties—Which will prevail?—The Struggle grows fiercer every day—The
-Strong Things of this World destroyed by the Weak</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right2"><span class="smc">Page</span> <a href="#Page_615">615</a></div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">{1}</a></div>
-
-<p class="center"><span style="font-size:125%">HISTORY</span><br />
- <span style="font-size:50%">OF</span><br />
- <span style="font-size:125%">THE REFORMATION IN EUROPE</span><br />
- <span style="font-size:100%">IN THE TIME OF CALVIN.</span></p>
-
- <h2>BOOK II.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">FRANCE. FAVOURABLE TIMES.</span></h2>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">JOHN CALVIN A STUDENT AT THE UNIVERSITY OF ORLEANS.<br />
- (1527-1528.)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CALVIN, whom his father's wishes and his own
-convictions urged to abandon the priestly career,
-for which he was preparing, had left Paris in the
-autumn of 1527, in order to go to Orleans and study
-jurisprudence under Pierre de l'Etoile, who was teaching
-there with great credit. 'Reuchlin, Aleander, and
-even Erasmus, have professed in this city,' said his
-pupils; 'but the Star (Etoile) eclipses all these suns.'
-He was regarded as the prince of French jurists.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_1" id="Ref_1" href="#Foot_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When Calvin arrived in that ancient city to which
-the Emperor Aurelian had given his name, he kept
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">{2}</a></span>
-himself apart, being naturally timid, and repelled by
-the noisy vivacity of the students. Yet his loving
-disposition sighed after a friend; and such he found
-in a young scholar, Nicholas Duchemin, who was
-preparing himself for a professorship in the faculty of
-letters.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_2" id="Ref_2" href="#Foot_2">[2]</a></span>
-Calvin fixed on him an observing eye, and
-found him modest, temperate, not at all susceptible,
-adopting no opinion without examination,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_3" id="Ref_3" href="#Foot_3">[3]</a></span>
-of equitable
-judgment, extreme prudence, and great mildness, but
-also a little slow in his movements. Duchemin's
-character formed a striking contrast with the vivacity,
-ardour, severity, activity, and, we will add, the susceptibility
-of Calvin. Yet he felt himself attracted towards
-the gentle nature of the young professor, and
-the very difference of their temperaments shed an
-inexpressible charm over all their intercourse. As
-Duchemin had but moderate means, he received students
-in his house, as many of the citizens did. Calvin
-begged to be admitted also, and thus became one of
-the members of his household. He soon loved Duchemin
-with all the energy of a heart of twenty, and
-rejoiced at finding in him a Mommor, an Olivétan,
-and even more. He wanted to share everything with
-Nicholas, to converse with him perpetually; and they
-had hardly parted, when he began to long to be with
-him again. 'Dear Duchemin!' he said to him, 'my
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">{3}</a></span>
-friend, you are dearer to me than life.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_4" id="Ref_4" href="#Foot_4">[4]</a></span>
-Ardent as
-was this friendship, it was not blind. Calvin, true to
-his character, discovered the weak point of his friend,
-who was deficient, he thought, in energy; and he
-reproved him for it. 'Take care,' he said, 'lest your
-great modesty should degenerate into indolence.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_5" id="Ref_5" href="#Foot_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE STUDENTS AT ORLEANS.=</p>
-
-<p>The scholar of Noyon, consoled by this noble friendship,
-began to examine more closely the university
-population around him. He was surprised to see
-crowds of students filling the streets, caring nothing
-for learning, so far as he could tell. At one time he
-would meet a young lord, in tight hose, with a richly
-embroidered doublet, small Spanish cloak, velvet cap,
-and showy dagger. This young gentleman, followed
-by his servant, would take the wall, toss his head
-haughtily, cast impertinent looks on each side of him,
-and want every one to give way to him. Farther on
-came a noisy band composed of the sons of wealthy
-tradesmen, who appeared to have no more taste for
-study than the sons of the nobility, and who went
-singing and 'larking' to one of the numerous tennis-courts,
-of which there were not less than forty in the
-city. Ten <i>nations</i>, afterwards reduced to four, composed
-the university. The German nation combined
-with 'the living and charming beauty of the body'
-that of a mind polished by continual study. Its
-library was called 'the abode of the Muses.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_6" id="Ref_6" href="#Foot_6">[6]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Calvin made a singular figure in the midst of the
-world around him. His small person and sallow face
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">{4}</a></span>
-formed a strong contrast with the ruddy features and
-imposing stature of Luther's fellow-countrymen. One
-thing, however, delighted him: 'The university,' he
-said, 'is quite a republican oasis in the midst of enslaved
-France.' The democratic spirit was felt even
-by the young aristocrats who were at the head of each
-nation, and the only undisputed authority in Orleans
-was that of Pierre de l'Etoile.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=ÉTOILE ON HERETICS.=</p>
-
-<p>This 'morning-star'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_7" id="Ref_7" href="#Foot_7">[7]</a></span>
-(as the registers of the Picard
-nation call him) had risen above the fogs and was
-shining like the sun in the schools. The great doctor
-combined an eminently judicial mind with an affectionate
-heart; he was inflexible as a judge, and tender
-as a mother. His manner of teaching possessed an
-inexpressible charm. As member of the council of
-1528, he had advocated the repression of heresy; but
-he had no sooner met Calvin at Orleans than, attracted
-by the beauty of his genius and the charms of his
-character, he loved him tenderly. Although opposed
-to the young man's religious opinions, he was proud
-of having him as his pupil, and was his friend to the
-last: thus giving a touching example in the sixteenth
-century of that noble christian equity which loves
-men while disapproving of their opinions.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_8" id="Ref_8" href="#Foot_8">[8]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Calvin, sitting on one of the benches in the school,
-listened attentively to the great doctor, and imbibed
-certain principles whose justice no one at that time in
-all christendom thought of disputing. 'The prosperity
-of nations,' said Pierre de l'Etoile, 'depends upon
-obedience to the laws. If they punish outrages against
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">{5}</a></span>
-the rights of man, much more ought they to punish
-outrages against the rights of God. What! shall the
-law protect a man in his body and goods, and not in
-his soul and his most precious and eternal inheritance?...
-A thief shall not be able to rob us of our purses,
-but a heretic may deprive us of heaven!' Jurists and
-students, nobles and people, were all convinced that
-the law ought equally to guarantee temporal and
-spiritual goods. 'Those insensate and furious men,'
-said the code which Pierre de l'Etoile was expounding
-to his pupils, 'who proclaim heretical and infamous
-opinions, and reject the apostolic and evangelical
-doctrine of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, in one
-only Godhead and one holy Trinity, ought first to be
-delivered up to divine vengeance, and afterwards visited
-with corporal punishment.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_9" id="Ref_9" href="#Foot_9">[9]</a></span>
-Is not that a <i>public offence</i>?'
-added the code; 'and although committed
-against the religion of God, is it not to the prejudice
-of all mankind?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_10" id="Ref_10" href="#Foot_10">[10]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Pierre de l'Etoile's youthful hearers received from
-these words those deep impressions which, being made
-while the character is forming, are calculated to last
-through life. The mind of man required time to
-throw off these legal prejudices, which had been the
-universal law of the understanding for more than
-a thousand years.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_11" id="Ref_11" href="#Foot_11">[11]</a></span>
-Could it be expected that a young
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">{6}</a></span>
-disciple, rising up against the most venerable teachers,
-should draw a distinction between the temporal and
-the spiritual sphere, between the old and the new
-economy, and insist that, inasmuch as grace had been
-proclaimed by virtue of the great sacrifice offered to
-eternal justice, it was repugnant to the Gospel of Christ
-for man to avenge the law of God by severe punishments?
-No: during the sixteenth, and even the
-seventeenth century, almost all enlightened minds
-remained, in this respect, sunk in lamentable error.</p>
-
-<p>Calvin, bashful and timid at first, gradually came
-round; his society was courted, and he conversed
-readily with all. He was received into the Picard
-nation. 'I swear,' he said, 'to guard the honour of
-the university and of my nation.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_12" id="Ref_12" href="#Foot_12">[12]</a></span>
-Yet he did not
-suffer himself to be bound by the university spirit:
-he had a larger mind than his fellow-students, and we
-find him in relation with men of all nations, towards
-whom he was drawn by a community of affection
-and study. Etoile gave his lessons in the monastery
-of Bonne Nouvelle. Calvin listened silently to the
-master's words, but between the lessons he talked
-with his companions, went in and out, or paced up
-and down the hall like the rest. One day, going up to
-one of the pillars, he took out his knife and carved a
-C, then an A, and at last there stood the word <span class="smc">Calvin</span>,
-as the historian of the university informs us. It was
-<i>Cauvin</i> perhaps, his father's name, or else <i>Calvinus</i>,
-for the students were fond of latinising their names.
-It was not until some time after, when the Latin word
-had been retranslated into French, that the Reformer
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">{7}</a></span>
-bore the more familiar name. This <i>Calvin</i> long remained
-on the pillar where the hand of the young
-Picard had cut it—a name of quarrels and discussions,
-insulted by the devout, but respected by many.
-'This precious autograph has disappeared,' says the
-historian, 'with the last vestiges of the building.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_13" id="Ref_13" href="#Foot_13">[13]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN HEAD OF THE PICARD NATION.=</p>
-
-<p>The Picards, proud of such a colleague, raised
-him to the highest post in the nation—that of proctor.
-Calvin was thus in the front rank in the public processions
-and assemblies of the university. He had to
-convene meetings, examine, order, decide, execute, and
-sign diplomas. Instead of assembling his <i>nationals</i>
-at a jovial banquet, Calvin, who had been struck
-by the disorders which had crept into these convivial
-meetings, paid over to the treasurer the sum
-which he would have expended, and made a present
-of books to the university library.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_14" id="Ref_14" href="#Foot_14">[14]</a></span>
-Erelong his
-office compelled him to display that firmness of character
-which distinguished him all his life. This hitherto
-unknown incident is worthy of being recorded.</p>
-
-<p>Every year, on the anniversary of the Finding of
-the Body of St. Firmin, the inhabitants of the little
-town of Beaugency, near Orleans, appeared in the
-church of St. Pierre, and, after the epistle had been
-chanted, handed to the proctor of the Picard nation
-a piece of gold called <i>maille de Florence</i>, of two
-crowns' weight.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_15" id="Ref_15" href="#Foot_15">[15]</a></span>
-'The origin of this ancient custom,'
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">{8}</a></span>
-they told Calvin, 'was this. On the 13th of January,
-687, the body of St. Firmin the martyr having been
-solemnly exhumed, a marvellous change took place
-in nature. The trees put forth fresh leaves and
-blossoms, and at the same time a supernatural odour
-filled the air. Simon, lord of Beaugency, who suffered
-from leprosy, having gone to the window of his
-castle to witness the ceremony, was restored to health
-by the sweet savour. In token of his gratitude he
-settled an annual offering of a gold <i>maille</i>, payable
-at first to the chapter of Amiens, and afterwards to
-the Picard students embodied in their nation at
-Orleans.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_16" id="Ref_16" href="#Foot_16">[16]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Calvin, who blames 'the old follies and nonsense
-which men substitute for the glory of Jesus Christ,'
-did not place great faith in this miracle. However,
-as the tribute was not paid in 1527, he resolved to go
-with his 'nation' and demand it. He assembled his
-fellow-students, and placing a band of music and the
-beadles in front, he led the procession; all his 'nationals'
-followed after him in a line, and in due course
-the joyous troop arrived at Beaugency, where the
-<i>maille</i> was placed in his hand. It bore in front an
-image of John the Baptist, and on the reverse a fleur-de-lys
-with the word <i>Florentia</i>. The Picard students
-were satisfied, and, with their illustrious chief at their
-head, resumed the road to Orleans, bringing back the
-golden <i>maille</i> in triumph, as Jason and the Argonauts
-had in days of yore returned from Colchis with the
-golden fleece. The procession reentered the city
-amid the shouts of the university. Calvin was one
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">{9}</a></span>
-day to rob the <i>dragon</i> of a more magnificent treasure,
-and nations more numerous were to show their joy by
-louder shouts of gladness.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_17" id="Ref_17" href="#Foot_17">[17]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN'S STUDIES AND FRIENDS.=</p>
-
-<p>Although Calvin would not separate from his
-fellow-students, he often suffered in the midst of this
-noisy and dissolute multitude, and turned with disgust
-from the duels, intrigues, and excesses which
-filled so large a space in the student life. He preferred
-study, and had applied to the law with his whole
-heart.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_18" id="Ref_18" href="#Foot_18">[18]</a></span>
-The vivacity of his wit, the strength of his
-memory, the remarkable style in which he clothed the
-lessons of his masters, the facility with which he
-caught up certain expressions, certain sentences, which
-fell from their lips, 'the starts and flashes of a bright
-mind, which he displayed at intervals,'—all this, says
-a Roman-catholic historian, soon made him distinguished
-by the professors.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_19" id="Ref_19" href="#Foot_19">[19]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But he was destined to find something better on
-the banks of the Loire: the work begun at Paris was
-to be strengthened and developed at Orleans. Calvin,
-always beloved by those who knew him, made numerous
-friends, especially among certain men attacked
-by the priests, and whose faith was full of christian
-meekness. Every day he had a serious conversation
-with Duchemin.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_20" id="Ref_20" href="#Foot_20">[20]</a></span>
-In order to lessen his expenses,
-he had shared his room with a pious German, formerly
-a grey friar, who having learnt, as Luther
-said, that it is not the cowl of St. Francis which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">{10}</a></span>
-saves, but the blood of Jesus Christ, had thrown off
-his filthy frock<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_21" id="Ref_21" href="#Foot_21">[21]</a></span>
- and come to France. The Picard
-student talked with him of Germany and of the Reformation;
-and some persons have thought that this
-was what first 'perverted Calvin from the true
-faith.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_22" id="Ref_22" href="#Foot_22">[22]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=DUCHEMIN, DANIEL, WOLMAR.=</p>
-
-<p>Next to the house of Duchemin where the wind
-of the new doctrine was blowing; next to the library,
-whose curator, Philip Laurent, became his friend:
-Calvin loved particularly to visit the family of an
-advocate where three amiable, educated, and pious
-ladies afforded him the charms of agreeable conversation.
-It was that of Francis Daniel, 'a person,'
-says Beza, 'who, like Duchemin, had a knowledge of
-the truth.' He was a grave and influential man,
-possessing inward christianity, and (perhaps his profession
-of lawyer had something to do with it) of a
-very conservative mind, holding both to the forms and
-ordinances of the Church. Calvin, on leaving the
-schools, the library, and his study, used to seek relaxation
-in this house. The company of educated and
-pious women may have exercised a happy influence
-over his mind, which he would have sought in vain
-in the society of the learned. And accordingly,
-whenever he was away, he did not fail to remember
-his friend's mother, wife, and sister Frances.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_23" id="Ref_23" href="#Foot_23">[23]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the company of these ladies he sometimes met a
-young man for whom he felt but little sympathy: he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">{11}</a></span>
-was a student from Paris, Coiffard by name, lively,
-active, intelligent, but selfish.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_24" id="Ref_24" href="#Foot_24">[24]</a></span>
-How much he preferred
-Daniel, in whom he found a mind so firm, a
-soul so elevated, and with whom he held such profitable
-conversations! The two friends were agreed on
-one point—the necessity of a Reformation of the
-Church; but they soon came to another point which
-at a later day occasioned a wide divergence between
-them. 'The reformation,' said the advocate, 'must
-be accomplished in the Church; we must not separate
-from the Church.' The intercourse between Calvin
-and Duchemin gradually became less frequent; the
-latter, being naturally rather negligent, did not reply
-to his friend's letters.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_25" id="Ref_25" href="#Foot_25">[25]</a></span>
-But Calvin's attachment for
-Daniel grew stronger so long as the reformer remained
-in France, and to him almost all the letters are addressed
-which he wrote between 1529 and 1536.</p>
-
-<p>But all these friendships did not satisfy Calvin; at
-Daniel's, at Duchemin's, at the library, and wherever
-he went, he heard talk of a man whom he soon burned
-to know, and who exercised over him more influence
-than all the rest. A poor young German of Rotweil,
-named Melchior Wolmar, had come to Paris,
-and, being forced to work for a living, had served for
-some time as corrector for the press.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_26" id="Ref_26" href="#Foot_26">[26]</a></span>
-Greedy of
-knowledge, the youthful reader quitted his proofs
-from time to time, and slipped among the students
-who crowded round the illustrious John Lascaris,
-Budæus, and Lefèvre. In the school of the latter he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">{12}</a></span>
-became a sincere christian; in the school of the former,
-a great hellenist. When he took his degree of
-M.A. along with a hundred others, he occupied the
-first place. Having one day (when in Germany) to
-make a speech in his mother-tongue, Wolmar asked
-permission to speak in Greek, because, he said, that
-language was more familiar to him. He had been
-invited to Orleans to teach Greek; and being poor,
-notwithstanding his learning, he took into his house
-a small number of young children of good family.
-'He was my faithful instructor,' says one of them,
-Theodore Beza; 'with what marvellous skill he gave
-his lessons, not only in the liberal arts, but also in
-piety!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_27" id="Ref_27" href="#Foot_27">[27]</a></span>
-His pupils did not call him <i>Melchior</i>, but
-<i>Melior</i> (better).</p>
-
-<p class="side">=STUDY OF GREEK.=</p>
-
-<p>Calvin, whose exalted soul was attracted by all that
-is beautiful, became attached to this distinguished
-professor. His father had sent him to study civil
-law; but Wolmar 'solicited him to devote himself to
-a knowledge of the Greek classics.' At first Calvin
-hesitated, but yielded at last. 'I will study Greek,'
-he said, 'but as it is you that urge me, you also
-must assist me.' Melchior answered that he was
-ready to devote to him abundantly, not only his instruction,
-but his person, his life, himself.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_28" id="Ref_28" href="#Foot_28">[28]</a></span>
-From
-that time Calvin made the most rapid progress in
-Greek literature. The professor loved him above all
-his pupils.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_29" id="Ref_29" href="#Foot_29">[29]</a></span>
-In this way he was placed in a condition
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">{13}</a></span>
-to become the most illustrious commentator of
-Scripture. 'His knowledge of Greek,' adds Beza,
-'was of great service to all the Church of God.'
-What Cordier had been to him for Latin, Wolmar
-was for Greek.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_1" id="Foot_1" href="#Ref_1">[1]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Jurisconsultorum Gallorum princeps.'—Bezæ <i>Vita Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_2" id="Foot_2" href="#Ref_2">[2]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Jam dedisti nomen inter rei litterariæ professores.'—Calvinus Chemino,
-Berne MSS. This letter will be found in the <i>Letters of John
-Calvin</i>, published in English at Philadelphia, by the learned Dr. Jules
-Bonnet, to whom I am indebted for the communication of the Latin
-manuscripts.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_3" id="Foot_3" href="#Ref_3">[3]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In ea natus es dexteritate, quæ nihil imprudenter præjudicare soleat.'—Calvinus
-Chemino.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_4" id="Foot_4" href="#Ref_4">[4]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Mi Chemine! amice mi! mea vita charior!'—Calvinus Chemino.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_5" id="Foot_5" href="#Ref_5">[5]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Vide ne desidem te faciat tuus pudor!'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_6" id="Foot_6" href="#Ref_6">[6]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Le Maire, <i>Antiquités d'Orléans</i>, i. p. 388.—<i>Theod. Beza</i> von Baum,
-i. p. 27.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_7" id="Foot_7" href="#Ref_7">[7]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ille quasi stella matutina in medio nebulæ et quasi sol refulgens
-emicuit.'—Bimbenet, <i>Histoire de l'Université des Lois d'Orléans</i>, p. 357.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_8" id="Foot_8" href="#Ref_8">[8]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. pp. 354-357.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_9" id="Foot_9" href="#Ref_9">[9]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hæretici divina primum vindicta, post etiam ... ultione plectendi.'—<i>Justiniani
-Codicis</i> lib. i. tit. i.: <i>De summa Trinitate, et ut nemo de ea
-publice contradicere audeat</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_10" id="Foot_10" href="#Ref_10">[10]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Publicum crimen, quia quod in religionem divinam committitur in
-omnium fertur injuriam.'—Ibid. tit. v.: <i>De Hæreticis</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_11" id="Foot_11" href="#Ref_11">[11]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The Justinian code dates from 529 <small>A.D.</small>, just a thousand years before
-the time of Calvin's studies; but the greater part of the laws contained
-in it were of older date.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_12" id="Foot_12" href="#Ref_12">[12]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bimbenet, <i>Hist. de l'Univ. des Lois d'Orléans</i>, p. 30.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_13" id="Foot_13" href="#Ref_13">[13]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bimbenet, <i>Hist. de l'Univ. d'Orléans</i>, p. 358. The prefecture now
-occupies the site of Bonne Nouvelle.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_14" id="Foot_14" href="#Ref_14">[14]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. pp. 40, 41, 51, 52, 358.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_15" id="Foot_15" href="#Ref_15">[15]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-This <i>maille</i> was probably the gold florin of Florence. The <i>giglio
-fiorentino</i> is the badge of this city, and John the Baptist its patron.</p>
-
-<p style="padding-left:4em">'La lega suggellata del Batista,'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent">says Dante in the <i>Inferno</i>, xxx. 74.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_16" id="Foot_16" href="#Ref_16">[16]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-M. Bimbenet, chief greffier to the Imperial Court of Orleans, gives
-this tradition in his <i>Hist. de l'Univ. d'Orléans</i>, pp. 161, 162, 179-358.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_17" id="Foot_17" href="#Ref_17">[17]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Hist. de l'Univ. d'Orléans</i>, pp. 173, 176, 179.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_18" id="Foot_18" href="#Ref_18">[18]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut patris voluntati obsequerer, fidelem operam impendere conatus
-sum.'—Calv. <i>in Psalm</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_19" id="Foot_19" href="#Ref_19">[19]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Singularem ingenii alacritatem,' &amp;c.—Flor. Rémond, <i>Hist. de
-l'Hérésie</i>, liv. vii. ch. ix.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_20" id="Foot_20" href="#Ref_20">[20]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Longa consuetudine diuturnoque usu.'—Bezæ <i>Vita Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_21" id="Foot_21" href="#Ref_21">[21]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Läusige Kappe.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_22" id="Foot_22" href="#Ref_22">[22]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Remarques sur la Vie de Calvin, Hérésiarque</i>, by J. Desmay, vicar-general,
-p. 43.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_23" id="Foot_23" href="#Ref_23">[23]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Saluta matrem, uxorem, sororem Franciscam.'—Calvinus Danieli,
-Berne MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_24" id="Foot_24" href="#Ref_24">[24]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'De Coiffartio quid aliud dicam, nisi hominem esse sibi natum?'—Calvinus
-Danieli, Geneva MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_25" id="Foot_25" href="#Ref_25">[25]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Calvin's Letters</i>, Philadelphia, i. p. 32.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_26" id="Foot_26" href="#Ref_26">[26]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Wolmar, <i>Commentaire sur l'Iliade</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_27" id="Foot_27" href="#Ref_27">[27]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Beza, <i>Vie de Calvin et Histoire des Eglises Réformées</i>, i. p. 67.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_28" id="Foot_28" href="#Ref_28">[28]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quam liberaliter paratus fueris te mihi officiaque tua impendere.'—Calv.
-<i>in 2ᵃᵐ Ep. ad Cor.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_29" id="Foot_29" href="#Ref_29">[29]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Præ cæteris discipulis diligere ac magnifacere eum cœpit.'—Flor.
-Rémond, <i>Hist. de l'Hérésie</i>, liv. vii. ch. ix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">{14}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XIV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CALVIN TAUGHT AT ORLEANS OF GOD AND MAN;<br />
- BEGINS TO DEFEND AND PROPAGATE THE FAITH.<br />
- (1528.)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CALVIN was to receive something more from Wolmar;
-he was about to begin, under his guidance,
-the work of all his life—to learn and to teach Christ.
-The knowledge which he acquired at the university of
-Orleans, philosophy, law, and even Greek, could not
-suffice him. The moral faculty is the first in man,
-and ought to be the first in the university also. The
-object of the Reformation was to found, not an intellectual,
-but a moral empire; it was to restore holiness
-to the Church. This empire had begun in Calvin;
-his conscience had been stirred; he had sought salvation
-and found it; but he had need of knowledge, of
-increase in grace, of practice in life, and these he was
-about to strive after.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=WOLMAR AND CALVIN STUDY THE EPISTLES.=</p>
-
-<p>Melchior, like Melanchthon, had set himself to
-study the Holy Scriptures in the original languages,
-and in them had found light and peace. Calvin, on
-his side, 'having acquired some taste for true piety,'
-as he informs us, 'was burning with a great desire to
-advance.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_30" id="Ref_30" href="#Foot_30">[30]</a></span>
-The most intimate confidence and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">{15}</a></span>
-freest communication were established between the
-professor and the scholar. Melchior spoke to Calvin
-of Germany and the Reformation; he read the Greek
-Testament with him, set before him the riches of Christ
-announced therein, and, when studying the Epistles
-of St. Paul, explained to him the doctrine of imputed
-righteousness which forms the essence of their teaching.
-Calvin, seated in his master's study, listened in silence,
-and respectfully embraced that mystery so strange
-and yet so profoundly in harmony with the righteousness
-of God!... 'By faith,' said Wolmar, 'man is
-united to Christ and Christ to him, so that it is no
-longer man whom God sees in the sinner, but his
-dearly beloved Son himself; and the act by virtue of
-which God makes the sinner an inheritor of heaven,
-is not an arbitrary one. The doctrine of justification,'
-added Wolmar, 'is in Luther's opinion the capital
-doctrine, <i>articulus stantis vel cadentis Ecclesiæ.</i>'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_31" id="Ref_31" href="#Foot_31">[31]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But Calvin's chief teacher was God. At Orleans
-he had more of those struggles, which are often prolonged
-in strong natures. Some take him simply for
-a metaphysical thinker, a learned and subtle theologian;
-on the contrary, no other doctor has had more
-experience of those tempests that stir up the heart to
-its lowest deeps. 'I feel myself pricked and stung
-to the quick by the judgment of God. I am in a continual
-battle; I am assaulted and shaken, as when an
-armed man is forced by a violent blow to stagger a
-few steps backwards.' The light which had rejoiced
-him so much when he was in college at Paris, seemed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">{16}</a></span>
-almost to have faded away. 'I am like a wretched
-man shut up in a deep dungeon, who receives the
-light of day obliquely and in part, only through a high
-and narrow loop-hole.' He persevered, however; he
-fixed his eyes on Jesus, and was soon able to say: 'If
-I have not the full and free sight of the sun, I distinguish
-however his light afar, and enjoy its brightness.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_32" id="Ref_32" href="#Foot_32">[32]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>People at Orleans soon found out that there was
-something new and strange in this young man. It
-was in this city, in the year 1022, that the revival of
-modern times, if we may so speak, had begun among
-the heads of a school of theology at that time very
-celebrated. Priests and canons had told the people
-who listened to them, both in Orleans and in the
-neighbouring towns, 'that they ought to be filled
-with the gift of the Holy Spirit; that this Spirit
-would reveal to them all the depths and all the dignity
-of the Scriptures;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_33" id="Ref_33" href="#Foot_33">[33]</a></span>
-that they would be fed with
-heavenly food and refreshed by an inward fulness.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_34" id="Ref_34" href="#Foot_34">[34]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>These <i>heretics</i> had been put to death at Orleans.
-Would they be seen rising again, after more than
-five centuries, in the city and even in the university?
-Many doctors and students opposed Calvin: 'You
-are a schismatic,' they said; 'you are separating from
-the Church!' Calvin, alarmed at these accusations,
-was a prey to fresh anguish.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN'S ANGUISH AND HUMILITY.=</p>
-
-<p>Then, as he informs us, he began to meditate on
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">{17}</a></span>
-the Psalms, and in the struggles of David he found
-an image of his own: 'Ah!' he exclaimed, 'the Holy
-Spirit has here painted to the life all the pains, sorrows,
-fears, doubts, hopes, anxieties, perplexities, and
-even the confused emotions with which my mind is
-wont to be agitated.... This book is an anatomy of
-all the parts of the soul.... There is no affection in
-man which is not here represented as in a glass.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_35" id="Ref_35" href="#Foot_35">[35]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This man, whom the Romish and other legends
-describe as vain, proud, and insensible, desired to see
-himself as he was, without screening any of his faults.
-'Of the many infirmities to which we are subject,' he
-said, 'and of the many vices of which we are full, not
-one ought to be hidden. Ah! truly it is an excellent
-and singular gain, when all the hiding-places are laid
-open, and the heart is brought into the light and
-thoroughly cleansed of all hypocrisy and foul infection.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_36" id="Ref_36" href="#Foot_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Such are the principles by which the Reformation
-has triumphed. Its great organs desired that men's
-hearts should be 'cleansed of all foul infection.' It is
-a singular delusion of those writers who, seeing things
-otherwise than they are, ascribe this divine work to
-vile interests and base passions. According to them,
-its causes were jealousy of the Augustine monks, the
-ambition of princes, the greed of nobles, and the
-carnal passions of priests, which, however, as we have
-seen, had but too free scope during the middle ages.
-A searching glance into the souls of the Reformers
-lays bare to us the cause of the revival. If the
-writers of whom I have spoken were right, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">{18}</a></span>
-Reformation ought not to have waited until Luther for
-its accomplishment; for there had existed for ages in
-christendom ambitious princes, greedy nobles, jealous
-monks, and impure priests. But what was really
-a new thing was to find men who, like the reformers,
-opened their hearts to the light of the Holy
-Spirit, believed in the Word of God, found Jesus
-Christ, esteemed everything in comparison with
-him as loss, lived the life of God, and desired that
-'all hiding-places should be laid open,' and men's
-hearts cleansed of all hypocrisy. Such were the true
-sources of the Reformation.</p>
-
-<p>The adversaries of the Gospel understood the
-danger incurred by the Church of Rome from the
-principles professed by Calvin; and hence they called
-him wicked and profane, and, as he says, 'heaped
-upon his head a world of abuse.' They said that
-he ought to be expelled from the Church. Then
-the student, 'cast down but not destroyed,' retiring
-to his chamber, would exclaim: 'If I am at war with
-such masters, I am not, however, at war with thy
-Church, O God! Why should I hesitate to separate
-from these false teachers whom the apostles call thy
-enemies?<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_37" id="Ref_37" href="#Foot_37">[37]</a></span>
-... When cursed by the unrighteous
-priests of their day, did not thy prophets remain in
-the true unity of thy children? Encouraged by their
-example, I will resist those who oppress us, and
-neither their threats nor their denunciations shall
-shake me.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_38" id="Ref_38" href="#Foot_38">[38]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=PHASES OF CALVIN'S CONVERSION.=</p>
-
-<p>The conversion of Calvin, begun at Paris, was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">{19}</a></span>
-completed at Orleans. There are, as we have said,
-several phases in this work. The first is that of the
-conscience, where the soul is aroused; the second is
-that of the understanding, where the mind is enlightened;
-then comes the last, where the new man is built
-up, where he strikes deeper root in Christ, and bears
-fruit to God. At Paris, Calvin had heard in his heart
-the divine voice calling him to eternal life; at Orleans,
-he constantly studied the Holy Scriptures,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_39" id="Ref_39" href="#Foot_39">[39]</a></span>
-and became
-'learned in the knowledge of salvation,' as
-Theodore Beza tells us. The Church herself has gone
-through similar phases: the first epoch of her history,
-that of the apostolic fathers,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_40" id="Ref_40" href="#Foot_40">[40]</a></span>
-was that of simple piety
-without the scientific element; the second, the age of
-the apologists, was that of a christian understanding
-seeking to justify its faith in the eyes of reason. Calvin
-had followed this road; but he did not give way to
-an intellectualism which would have brought back
-death into his heart. On the contrary, the third
-phase began immediately, and from day to day the
-christian life became in him more spiritual and more
-active.</p>
-
-<p>The conversion of Calvin and of the other reformers—we
-must insist upon this point—was not simply a
-change wrought by study in their thoughts and in
-their system. Calvin did not set himself the task of
-inventing a new theology, as his adversaries have
-asserted. We do not find him coldly meditating on
-the Church, curiously examining the Scriptures, and
-seeking in them a means of separating a portion
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">{20}</a></span>
-of christendom from Rome. The Reformation was
-not the fruit of abstract reasoning; it proceeded
-from an inward labour, a spiritual combat, a victory
-which the reformers won by the sweat of their brow,
-or rather ... of their heart. Instead of composing
-his doctrine chapter after chapter, Calvin, thirsting
-for righteousness and peace, found it in Christ.
-'Placed as in the furnace of God (they are his own
-words), the scum and filth of his faith were thus
-purified.' Calvin was put into the crucible, and the
-new truth came forth, burning and shining like gold,
-from the travail of his melted soul. In order to comprehend
-the productions of nature or of art, we must
-study closely the secrets of their formation. We have
-on a former occasion sought to discover the generative
-principle of the Reformation in the heart of
-Luther; we are now striving to discern it in Calvin
-also. Convictions, affections, intelligence, activity—all
-these were now in process of formation in that
-admirable genius under the life-giving rays of truth.</p>
-
-<p class="side">='I SACRIFICE MY HEART TO THEE.'=</p>
-
-<p>There came a moment when Calvin, desirous of
-possessing God alone, renounced the world, which,
-from that time, has never ceased to hate him: 'I have
-not sued thee by my love, O Christ,' he said; 'thou
-hast loved me of thy free will. Thou hast shone into
-my soul, and then everything that dazzled my eyes by
-a false splendour immediately disappeared, or at least
-I take no count of it. As those who travel by sea,
-when they find their ship in danger, throw everything
-overboard, in order that, having lightened the vessel,
-they may arrive safely in port; in like manner I prefer
-being stripped of all that I have, rather than be deprived
-of thee. I would rather live poor and miserable
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">{21}</a></span>
-than be drowned with my riches. Having cast
-my goods into the waves, I begin to have hope of escape
-since the vessel is lightened.... I come to thee
-naked and empty.... And what I find in thee is not
-a trifling vulgar gain: I find everything there.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_41" id="Ref_41" href="#Foot_41">[41]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Thus lifting up his hands to God, Calvin offered the
-sacrifice of a heart burning with love. He made
-this grand thought the charter of his nobility, his
-blazon, and engraving this design on his seal, a hand
-presenting a heart in sacrifice, he wrote round it:
-<i>Cor meum velut mactatum Domino in sacrificium
-offero</i>—'O Lord, I offer unto thee as a sacrifice my
-heart immolated to thee.' Such was his device—such
-was his life.</p>
-
-<p>The eyes of many began already to be turned upon
-him with admiration. The surprising clearness of
-his mind, the powerful convictions of his heart, the
-energy of his regenerated will, the strength of his
-reasoning, the luminous flashes of his genius, and the
-severe beauties of his eloquence—all betokened in
-him one of the great men of the age. 'A wonderful
-mind!' says Florimond de Rémond, one of his chief
-adversaries, 'a mind keen and subtle to the highest
-degree, prompt and sudden in its imaginations! What
-a praiseworthy man he would have been, if, sifting
-away the vices (heresy), the virtues alone could have
-been retained!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_42" id="Ref_42" href="#Foot_42">[42]</a></span>
-There was doubtless something
-wanting in Calvin: he may not have had that smiling
-imagination which, at the age he had now reached, generally
-gilds life with the most brilliant colours; the world
-appeared to him one wide shipwreck. But, possessing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">{22}</a></span>
-the glance of the eagle, he discovered a deliverance in
-the future, and his powerful hand, strengthened by
-God, was about to prepare the great transformations
-of the Church and of the world.</p>
-
-<p>He was indefatigable in labour. When the day
-was ended, and his companions indulged in dissipation
-or in sleep, Calvin, restricting himself to a slight
-repast for fear of oppressing his head, withdrew to his
-room and sat down to study the Scriptures. At
-midnight he extinguished his lamp,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_43" id="Ref_43" href="#Foot_43">[43]</a></span>
-and early in the
-morning, when he awoke and before he left his bed, he
-'ruminated,' says Beza, on what he had read and
-learnt the night before.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_44" id="Ref_44" href="#Foot_44">[44]</a></span>
-'We were his friends, we
-shared his room with him,' said Theodore Beza's informants.
-'We only tell you what we have seen.'—'Alas!'
-adds the reformer, 'these long vigils, which
-so wonderfully developed his faculties and enriched
-his memory, weakened his health, and laid the foundation
-of those sufferings and frequent illnesses which
-shortened his days.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_45" id="Ref_45" href="#Foot_45">[45]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN SOUGHT AS A TEACHER.=</p>
-
-<p>His taste for Holy Scripture did not divert Calvin
-from the study of law. He was unwilling that the
-labours of his profession should suffer in any degree
-from the labours of piety. He made such remarkable
-progress in jurisprudence that he was soon looked
-upon, by both students and professors, as a master and
-not as a scholar.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_46" id="Ref_46" href="#Foot_46">[46]</a></span>
-One day, Pierre de l'Etoile begged
-him to give a lesson in his place; and the young man
-of nineteen or twenty discharged his duty with so much
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">{23}</a></span>
-skill and clearness, that he was considered as destined to
-become the greatest jurist in France. The professors
-often employed him as their substitute.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_47" id="Ref_47" href="#Foot_47">[47]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To knowledge he joined communion. While still
-continuing to follow the lessons of Etoile, Calvin
-'sought the company of the faithful servants of God,'
-as he tells us. All the children of God (he thought)
-should be united together by a bond of brotherly
-union. He mixed also with everybody, even with the
-gainsayers, and if they attacked the great doctrines of
-Gospel truth, he defended them. But he did not put
-himself forward. He could discern when, how far,
-and to whom it was expedient to speak, and never
-exposed the doctrine of Christ to the jeers of the unbeliever
-by imprudence or by the fears of the flesh.
-When he opened his mouth, every one of his words
-struck home. 'Nobody can withstand him,' they said,
-'when he has the Bible in his hand.'</p>
-
-<p>Students who felt a difficulty in believing, townspeople
-who could not understand, went and begged
-him to teach them.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_48" id="Ref_48" href="#Foot_48">[48]</a></span>
-He was abashed. 'I am but
-a poor recruit,' he said, 'and you address me as if I
-were a general.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_49" id="Ref_49" href="#Foot_49">[49]</a></span>
-As these requests were constantly
-renewed, Calvin tried to find some hiding-place where
-he could read, meditate, and pray, secure from interruption.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_50" id="Ref_50" href="#Foot_50">[50]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At one time it was the room of a friend,
-a nook in the university library, or some shady retreat
-on the banks of the river. But he was hardly absorbed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">{24}</a></span>
-in meditation or in the study of Scripture, before he
-found himself surrounded by persons eager to hear him,
-and who refused to withdraw. 'Alas!' he exclaimed,
-'all my hiding-places are turned into public schools.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_51" id="Ref_51" href="#Foot_51">[51]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Accordingly he sought still more private retreats;
-for he wished to understand before he taught. The
-French love to see clearly into things; but their defect
-in this respect is that they often do not go deep enough,
-or fail to observe that by going deep they arrive at
-truths in whose presence the most eminent minds
-ought to confess their insufficiency and believe in the
-revelation from God. In the middle ages there had
-been men who wished to bring the mysteries of the
-catholic faith to the test of reason;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_52" id="Ref_52" href="#Foot_52">[52]</a></span>
-Abelard was at
-the head of that phalanx. Calvin was not a new
-Abelard. He did not presume to fathom impenetrable
-mysteries, but sought in Scripture the light and the
-life of his soul.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=HE TEACHES IN PRIVATE FAMILIES.=</p>
-
-<p>His admirers returned to him. Several citizens of
-Orleans opened their houses to him, saying: 'Come
-and teach openly the salvation of man.' Calvin shrank
-back. 'Let no one disturb my repose,' he said; 'leave
-me in peace.' His repose, that is to say his studies,
-were his only thought. But these souls, thirsting for
-truth, did not yield so easily. 'A repose of darkness!'
-replied the most ardent; 'an ignoble peace!<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_53" id="Ref_53" href="#Foot_53">[53]</a></span>
-Come
-and preach!' Calvin remembered the saying of St.
-Chrysostom: 'Though a thousand persons should call
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">{25}</a></span>
-you, think of your own weakness, and obey only under
-constraint.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_54" id="Ref_54" href="#Foot_54">[54]</a></span>
-'Well, then, we constrain you,' answered
-his friends. 'O God! what desirest thou of me?'
-Calvin would exclaim at such moments. 'Why dost
-thou pursue me? Why dost thou turn and disturb
-me, and never leave me at rest? Why, despite my
-disposition, dost thou lead me to the light and bring
-me into play?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_55" id="Ref_55" href="#Foot_55">[55]</a></span>
-Calvin gave way, however, and
-understood that it was his duty to publish the Gospel.
-He went to the houses of his friends. A few men,
-women, and young people gathered round him, and
-he began to explain the Scriptures. It was quite
-a new order of teaching: there were none of those
-distinctions and deductions of scholastic science, at
-that time so familiar to the preachers. The language
-of the young man possessed an admirable simplicity, a
-piercing vitality, and a holy majesty which captivated
-the heart. 'He teaches the truth,' said his hearers
-as they withdrew, 'not in affected language, but with
-such depth, solidity, and weight, that every one who
-hears him is struck with admiration.' These are the
-words of a contemporary of Calvin, who lived on the
-spot, and in the very circle in which the Reformer
-then moved. 'While at Orleans,' adds this friend,
-Theodore Beza, 'Calvin, chosen from that time to
-be an instrument of election in the Lord's work,
-wonderfully advanced the kingdom of God in many
-families.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_56" id="Ref_56" href="#Foot_56">[56]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was at Orleans, therefore, that Calvin began his
-evangelist work and manifested himself to the world
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">{26}</a></span>
-as a christian. Calvin's activity in this city is a proof
-that he was then converted to the Gospel, and that he
-had been so for some time; for his was not one of those
-expansive natures which immediately display externally
-what is within them. This first ministry of the
-reformer negatives the hypotheses which place Calvin's
-conversion at Orleans, or at Bourges somewhat
-later, or, even later still, during his second residence
-at Paris.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the young doctor, growing in knowledge and
-acting in love, refuted the objections of the gainsayers,
-and led to Christ the humble souls who thirsted for
-salvation. A domestic event suddenly withdrew him
-from this pious activity.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_30" id="Foot_30" href="#Ref_30">[30]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin, <i>Préface aux Psaumes</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_31" id="Foot_31" href="#Ref_31">[31]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-('The touch-stone of a standing or of a falling Church.') 'Wolmarus
-lutheranum virus Calvino instillabat.'—Flor. Rémond, <i>Hist. de l'Hérésie</i>,
-liv. vii. ch. ix.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_32" id="Foot_32" href="#Ref_32">[32]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin, <i>Institution</i>, liv. iii. ch. ii. 17-19.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_33" id="Foot_33" href="#Ref_33">[33]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Sancti Spiritus dono repleberis, qui scripturarum omnium profunditatem
-ac veram dignitatem te docebit.'—Mansi, <i>Gesta Synodi Aurelianensis</i>,
-xix. p. 376.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_34" id="Foot_34" href="#Ref_34">[34]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Deinde cœlesti cibo pastus, interna satietate recreatus.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_35" id="Foot_35" href="#Ref_35">[35]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin, <i>Préface des Commentaires sur les Psaumes</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_36" id="Foot_36" href="#Ref_36">[36]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_37" id="Foot_37" href="#Ref_37">[37]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quos pronuntiabant apostoli esse habendos pro hostibus, ab iis cur
-dubitassem me sejungere?'—<i>Opusc. Lat.</i> p. 124; <i>Franç.</i> p. 169.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_38" id="Foot_38" href="#Ref_38">[38]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Opuscules.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_39" id="Foot_39" href="#Ref_39">[39]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Interea tamen ille sacrarum litterarum studium simul diligenter
-excolere in quo tantum etiam promoverat.'—Bezæ <i>Vita Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_40" id="Foot_40" href="#Ref_40">[40]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-From 70 to 130 <small>A.D.</small></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_41" id="Foot_41" href="#Ref_41">[41]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin, <i>in Ep. Johan.</i>; <i>Pauli ad Philip.</i> &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_42" id="Foot_42" href="#Ref_42">[42]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Flor. Rémond, <i>Hist. de l'Hérésie</i>, liv. vii. ch. x.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_43" id="Foot_43" href="#Ref_43">[43]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ad mediam usque noctem lucubrare.'—Bezæ <i>Vita Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_44" id="Foot_44" href="#Ref_44">[44]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Mane vero, quæ legisset, in lecto veluti concoquere.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_45" id="Foot_45" href="#Ref_45">[45]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Et tandem etiam intempestivam mortem attulit.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_46" id="Foot_46" href="#Ref_46">[46]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Doctor potiusquam auditor haberetur.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_47" id="Foot_47" href="#Ref_47">[47]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quum sæpissime obiret ipsorum doctorum vices.'—Bezæ <i>Vita Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_48" id="Foot_48" href="#Ref_48">[48]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Omnes purioris doctrinæ cupidi ad me, discendi causa, ventitabant.'—<i>Præf.
-in Psalm.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_49" id="Foot_49" href="#Ref_49">[49]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Novitium adhuc et tyronem.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_50" id="Foot_50" href="#Ref_50">[50]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Tunc latebras captare.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_51" id="Foot_51" href="#Ref_51">[51]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut mihi secessus omnes instar publicæ scholæ essent.'—<i>Præf. in
-Psalm.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_52" id="Foot_52" href="#Ref_52">[52]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Catholicæ fidei mysteria ratione investiganda.'—Abelard, <i>Introd.
-ad Theol.</i> p. 1059.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_53" id="Foot_53" href="#Ref_53">[53]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ignobile otium colere.'—<i>Præf. in Psalm.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_54" id="Foot_54" href="#Ref_54">[54]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Chrysostomus, <i>De Sacerdotio</i>, lib. iv.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_55" id="Foot_55" href="#Ref_55">[55]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calv. <i>Præf. in Psalm.</i> p. 3.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_56" id="Foot_56" href="#Ref_56">[56]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Histoire des Eglises Réformées</i>, p. 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">{27}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CALVIN CALLED AT BOURGES TO THE EVANGELICAL WORK.<br />
- (1528-1529.)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN LEAVES ORLEANS.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ONE day, probably at the beginning of April 1528,
-about the Easter holidays, Calvin received a letter
-from Noyon. He opened it: it contained sad news! his
-father was seriously ill. He went at once to Duchemin
-in great agitation: 'I must depart,' he said.
-This friend, and many others, would have wished to
-keep him in a place where he had become so useful;
-but he did not hesitate. He must go to his father;
-he would, however, only stay as long as was necessary;
-as soon as the sick man was better, he would come
-back. 'I promise you to return shortly,' he said to
-Duchemin.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_57" id="Ref_57" href="#Foot_57">[57]</a></span>
-Calvin, therefore, bade farewell to his cherished
-studies, to his beloved friends, and those pious
-families in which he was advancing the kingdom of
-God, and returned to Picardy.</p>
-
-<p>We have but few particulars of his sojourn at
-Noyon. Assuredly his filial piety indulged at his
-father's bedside in what has been termed with reason
-the sweetest form of gratitude. Yet the weak
-condition of the episcopal secretary was prolonged,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">{28}</a></span>
-without any appearance of imminent danger. A
-question began to rise up in the young man's heart:
-shall he go, or shall he stay?<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_58" id="Ref_58" href="#Foot_58">[58]</a></span>
-Sometimes, when
-seated by the sick man's pillow during the watches of
-the night, his thoughts would transport him to Orleans,
-into the midst of his studies and the society of his
-friends; he felt himself impelled, as by a vigorous
-hand, towards the places that were so dear to him,
-and he made in his mind all the arrangements necessary
-for his return.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_59" id="Ref_59" href="#Foot_59">[59]</a></span>
-... Suddenly his father's disease
-grew worse, and the son did not quit the sufferer's
-bedside. The old secretary, 'a man of sound understanding
-and good counsel,' says Beza, was much
-respected by those around him, and love for the author
-of his days was profoundly engraven in the young
-man's soul. 'The title of father belongs to God,' he
-said; 'when God gives it to a man, he communicates
-to him some sparks of his own brightness.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_60" id="Ref_60" href="#Foot_60">[60]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN'S FIRST LETTER.=</p>
-
-<p>Erelong a crisis appeared to take place; the doctors
-held out hopes: the patient might recover his health,
-they said.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_61" id="Ref_61" href="#Foot_61">[61]</a></span>
-Calvin's thoughts and desires were
-turned once more towards Orleans; he would have
-wished to go there instantly,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_62" id="Ref_62" href="#Foot_62">[62]</a></span>
-but duty was still
-the strongest, and he resolved to wait until his father's
-convalescence was complete. Thus one day after another
-glided away.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_63" id="Ref_63" href="#Foot_63">[63]</a></span>
-Alas! the doctors were deceived.
-'There is no longer any hope of a cure,' they soon told
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">{29}</a></span>
-him; 'your father's death cannot be far off.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_64" id="Ref_64" href="#Foot_64">[64]</a></span>
-Calvin,
-therefore, determined (14th of May, 1528) to write
-to Duchemin, which he had not yet done since his
-departure. It is the first of the reformer's letters
-that has been handed down to us. 'You know,' he
-says, 'that I am very exact in my correspondence,
-and that I carry it even to importunity.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_65" id="Ref_65" href="#Foot_65">[65]</a></span>
-You will
-be astonished, perhaps, that I have been wanting in
-my extreme punctuality; but when you know the
-cause, you will restore to me your friendship, should
-I perchance have forfeited it.' He then tells Duchemin
-of his father's condition, and adds: 'Happen what
-may, I will see you again.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_66" id="Ref_66" href="#Foot_66">[66]</a></span>
-What did happen is not
-very clear. Calvin was at Noyon, as we have seen,
-on the 14th of May, 1528; perhaps he remained all
-the summer with the sick man. It has been concluded
-from this letter to Duchemin that Gerard
-Calvin died shortly after the 14th of May; at that
-time <i>the approach of death</i> was certain, according to
-the doctors; but doctors may be mistaken. According
-to Theodore Beza, he died during his son's residence
-at Bourges, nine or ten months later, and a passage
-from Calvin, which we shall quote further on, confirms
-Beza's testimony, of itself so decisive.</p>
-
-<p>One circumstance, which has some interest, seems to
-show that Calvin was not at Orleans during the latter
-part of this year. On the 5th of December, 1528,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_67" id="Ref_67" href="#Foot_67">[67]</a></span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">{30}</a></span>
-eight months after his sudden departure, a boy
-eight or nine years old arrived at Melchior Wolmar's
-house in that city. He had a sickly look,
-but was a well-made child, playful and well-bred, with
-a keen glance and lively wit. This boy, who was one
-day to be Calvin's best friend, belonged to a Burgundian
-family. His father, Pierre de Beza, was bailli of
-Vezelay, a very old town, where the child was born
-on the 24th of June, 1519,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_68" id="Ref_68" href="#Foot_68">[68]</a></span>
-and received the name
-of Theodore. One of his uncles, named Nicholas,
-seignior of Cette and of Chalonne, and councillor
-of parliament, having paid the bailli a visit a few
-months after the child's birth, adopted him, being
-an unmarried man, and took him to Paris, although
-he had not been weaned.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_69" id="Ref_69" href="#Foot_69">[69]</a></span>
-Nine years later (1528),
-at the recommendation of an Orleanese, who was
-connected with the Bezas and a member of the
-royal council, the uncle sent his nephew to Wolmar,
-who was described to him as very learned in Greek
-and of great experience in education. Nothing in
-Calvin's biography written by Beza indicates that the
-latter met Calvin at that time at Orleans. When
-Margaret of Valois, who was Duchess of Berry,
-endeavoured about this time to gather together a
-number of pious and learned men in her university of
-Bourges, she invited Wolmar there;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_70" id="Ref_70" href="#Foot_70">[70]</a></span>
-and it was here
-that young Beza saw Calvin for the first time.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN GOES TO BOURGES.=</p>
-
-<p>The scholar, set at liberty by the apparent restoration
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">{31}</a></span>
-of his father's health, had once more turned his
-thoughts towards his studies. He desired to take
-advantage of the instruction of a doctor whose reputation
-surpassed even that of Pierre de l'Etoile. All
-the learned world was at that time talking of Alciati
-of Milan, whom the king had invited to Bourges, and
-to attend whose brilliant lessons the academic youth
-flocked from every quarter. Calvin had other motives
-besides this for going to that city. Under Margaret's
-influence, Berry had become a centre of evangelisation.
-Returning, therefore, to Orleans, he made
-known his intention of going to Bourges, and the
-professors of the university where he had studied,
-and even taught with credit, unanimously offered
-him the degree of doctor. It would appear that his
-modesty did not permit him to accept it.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_71" id="Ref_71" href="#Foot_71">[71]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There were fewer resources at Bourges than at
-Orleans. 'As we cannot live as we wish,' said the
-students, 'we live as we can.' Everything was dear:
-board alone cost one hundred francs a year.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_72" id="Ref_72" href="#Foot_72">[72]</a></span>
-'France is truly a golden country,' bitterly remarked
-a poor scholar, 'for without gold you can get nothing.'
-But the Noyon student cared little for the comforts of
-life; intellectual and spiritual wealth satisfied him.
-He was anxious to hear Alciati, and was surprised to
-find him a tall corpulent man, with no very thoughtful
-look. 'He is a great eater,' said one of his neighbours,
-'and very covetous.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_73" id="Ref_73" href="#Foot_73">[73]</a></span>
-Intelligence and imagination,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">{32}</a></span>
-rather than sentiment, were his characteristics: he
-was a great jurist and also a great poet. Mingling
-literature with his explanation of the laws, and substituting
-an elegant style for barbarism of language,
-he gave quite a new <i>éclat</i> to the study of the law.
-Calvin listened with admiration. Five years later
-Alciati returned to Italy, allured by greater emoluments
-and greater honours.</p>
-
-<p>Erelong Calvin gave himself up entirely to other
-thoughts. Bourges had become, under Margaret's
-government, the centre of the new doctrine in France;
-and he was accordingly struck by the movement of
-the minds around him. There was discussing, and
-speaking, and assembling, wherever the sound of the
-Gospel could be heard. On Sunday students and
-citizens crowded the two churches where Chaponneau
-and Michel preached. Calvin went with the rest, and
-found the christian truth pretty fairly set forth 'considering
-the time.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_74" id="Ref_74" href="#Foot_74">[74]</a></span>
-During the week, evangelical
-truth was taught in the university by Gamaire, a
-learned priest, and by Bournonville, prior of St.
-Ambrose.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=WOLMAR'S APPEAL TO CALVIN.=</p>
-
-<p>But nothing attracted Calvin like Wolmar's house.
-It would appear that this scholar had arrived at
-Bourges before him.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_75" id="Ref_75" href="#Foot_75">[75]</a></span>
-It was there that Calvin met
-young Beza, and then began in Theodore's heart that
-filial piety which continued all his life, and that admiration
-which he professed afterwards in one of his
-Latin poems, where he calls Calvin</p>
-
-<p class="center small">Romæ ruentis terror ille maximus.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_76" id="Ref_76" href="#Foot_76">[76]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">{33}</a></span>
-And truly Calvin was training for this. If Wolmar
-at Orleans had confirmed the christian faith in him,
-Wolmar at Bourges was the first who invited him
-distinctly to enter upon the career of a reformer.
-The German doctor communicated to the young man
-the books which he received from beyond the Rhine—the
-writings of Luther, Melanchthon, and other evangelical
-men.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_77" id="Ref_77" href="#Foot_77">[77]</a></span>
-Wolmar, modest, gentle, and a foreigner,
-did not think himself called to do in France what these
-illustrious servants of God were doing in Germany:
-but he asked himself whether there was not some
-Frenchman called by God to reform France; whether
-Lefèvre's young fellow-countryman, who united a
-great understanding with a soul so full of energy,
-might not be the man for whom this work was
-reserved.</p>
-
-<p>Wolmar seems to have been to Calvin what Staupitz
-was to Luther; both these doctors felt the need of
-minds of a strong temper for the great things that
-were about to take place in the world. One day,
-therefore, the professor invited the student to take a
-walk with him, and the two friends, leaving behind
-them that old city, burnt down by Cæsar and
-Chilperic, rebuilt by Charlemagne, and enlarged by
-Philip Augustus, drew near the banks of the Auron,
-at its confluence with the Yèvre, and strolled here
-and there among the fertile plains of Berry.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_78" id="Ref_78" href="#Foot_78">[78]</a></span>
-At
-last Wolmar said to Calvin, 'What do you propose
-doing, my friend? Shall the Institutes, the Novels,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">{34}</a></span>
-the Pandects absorb your life? Is not theology the
-queen of all sciences, and does not God call you to
-explain his Holy Scriptures?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_79" id="Ref_79" href="#Foot_79">[79]</a></span>
-What new ideas
-then started up before Calvin! At Paris he had
-renounced the priesthood, and at Bourges Wolmar
-urged him to the ministry.... What should he do?</p>
-
-<p>This was quite another calling. In the theocratic
-and legal Church, the priest is the means by which
-man is restored to communion with God. The special
-priesthood, with which he is invested, is the condition
-on which depends the virtue of the sacraments and of
-all the means of grace. Possessed of a magical power,
-he works the greatest of miracles at the altar, and
-whoever does not partake in the ministrations of this
-priesthood can have no share in redemption. The
-Reformation of the sixteenth century, by setting aside
-the formal and theocratic Church of Rome, which was
-shaped in the image of the Jewish theocracy, and by
-substituting for it the Evangelical Church, conformably
-to the principles of Christ and his apostles,
-transformed the ministry also. The service of the
-Word became its centre—the means by which, with
-the aid of the Holy Ghost, all its functions were
-discharged. This evangelical ministry was to work
-its miracles also; but whilst those of the legal
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">{35}</a></span>
-ministry proceed from a mysterious virtue in the
-priesthood, and are accomplished upon earthly elements,
-those of the evangelical ministry are wrought
-freely by the divine Word, and by a heartfelt faith in
-the great love of God, which that ministry proclaims,—strange
-spiritual miracles, effected within the soul,
-transforming the man and not the bread, and making
-him a new creature, destined to dwell eternally with
-God.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN HESITATES.=</p>
-
-<p>Did Calvin at this time see clearly the difference
-between the Roman priesthood and the Gospel ministry?
-We doubt it. It was not until later that his
-ideas became clear upon this important point. The
-notion, however, of abandoning not only the priesthood,
-but also the study of the law for the Gospel, was not
-new to him. More than once in his retirement, he
-had already asked himself: 'Shall I not preach Christ
-to the world?' But he had always shrunk away
-humble and timid from this ministry. 'All men are
-not suited for it,' he said; 'a special vocation is
-necessary, and no one ought to take it upon himself
-rashly.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_80" id="Ref_80" href="#Foot_80">[80]</a></span>
-Calvin, like St. Augustin, the ancient
-doctor whom he most resembled (the irregularities
-excepted which mark the youth of the bishop of
-Hippona), feared to undertake a charge beyond his
-strength. He thought also that his father would
-never consent to his abandoning the law and joining
-the heretics. And yet he felt himself daily more
-inclined to entertain the great questions of conscience
-and christian liberty, of divine sovereignty and self-renunciation.
-'So great a desire of advancing in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">{36}</a></span>
-knowledge of Christ consumed me at that time,' he
-said, 'that I pursued my other studies very coldly.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_81" id="Ref_81" href="#Foot_81">[81]</a></span>
-A domestic event was soon to give him liberty to
-enter upon the new career to which God and Wolmar
-were calling him.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_82" id="Ref_82" href="#Foot_82">[82]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Nor was this the only call he received at Bourges.
-Wolmar had spoken of him, and several families
-invited him to their houses to edify them. This took
-the young man by surprise, as it had done at Orleans;
-he remained silent, lost in the multitude of his
-thoughts. 'I am quite amazed,' he said, 'at seeing
-those who have a desire for pure doctrine gather
-round me to learn, although I have only just begun
-to learn myself!' He resolved, however, to continue
-at Bourges the evangelical work which he had timidly
-commenced on the banks of the Loire; and he brought
-more time and more decision to the task.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE PREACHERS IN BERRY.=</p>
-
-<p>Calvin accordingly entered into relations with students
-and townspeople, nobles and lawyers, priests
-and professors. The family of the Colladons held
-at that time a considerable station in Berry. Two
-brothers, Leo and Germain, and two sisters, Mary
-and Anne, were the first to embrace the Gospel in
-Berry. Leo and Germain were advocates, and one
-of their cousins, styled Germain II. in the genealogies,
-now eighteen years old, afterwards became Calvin's
-intimate friend at Geneva. These ties of friendship
-had probably begun at Bourges.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_83" id="Ref_83" href="#Foot_83">[83]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">{37}</a></span>
-The evangelist soon extended his christian activity
-beyond the walls of the city. Many natives of Berry,
-who had heard him at Bourges, had been charmed
-with his addresses. 'Come and preach these beautiful
-words to us,' they said. Calvin gradually laid
-aside his natural timidity, and being cheerful and fond
-of walking, he visited the castles and villages.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_84" id="Ref_84" href="#Foot_84">[84]</a></span>
-He introduced
-himself affectionately into all the houses at
-which he stopped. 'A graceful salutation,' he said
-in after years, 'serves as an introduction to converse
-with people.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_85" id="Ref_85" href="#Foot_85">[85]</a></span>
-He delivered several sermons in these
-hamlets and country-seats.</p>
-
-<p>On the banks of the Arnon, ten leagues from
-Bourges, there stands a little town named Lignières,
-at that time the seat of a considerable lordship.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_86" id="Ref_86" href="#Foot_86">[86]</a></span>
-Every
-year certain monks came to preach in the parish
-church, and were bountifully received at the château,
-where they complained of their wretchedness in the
-most pitiable tone. This offended the lord of Lignières,
-who was not of a superstitious character. 'If
-I am not mistaken,' he said, 'it is with a view to
-their own gain that these monks pretend to be such
-drudges.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_87" id="Ref_87" href="#Foot_87">[87]</a></span>
-Disgusted with their hypocrisy, M. de
-Lignières begged Calvin to come and preach in their
-stead. The law-student spoke to an immense crowd
-with such clearness, freedom, depth, and vitality, that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">{38}</a></span>
-every one was moved.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_88" id="Ref_88" href="#Foot_88">[88]</a></span>
-'Upon my word,' said the
-lord to his wife, 'Master John Calvin seems to me to
-preach better than the monks, and he goes heartily to
-work too.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_89" id="Ref_89" href="#Foot_89">[89]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=RELIGIOUS MOVEMENT AT BOURGES.=</p>
-
-<p>When the priests saw the young evangelist so well
-received, they cried out and intrigued against him,
-and did all in their power to get him put into prison.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_90" id="Ref_90" href="#Foot_90">[90]</a></span>
-It was at Bourges that Calvin began to see that 'everything
-among men is full of vexation.' He said: 'By
-the assaults made against them, Christ sounds the
-trumpet to his followers, in order that they may
-prepare themselves more cheerfully for battle.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_91" id="Ref_91" href="#Foot_91">[91]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In this way Calvin laboured in the town, in the
-villages, and in the châteaux, conversing tenderly
-with children, preaching to adults, and training heroes
-and martyrs. But the same circumstance which had
-taken him away from Orleans, suddenly occurred at
-Bourges. One day he received a letter from Noyon,
-written probably by his brother Anthony. Alas! his
-father was dead! and he was far from him, unable to
-lavish upon him the attentions of his filial piety.
-'While he was at Bourges his father died,' says
-Theodore Beza, 'and he was obliged to return to
-Noyon.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_92" id="Ref_92" href="#Foot_92">[92]</a></span>
-The death was very sudden.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_93" id="Ref_93" href="#Foot_93">[93]</a></span>
-Calvin did
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">{39}</a></span>
-not hesitate; he bade farewell to Berry, to those pious
-families which he had edified, to his studies, and to
-his friends. 'You held out your hand to me,' he
-said to Wolmar, 'and were ready to support me from
-one end to the other of my course; but my father's
-death takes me away from our conversations and our
-lessons.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_94" id="Ref_94" href="#Foot_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Bourges did not fall back into darkness after Calvin's
-departure. A venerable doctor, named Michel
-Simon, perhaps that <i>Michel</i> whom we have already
-mentioned, displayed a holy boldness notwithstanding
-his age. One day a Pelagian cordelier (as all the
-doctors of that order are) had effrontery enough to
-maintain that man can be saved by his natural
-strength alone. Simon confronted him, and succeeded
-in getting it laid down that in the public disputations
-every proposition must be established by
-the text of Scripture. This gave a new impulse to
-theological studies.</p>
-
-<p>The priests came to an understanding with one
-another, and made their preparations without saying
-a word. On the following Sunday, Michel Simon,
-having entered the pulpit, was about to begin his sermon,
-when the curé, with his vicars and choristers,
-entered the choir, and began to chant the office for
-the dead. It was impossible either to preach or to
-hear. The exasperated students rushed into the
-choir, threw the books about, upset the lecterns, and
-drove out the priests, who ran off 'in great disorder.'
-Simon, who remained master of the field, delivered
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">{40}</a></span>
-his sermon, and, to the surprise of his hearers, ended
-by repeating the Lord's prayer <i>in French</i>, without
-adding the <i>Ave Maria</i>! Whereupon a man, sitting
-in one of the upper stalls (he was the king's proctor),
-stood up, and with a sonorous voice began:
-<i>Ave Maria, gratia</i>.... He could not complete the
-sentence. A universal shout interrupted him; the
-women, who are easily excited, caught up their little
-stools, crowded round the proctor, and shook them
-over his head. These people were catholics, disgusted
-with the priests, not with the disciples of the
-Saviour.</p>
-
-<p>While the student of Noyon was devoting himself
-to the preaching of the Gospel, extreme danger threatened
-him who had been his forerunner in this work.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_57" id="Foot_57" href="#Ref_57">[57]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quod tibi promiseram discedens me brevi adfuturum.'—Calvinus
-Chemino, May 14, 1528, Berne MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_58" id="Foot_58" href="#Ref_58">[58]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ea me expectatio diutius suspensum habuit.'—Calvinus Chemino.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_59" id="Foot_59" href="#Ref_59">[59]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nam dum reditum ad vos meditor.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_60" id="Foot_60" href="#Ref_60">[60]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvini <i>Opera</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_61" id="Foot_61" href="#Ref_61">[61]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Sed cum medici spem facerent posse redire in prosperam valetudinem.'—Calvinus
-Chemino.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_62" id="Foot_62" href="#Ref_62">[62]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nihil aliud visum est quam tui desiderium.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_63" id="Foot_63" href="#Ref_63">[63]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Interim dies de die trahitur.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_64" id="Foot_64" href="#Ref_64">[64]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Certum mortis periculum.'—Calvinus Chemino.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_65" id="Foot_65" href="#Ref_65">[65]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In litteris missitandis plus satis officiosum, ne dicam importunum.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_66" id="Foot_66" href="#Ref_66">[66]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Utcunque res ceciderit, ad vos revisam.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_67" id="Foot_67" href="#Ref_67">[67]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Factum est ut ad te pervenirem anno Domini 1528, nonis Decembris.'—Letter
-of Theodore Beza to Wolmar, Preface to the <i>Confessio Fidei
-Christianæ</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_68" id="Foot_68" href="#Ref_68">[68]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Anno Domini 1519 die 24 junii, placuit Deo O. M. ut mundi lucem
-aspicerem.'—Letter of Theodore Beza to Wolmar, Preface to the <i>Confessio
-Fidei Christianæ</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_69" id="Foot_69" href="#Ref_69">[69]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut me quamvis adhuc a nutricis uberibus pendentem.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_70" id="Foot_70" href="#Ref_70">[70]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Aureliæ primum, deinde Biturigibus, quum in eam urbem regina
-Navarræ te evocasset.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_71" id="Foot_71" href="#Ref_71">[71]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Eique discedenti doctoratus insignia absque ullo pretio offeruntur.'—Bezæ
-<i>Vita Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_72" id="Foot_72" href="#Ref_72">[72]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Conrad Gessner</i> von Hanhait, p. 22. <i>Theodor. Beza</i> von Baum,
-p. 12.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_73" id="Foot_73" href="#Ref_73">[73]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Vir fuit corpulentus, proceræ staturæ. Auri avidus habitus est
-et cibi avidior.'—Panzivole, <i>De claris Legum Interpret.</i> lib. ii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_74" id="Foot_74" href="#Ref_74">[74]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Hist. des Eglises Réformées</i>, p. 6.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_75" id="Foot_75" href="#Ref_75">[75]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_76" id="Foot_76" href="#Ref_76">[76]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Of Rome in its decline the greatest dread.'—Bezæ <i>Icones</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_77" id="Foot_77" href="#Ref_77">[77]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Libros quos e Germania acceperat, mittebat.'—Flor. Rémond, <i>Hist.
-de l'Hérésie</i>, ii. liv. vii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_78" id="Foot_78" href="#Ref_78">[78]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Die quodam cum discipulo magister, animi gratia, deambulans.'—Flor.
-Rémond, <i>Hist. de l'Hérésie</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_79" id="Foot_79" href="#Ref_79">[79]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut posito Justiniani codice ad Theologiæ omnium scientiarum
-reginæ studium, animum applicaret.'—Flor. Rémond, <i>Hist. de l'Hérésie</i>,
-liv. vii. ch. ix. Florimond Rémond was so hostile to the Reformation
-which he had abjured, that he cannot be trusted when his prejudices are
-concerned; but he ought to be believed when his predilections do not
-mislead him. I cannot see what object he could have had in inventing
-this conversation. 'The Calvinists, in order to be avenged of this writer,'
-says Moreri, 'have endeavoured to traduce his memory.' The most
-sensible course is to hold a just mean between the Romish apologists and
-the protestant detractors.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_80" id="Foot_80" href="#Ref_80">[80]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Non omnes esse Verbi ministerio idoneos . . . requiritur specialis
-vocatio.'—Calv. <i>Opera</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_81" id="Foot_81" href="#Ref_81">[81]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Tanto proficiendi studio exarsi, ut reliqua studia quamvis non abjicerem,
-frigidius tamen sectarer.'—Calv. <i>Præf.</i> in Psalm.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_82" id="Foot_82" href="#Ref_82">[82]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Acriter exhortans ut de reformanda atque illustranda Dei ecclesia
-cogitationem ac curam serio inciperet.'—Flor. Rémond, <i>Histoire de
-l'Hérésie</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_83" id="Foot_83" href="#Ref_83">[83]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Leo Colladon died at Geneva on the 31st of August, 1552. His son
-Nicholas took refuge there in 1553, and in 1556 succeeded Calvin in the
-chair of divinity. Germain II., made free of the city in 1555, was the
-compiler of the Genevese code. Galiffe, <i>Généalogie des Familles Genevoises</i>.
-Haag, <i>France Protestante</i>, article <i>Colladon</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_84" id="Foot_84" href="#Ref_84">[84]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Hist. des Eglises Réformées</i>, p. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_85" id="Foot_85" href="#Ref_85">[85]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin, <i>Commentaire sur Mathieu</i>, ch. x.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_86" id="Foot_86" href="#Ref_86">[86]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-In the reign of Louis XIV. this lordship belonged to Colbert.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_87" id="Foot_87" href="#Ref_87">[87]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Contrefont les marmitons.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_88" id="Foot_88" href="#Ref_88">[88]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nonnullas interdum conciones in agro Biturigum, in oppidulo quod
-<i>Linerias</i> vocant.'—Bezæ <i>Vita Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_89" id="Foot_89" href="#Ref_89">[89]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bèze, <i>Hist. des Eglises Réformées</i>, p. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_90" id="Foot_90" href="#Ref_90">[90]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nisi me ab ipsis prope carceribus mors patris revocasset.'—Calvinus
-Volmario, <i>in 2ᵃᵐ Ep. ad Corinth</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_91" id="Foot_91" href="#Ref_91">[91]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Commentaire sur Mathieu</i>, ch. x.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_92" id="Foot_92" href="#Ref_92">[92]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Vie de Calvin</i> (French text), p. 11.
-'In agro Biturigum ... mors patris nuntiata in patriam vocavit.'—Ibid.
-in Latin text.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_93" id="Foot_93" href="#Ref_93">[93]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Repentina mors patris,' says Beza. This <i>sudden</i> death proves that
-Calvin's father did not die, as some assert, of the long illness described in
-the letter to Duchemin.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_94" id="Foot_94" href="#Ref_94">[94]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Dédicace de la 2ᵉ aux Corinthiens.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">{41}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XVI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">BERQUIN, THE MOST LEARNED OF THE NOBILITY,<br />
- A MARTYR FOR THE GOSPEL.<br />
- (1529.)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHEN Calvin passed through the capital on his
-way from Bourges to Noyon, on the occasion of
-his father's death, he might have remarked a certain
-agitation among his acquaintances. In fact, the
-Sorbonne was increasing its exertions to destroy
-Berquin, who, forsaken by almost everybody, had no
-one to support him but God and the Queen of Navarre.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=MARGARET'S SORROWS.=</p>
-
-<p>Margaret, who was at St. Germain-en-Laye, enjoyed
-but little repose. The brilliant court of Francis I.
-filled the noble palace with their pastimes. Early in
-the morning every one was afoot; the horns sounded,
-and the king set off, accompanied by the King of
-Navarre, a crowd of nobles, the Duchess of Etampes,
-and many other ladies, and joined one of those great
-hunting parties of which he was so fond. Margaret,
-remaining alone, recalled her sorrows, and sought the
-<i>one thing needful</i>. Her husband sometimes indulged
-in gaming, and the queen entreated Montmorency to
-give him good advice. Henry, who thought his wife
-rather too pious, complained of this with all the
-impetuosity of his character. It was not Margaret's
-only vexation. At first her mother had appeared to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">{42}</a></span>
-take part with the Reformation. One day, in December
-1522, Louisa of Savoy had said to her daughter, who
-was delighted to hear it: 'By the grace of the Holy
-Ghost, my son and I are beginning to know these
-hypocrites, white, black, grey, and all colours....
-May God, by his mercy and infinite goodness, defend
-us from them; for, if Jesus Christ is not a liar, there
-is no such dangerous brood in all human nature.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_95" id="Ref_95" href="#Foot_95">[95]</a></span>
-But this princess, whose morality was more than
-doubtful, had now become reconciled, and even
-leagued with these 'hypocrites black, white, and
-grey,' and the king was beginning to give them his
-support. Thus Margaret saw the three objects of
-her tenderest affection alienating themselves from
-God; and remaining at the palace while Francis with
-his lords and ladies and his hounds was chasing the
-wild animals, she walked sadly in the park, saying to
-herself:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Father and mother I have none;</div>
-<div class="verse">Brother and sister—all are gone,</div>
-<div class="verse">Save God, in whom I trust alone,</div>
-<div class="verse">Who rules the earth from his high throne.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">All these loved ones I would forget;</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Parents and friends, the world, its joys,</div>
-<div class="verse">Honour and wealth however great,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">I hold my deepest enemies!</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Hence, ye delights!</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Whose vanity</div>
-<div class="verse">Jesus the Christ has shown to me!</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">{43}</a></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">But God, God only is my hope;</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">I know that he is all in all,</div>
-<div class="verse">Dearer than husband to the wife—</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">My father, mother, friend, my all!</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">He is my hope,</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">My resting-place,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2"> My strength, my being, and my trust,</div>
-<div class="verse">For he hath saved me by his grace.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Father and mother I have none;</div>
-<div class="verse">Brother and sister—all are gone,</div>
-<div class="verse">Save God, in whom I trust alone,</div>
-<div class="verse">Who rules the earth from his high throne.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_96" id="Ref_96" href="#Foot_96">[96]</a></span></div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="side">=SORBONNE PLOTS AGAINST BERQUIN.=</p>
-
-<p>Whilst Margaret was seeking consolation in God,
-there came a support which she had not expected.
-Erasmus was growing uneasy; the letters which he
-received were full of alarming news; he saw that
-Francis I., on whom he had so much relied, was
-stumbling and ready to fall. This would give the
-victory to the Sorbonne. Having a presentiment that
-the ultramontanists were daring revolutionists, prepared
-to sacrifice not only literature and the Gospel,
-but royalty itself, he laid aside his usual prudence,
-and resolved to tear the veil from the king's eyes,
-which concealed the perverted designs of the Roman
-party, and to show him conspirators in those who
-called themselves the supporters of the throne. 'These
-men,' he wrote, 'under the cloak of the interests of
-the faith, creep into all sorts of dark ways. Their
-only thought is of bringing the august heads of monarchs
-under their yoke and of suspending their
-power. Wait a little. If a prince resists them, they
-call him a favourer of heresy, and say that it is the
-duty of the Church (that is to say, of a few apocryphal
-monks and false doctors) to dethrone him.
-What! shall they be permitted to scatter their poisons
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">{44}</a></span>
-everywhere, and we be forbidden to apply the antidote?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_97" id="Ref_97" href="#Foot_97">[97]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This epistle from the prince of letters, who with so
-much discernment placed his finger on the sore, soon
-became known; and when it reached the Sorbonne,
-the doctors, dismayed that a man so moderate and
-respected should reveal their secrets so boldly, saw no
-other means of saving their cause than by striking
-their enemies with terror. They dared do nothing
-against the sage of Rotterdam, who was besides out of
-their reach; but they swore that his friend Berquin
-should pay for his master. The theologians of the
-Sorbonne demanded that this gentleman should be
-brought to trial; Duprat, Louisa of Savoy, and Montmorency
-supported their petition. There was no
-means of evading it, and twelve judges were nominated
-by the pope and by the king.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_98" id="Ref_98" href="#Foot_98">[98]</a></span>
-These men were
-greatly embarrassed, for Berquin's irreproachable life,
-amiable character, inexhaustible charity, and regular
-attendance at public worship, had won universal
-esteem. However, as the first president De Selva,
-the fourth president Pailot, and some others, were
-either weak or fanatical persons, the Sorbonne did not
-lose all hope. One alone of the twelve caused any
-fear: this was William Budæus, called by Erasmus
-'the prodigy of France;' an enlightened man, who,
-while professing a great respect for the Catholic
-Church, had more than once betrayed certain evangelical
-tendencies to his wife and children. The
-twelve judges proceeded with their investigation,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">{45}</a></span>
-without requiring the accused man to be shut up
-in prison. Berquin went and came as he pleased; he
-spoke to the judges and parliament, and convinced
-them of his innocence. But terror began to paralyse
-the weak minds among them; they were afraid
-of the righteous man; they would have nothing to
-do with 'that sort of people,' and turned their backs
-upon him.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=MARGARET INTERCEDES FOR BERQUIN=</p>
-
-<p>Berquin now resolved to address the king and to
-get Margaret to support him. 'It was generally reported,'
-says one of the enemies of the Reform, 'that
-the Queen of Navarre took wondrous pains to save
-those who were in danger, and that she alone prevented
-the Reformation from being stifled in the
-cradle.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_99" id="Ref_99" href="#Foot_99">[99]</a></span>
-Berquin went to the palace, and made his
-danger known to the queen. He found in Margaret
-the compassion which failed him elsewhere. She knew
-that we ought not 'to stand aside from those who
-suffer persecution for the name of Christ, and would
-not be ashamed of those in whom there was nothing
-shameful.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_100" id="Ref_100" href="#Foot_100">[100]</a></span>
-Margaret immediately took up her pen,
-and sitting down at that table where she had so often
-pleaded both in prose and verse the cause of Christ
-and of christians, she wrote the king the following
-letter:—</p>
-
-<p>'Monseigneur,—The unhappy Berquin, who maintains
-that God, through your goodness, has twice saved
-his life, presents himself before you, to make manifest
-his innocence to you, having no one else to whom he
-can apply. Knowing, Monseigneur, the esteem in
-which you hold him, and the desire which he has
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">{46}</a></span>
-now and always has had to serve you, I fear not
-to entreat that you will be pleased to have pity
-upon him. He will convince you that these heretic-finders
-are more slanderous and disobedient towards
-you than zealous for the faith. He knows, Monseigneur,
-that you desire to maintain the rights of
-every one, and that the just man needs no advocate
-in the eyes of your compassion. For this cause I shall
-say no more. Entreating Him who has given you
-such graces and virtues to grant you a long and
-happy life, in order that he may long be glorified by
-you in this world and everlastingly in the world to
-come,</p>
-
-<p>'Your most obedient and most humble subject and
-sister,</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right1">'<span class="smc">Margaret</span>.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_101" id="Ref_101" href="#Foot_101">[101]</a></span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Having finished, the queen rose and gave the letter
-to Berquin, who immediately sought an audience of
-the king. We know not how he was received, or
-what effect Margaret's intercession had upon Francis.
-It would seem, however, that the king addressed a
-few kind words to him. We know at least that Beda
-and the Sorbonne were uneasy, and that, fearing to see
-their victim once more escape them, they increased
-their exertions, and brought one charge after another
-against him. At last the authorities gave way; the
-police received orders to avoid every demonstration
-calculated to alarm him, lest he should escape to
-Erasmus at Basle. All their measures were arranged,
-and at the moment when he least expected it, about
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">{47}</a></span>
-three weeks before Easter (in March 1529), Berquin
-was arrested and taken to the Conciergerie.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=BERQUIN'S LETTER DISCOVERED.=</p>
-
-<p>Thus then was 'the most learned of the nobles,'
-as he was termed, thrown into prison in despite of
-the queen. He paced sadly up and down his cell,
-and one thought haunted him. Having been seized
-very unexpectedly, he had left in his room at Paris
-certain books which were condemned at Rome, and
-which consequently might ruin him. 'Alas!' he
-exclaimed, 'they will cost me serious trouble!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_102" id="Ref_102" href="#Foot_102">[102]</a></span>
-Berquin resolved to apply to a christian friend
-whom he could trust, to prevent the evil which he
-foresaw; and the next day after his incarceration,
-when the domestic, who had free access to him, and
-passed in and out on business, came for orders, the
-prisoner gave him, with an anxious and mysterious
-air, a letter which he said was of the greatest importance.
-The servant immediately hid it under his
-dress. 'My life is at stake,' repeated Berquin. In
-that letter, addressed to a familiar friend, the prisoner
-begged him without delay to remove the books
-pointed out to him and to burn them.</p>
-
-<p>The servant, who did not possess the courage
-of a hero, departed trembling. His emotion increased
-as he proceeded, his strength failed him, and
-as he was crossing the Pont au Change, and found
-himself in front of the image of Our Lady, known
-as <i>la belle ymage</i>, the poor fellow, who was rather
-superstitious, although in Berquin's service, lost his
-presence of mind and fainted. 'A sinking of the
-heart came over him, and he fell to the ground as
-if in a swoon,' says the catholic chronicler.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_103" id="Ref_103" href="#Foot_103">[103]</a></span>
-The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">{48}</a></span>
-neighbours and the passers-by gathered round him,
-and lifted him up. One of these kind citizens, eager
-to assist him, unbuttoned his coat to give him room
-to breathe, and found the letter which had been so
-carefully hidden. The man opened and read it; he
-was frightened, and told the surrounding crowd what
-were its contents. The people declared it to be a
-miracle: 'He is a heretic,' they said. 'If he has
-fallen like a dead man, it is the penalty of his crime;
-it was Our Lady who did it.'—'Give me the letter,'
-said one of the spectators; 'the famous Jacobin doctor
-who is preaching the Lent sermons at St. Bartholomew's
-dines with me to-day. I will show it to him.'
-When the dinner-hour came, the company invited by
-this citizen arrived, and among them was the celebrated
-preacher of the Rue St. Jacques in his white
-robe and scapulary and pointed hood. This Jacobin
-monk was no holiday inquisitor. He understood the
-great importance of the letter, and, quitting the table,
-hastened with it to Beda, who, quite overjoyed at the
-discovery, eagerly laid it before the court. The
-christian gentleman was ruined. The judges found
-the letter very compromising. 'Let the said Berquin,'
-they ordered, 'be closely confined in a strong tower.'
-This was done. Beda, on his side, displayed fresh
-activity; for time pressed, and it was necessary to
-strike a decisive blow. With some the impetuous
-syndic spoke gently, with others he spoke loudly; he
-employed threats and promises, and nothing seemed
-to tire him.</p>
-
-<p>From that hour Berquin's case appeared desperate.
-Most of his friends abandoned him; they were afraid
-lest Margaret's intervention, always so powerful,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">{49}</a></span>
-should now prove unavailing. The captive alone did
-not give way to despair. Although shut up in a
-strong tower, he possessed liberty and joy, and uplifting
-his soul to God, he hoped even against hope.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=BERQUIN'S SENTENCE.=</p>
-
-<p>On Friday, the 16th of April, 1529, the inquiry was
-finished, and at noon Berquin was brought into court.
-The countenance of Budæus was sorrowful and kind;
-but the other judges bore the stamp of severity on
-their features. The prisoner's heart was free from
-rancour, his hands pure from revenge, and the calm of
-innocence was on his face. 'Louis Berquin,' said the
-president, 'you are convicted of belonging to the
-sect of Luther, and of having written wicked books
-against the majesty of God and of his glorious mother.
-Wherefore we condemn you to do public penance,
-bareheaded and with a lighted taper in your hand, in
-the great court of our palace, asking pardon of God,
-of the king, and of justice, for the offence you have
-committed. You shall then be taken, bareheaded and
-on foot, to the Grève, where you shall see your books
-burnt. Next you shall be led to the front of the
-church of Notre Dame, where you shall do penance
-to God and the glorious Virgin, his mother. Afterwards
-you shall have your tongue pierced—that instrument
-of unrighteousness by which you have so
-grievously sinned.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_104" id="Ref_104" href="#Foot_104">[104]</a></span>
-Lastly, you shall be taken to the
-prison of Monsieur de Paris (the bishop), and be shut
-up there all your life between four walls of stone;
-and we forbid you to be supplied either with books to
-read, or pen and ink to write.'</p>
-
-<p>Berquin, startled at hearing such a sentence, which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">{50}</a></span>
-Erasmus terms 'atrocious,' and which the pious nobleman
-was far from expecting,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_105" id="Ref_105" href="#Foot_105">[105]</a></span>
- at first remained silent,
-but soon regaining his usual courage, and looking
-firmly at his judges,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_106" id="Ref_106" href="#Foot_106">[106]</a></span>
- he said: 'I appeal to the king.'—'Take
-care,' answered his judges; 'if you do not
-acquiesce in our sentence, we will find means to prevent
-you from ever appealing again.' This was clear. Berquin
-was sent back to prison.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret began to fear that her brother would
-withdraw his support from the evangelicals. If the
-Reformation had been a courtly religion, Francis
-would have protected it; but the independent air that
-it seemed to take, and, above all, its inflexible holiness,
-made it distasteful to him. The Queen of Navarre
-saw that the unhappy prisoner had none but the Lord
-on his side. She prayed:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent4">Thou, God, alone canst say:</div>
-<div class="verse">Touch not my son, take not his life away.</div>
-<div class="verse">Thou only canst thy sovereign hand outstretch</div>
-<div class="verse">To ward the blow.<span
- class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_107" id="Ref_107" href="#Foot_107">[107]</a></span></div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Everything indicated that the blow would be struck.
-On the afternoon of the very day when the sentence
-had been delivered, Maillard, the lieutenant-criminal,
-with the archers, bowmen, and arquebusiers of the city,
-surrounded the Conciergerie. It was thought that
-Berquin's last hour had come, and an immense crowd
-hurried to the spot. 'More than twenty thousand
-people came to see the execution,' says a manuscript.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_108" id="Ref_108" href="#Foot_108">[108]</a></span>
-'They are going to take one of the king's officers to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">{51}</a></span>
-Grève,' said the spectators. Maillard, leaving his
-troops under arms, entered the prison, ordered the
-martyr's cell to be opened, and told him that he had
-come to execute the sentence. 'I have appealed to the
-king,' replied the prisoner. The lieutenant-criminal
-withdrew. Everybody expected to see him followed
-by Berquin, and all eyes were fixed upon the gate;
-but no one appeared. The commander of the troops
-ordered them to retire; the archers marched back,
-and 'the great throng of people that was round the
-court-house and in the city separated.' The first
-president immediately called the court together, to
-take the necessary measures. 'We must lose no time,'
-said some, 'for the king has twice already rescued him
-from our hands.' Was there no hope left?</p>
-
-<p class="side">=BUDÆUS TRIES TO SAVE BERQUIN.=</p>
-
-<p>There were in France at that time two men of the
-noblest character, both friends of learning, whose whole
-lives had been consecrated to doing what was right:
-they were Budæus on the bench, and Berquin in his
-cell. The first was united to the second by the
-purest friendship, and his only thought was how to
-save him. But what could he do singly against the
-parliament and the Sorbonne? Budæus shuddered
-when he heard of his friend's appeal; he knew the
-danger to which this step exposed him, and hastened
-to the prison. 'Pray do not appeal!' said he; 'a second
-sentence is all ready, and it orders you to be put
-to death. If you accept the first, we shall be able to
-save you eventually. Pray do not ruin yourself!'
-Berquin, a more decided man than Budæus, would
-rather die than make any concession to error. His
-friend, however, did not slacken his exertions; he
-desired at whatever risk to save one of the most
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">{52}</a></span>
-distinguished men of France. Three whole days
-were spent by him in the most energetic efforts.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_109" id="Ref_109" href="#Foot_109">[109]</a></span>
-He had hardly quitted his friend before he returned and
-sat down by his side or walked with him sorrowfully
-up and down the prison. He entreated him for his own
-safety, for the good of the Church, and for the welfare
-of France. Berquin made no reply; only, after
-a long appeal from Budæus, he gave a nod of dissent.
-Berquin, says the historian of the University
-of Paris, 'sustained the encounter with indomitable
-obstinacy.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_110" id="Ref_110" href="#Foot_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=BERQUIN'S FALL AND RECOVERY=</p>
-
-<p>Would he continue firm? Many evangelicals were
-anxiously watching the struggle. Remembering the
-fall of the apostle Peter at the voice of a serving-maid,
-they said one to another that a trifling opposition was
-sufficient to make the strongest stumble. 'Ah!' said
-Calvin, 'if we cease but for an instant to lean upon the
-hand of God, a puff of wind, or the rustling of a falling
-leaf, is enough ... and straightway we fall!' It was
-not a puff of wind, but a tempest rather, by which
-Berquin was assailed. While the threatening voices
-of his enemies were roaring around him, the gentle
-voice of Budæus, full of the tenderest affection, penetrated
-the prisoner's heart and shook his firmest resolutions.
-'O my dear friend,' said Budæus, 'there
-are better times coming, for which you ought to preserve
-yourself.' Then he stopped, and added in a
-more serious tone: 'You are guilty towards God and
-man if by your own act you give yourself up to
-death.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_111" id="Ref_111" href="#Foot_111">[111]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">{53}</a></span>
-Berquin was touched at last by the perseverance of
-this great man; he began to waver; his sight became
-troubled. Turning his face away from God, he bent
-it to the ground. The power of the Holy Spirit was
-extinguished in him for a moment (to use the language
-of a reformer), and he thought he might be more useful
-to the kingdom of God by preserving himself for
-the future, than by yielding himself up to present
-death. 'All that we ask of you is to beg for pardon.
-Do we not all need pardon?' Berquin consented to
-ask pardon of God and the king in the great court of
-the palace of justice.</p>
-
-<p>Budæus ran off with delight and emotion to inform
-his colleagues of the prisoner's concession. But at
-the very moment when he thought he had saved his
-friend, he felt a sudden sadness come over him. He
-knew at what a price Berquin would have to purchase
-his life; besides, had he not seen that it was only after
-a struggle of nearly sixty hours that the prisoner had
-given way? Budæus was uneasy. 'I know the man's
-mind,' he said. 'His ingenuousness, and the confidence
-he has in the goodness of his cause, will be his ruin.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_112" id="Ref_112" href="#Foot_112">[112]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>During this interval there was a fierce struggle in
-Berquin's soul. All peace had forsaken him; his
-conscience spoke tumultuously. 'No!' he said to
-himself, 'no sophistry! Truth before all things! We
-must fear neither man nor torture, but render all
-obedience to God. I will persevere to the end; I will
-not pray the leader of this good war for my discharge.
-Christ will not have his soldiers take their ease until
-they have conquered over death.'</p>
-
-<p>Budæus returned to the prison shortly afterwards.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">{54}</a></span>
-'I will retract nothing,' said his friend; 'I would
-rather die than by my silence countenance the condemnation
-of truth.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_113" id="Ref_113" href="#Foot_113">[113]</a></span>
-He was lost! Budæus withdrew,
-pale and frightened, and communicated the
-terrible news to his colleagues. Beda and his friends
-were filled with joy, being convinced that to remove
-Berquin from the number of the living was to remove
-the Reformation from France. The judges, by an unprecedented
-exercise of power, revised their sentence,
-and condemned the nobleman to be strangled and then
-burnt on the Grève.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret, who was at St. Germain, was heartbroken
-when she heard of this unexpected severity. Alas!
-the king was at Blois with Madame ——.... Would
-there be time to reach him? She would try. She wrote
-to him again, apologising for the very humble recommendations
-she was continually laying before him, and
-adding: 'Be pleased, Sire, to have pity on poor Berquin,
-who is suffering only because he loves the Word
-of God and obeys you. This is the reason why those
-who did the contrary during your captivity hate him
-so; and their malicious hypocrisy has enabled them
-to find advocates about you to make you forget his
-sincere faith in God and his love for you.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_114" id="Ref_114" href="#Foot_114">[114]</a></span>
-After having uttered this cry of anguish, the Queen of Navarre
-waited.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE EXECUTION HURRIED ON.=</p>
-
-<p>But Francis gave no signs of life. In his excuse it
-has been urged that if he had at that time been victorious
-abroad and honoured at home, he would have
-saved Berquin once more; but the troubles in Italy and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">{55}</a></span>
-the intrigues mixed up with the treaty of Cambray,
-signed three months later, occupied all his
-thoughts. These are strange reasons. The fact is,
-that if the king (as is probable) had desired to save
-Berquin, he had not the opportunity; the enemies
-of this faithful christian had provided against that.
-They had scarcely got the sentence in their hands,
-when they called for its immediate execution. They
-fancied they could already hear the gallop of the horse
-arriving from Blois, and see the messenger bringing
-the pardon. Beda fanned the flame. Not a week's
-delay, not even a day or an hour! 'But,' said some,
-'this prevents the king from exercising the right of
-pardon, and is an encroachment upon his royal authority.'—'It
-matters not! put him to death!'—The
-judges determined to have the sentence carried out
-the very day it was delivered, '<i>in order that he might
-not be helped by the king</i>.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_115" id="Ref_115" href="#Foot_115">[115]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the morning of the 22nd of April, 1529,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_116" id="Ref_116" href="#Foot_116">[116]</a></span>
-the officers of parliament entered the gloomy cell where
-Berquin was confined. The pious disciple, on the
-point of offering up his life voluntarily for the name
-of Jesus Christ, was absorbed in prayer; he had long
-sought for God and had found him; the Lord was near
-him, and peace filled his soul. Having God for his
-father, he knew that nothing would be wanting to him
-in that last hour when everything else was to fail him:
-he saw a triumph in reproach, a deliverance in death.
-At the sight of the officers of the court, some of whom
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">{56}</a></span>
-appeared embarrassed, Berquin understood what they
-wanted. He was ready; he rose calm and firm, and
-followed them. The officers handed him over to the
-lieutenant-criminal and his sergeants, who were to
-carry out the sentence.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile several companies of archers and bowmen
-were drawn up in front of the Conciergerie.
-These armed men were not alone around the prison.
-The news had spread far and wide that a gentleman
-of the court, a friend of Erasmus and of the Queen of
-Navarre, was about to be put to death; and accordingly
-there was a great commotion in the capital. A
-crowd of common people, citizens, priests and monks,
-with a few gentlemen and friends of the condemned
-noble, waited, some with anger, others with curiosity,
-and others with anguish, for the moment when he
-would appear. Budæus was not there; he had not
-the courage to be present at the punishment. Margaret,
-who was at St. Germain, could almost see the
-flames of the burning pile from the terrace of the
-château.</p>
-
-<p>When the clock struck twelve, the escort began to
-move. At its head was the grand penitentiary Merlin;
-then followed the archers and bowmen, and after
-them the officers of justice and more armed men.
-In the middle of the escort was the prisoner. A
-wretched tumbrel was bearing him slowly to punishment.
-He wore a cloak of velvet, a doublet of satin
-and damask, and golden hose, says the Bourgeois of
-Paris, who probably saw him pass.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_117" id="Ref_117" href="#Foot_117">[117]</a></span>
-The King of
-heaven having invited him to the wedding, Berquin
-had joyfully put on his finest clothes. 'Alas!' said
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">{57}</a></span>
-many as they saw him, 'he is of noble lineage, a very
-great scholar, expert and quick in learning ... and
-yet he has gone out of his mind!' There was nothing
-in the looks or gestures of the reformer which
-indicated the least confusion or pride. He neither
-braved nor feared death: he approached it with tranquillity,
-meekness, and hope, as if entering the gates
-of heaven. Men saw peace unchangeable written on
-his face. Montius, a friend of Erasmus, who had
-desired to accompany this pious man even to the
-stake, said in the highest admiration: 'There was
-in him none of that boldness, of that hardened air
-which men led to death often assume; the calmness
-of a good conscience was visible in every feature.'—'He
-looks,' said other spectators, 'as if he were in
-God's house meditating upon heavenly things.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_118" id="Ref_118" href="#Foot_118">[118]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=BERQUIN'S MARTYRDOM.=</p>
-
-<p>At last the tumbrel had reached the place of punishment,
-and the escort halted. The chief executioner
-approached and desired Berquin to alight. He did
-so, and the crowd pressed more closely round the ill-omened
-spot. The principal officer of the court, having
-beckoned for silence with his hand, unrolled a
-parchment, and read the sentence 'with a husky
-voice,' says the chronicler. But Berquin was about
-to die for the Son of God who had died for him; his
-heart did not flinch one jot; he felt no confusion, and
-wishing to make the Saviour who supported him in
-that hour of trial known to the poor people around
-him, he uttered a few christian words. But the
-doctors of the Sorbonne were watching all his movements,
-and had even posted about a certain number
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">{58}</a></span>
-of their creatures in order to make a noise if they
-thought it was necessary. Alarmed at hearing the
-soft voice of the evangelist, and fearing lest the people
-should be touched by his words, these 'sycophants'
-hastily gave the signal. Their agents immediately
-began to shout, the soldiers clashed their arms, 'and
-so great was the uproar that the voice of the holy
-martyr was not heard in the extremity of death.'
-When Berquin found that these clamours drowned
-his voice, he held his peace. A Franciscan friar,
-who had accompanied him from the prison, eager to
-extort from him one word of recantation, redoubled
-his importunities at this last moment; but the martyr
-remained firm. At length the monk was silent,
-and the executioner drew near. Berquin meekly
-stretched out his head; the hangman passed the cord
-round his neck and strangled him.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=EFFECT ON THE SPECTATORS.=</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause of solemn silence ... but not
-for long. It was broken by the doctors of the Sorbonne
-and the monks, who hastily went up and contemplated
-the lifeless body of their victim. No one
-cried 'Jesus! Jesus!'—a cry of mercy heard even
-at the execution of a parricide. The most virtuous
-man in France was treated worse than a murderer.
-One person, however, standing near the stake, showed
-some emotion, and, strange to say, it was the grand
-penitentiary Merlin. 'Truly,' he said, 'so good a
-christian has not died these hundred years and
-more.' The dead body was thrown into the flames,
-which mounted up and devoured those limbs once so
-vigorous and now so pale and lifeless. A few men,
-led away by passion, looked on with joy at the progress
-of the fire, which soon consumed the precious
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">{59}</a></span>
-remains of him who should have been the reformer of
-France. They imagined they saw heresy burnt out,
-and when the body was entirely destroyed, they
-thought that the Reformation was destroyed with it,
-and that not a fragment of it remained. But all the
-spectators were not so cruel. They gazed upon the
-burning pile with sorrow and with love. The christians
-who had looked upon Berquin as the future
-reformer of France, were overwhelmed with anguish
-when they saw the hero in whom they had hoped
-reduced to a handful of dust. The temper of the
-people seemed changed, and tears were seen to flow
-down many a face. In order to calm this emotion,
-certain rumours were set afloat. A man stepped out
-of the crowd, and going up to the Franciscan confessor,
-asked him: 'Did Berquin acknowledge his
-error?'—'Yes, certainly,' answered the monk, 'and
-I doubt not that his soul departed in peace.' This
-man was Montius; he wrote and told the anecdote to
-Erasmus. 'I do not believe a word of it,' answered
-the latter. 'It is the usual story which those people
-invent after the death of their victims, in order to
-appease the anger of the people.'</p>
-
-<p>Some such stratagems were necessary, for the general
-agitation was increasing. Berquin's innocence,
-stamped on his features and on all his words, struck
-those who saw him die, and they were beginning to
-murmur. The monks noticed this, and had prepared
-themselves beforehand in case the indignation of the
-people should break out. They penetrated into the
-thickest of the crowd, making presents to the children
-and to the common people; and having worked them
-up, they sent them off in every direction. The impressionable
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">{60}</a></span>
-crowd spread over the Grève and through
-the neighbouring streets, shouting out that Berquin
-was a heretic. Yet here and there men gathered in
-little groups, talking of the excellent man who had
-been sacrificed to the passion of the theological
-faculty. 'Alas!' said some with tears in their eyes,
-'there never was a more virtuous man.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_119" id="Ref_119" href="#Foot_119">[119]</a></span>
-Many were astonished that a nobleman who held a high
-place in the king's affections should be strangled like
-a criminal. 'Alas!' rejoined others indignantly, 'what
-caused his ruin was the liberty which animated him,
-which is always the faithful companion of a good
-conscience.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_120" id="Ref_120" href="#Foot_120">[120]</a></span>
-Others of more spirit exclaimed: 'Condemn,
-quarter, crucify, burn, behead ... that is what
-pirates and tyrants can do; but God is the only just
-judge, and blessed is the man whom he pardoneth.'
-The more pious looked for consolation to the future.
-'It is only through the cross,' they said, 'that Christ
-will triumph in this kingdom.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_121" id="Ref_121" href="#Foot_121">[121]</a></span>
-The crowd dispersed.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE MARTYRS' HYMN.=</p>
-
-<p>The news of this tragedy soon spread through
-France, everywhere causing the deepest sorrow. Berquin
-was not the only person struck down; other
-christians also suffered the last punishment. Philip
-Huaut was burnt alive, after having his tongue cut
-out; and Francis Desus had both hand and head cut
-off. The story of these deaths, especially that of Berquin,
-was told in the shops of the workmen and in the
-cottages of the peasants. Many were terrified at it;
-but more than one evangelical christian, when he heard
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">{61}</a></span>
-the tale at his own fireside, raised his head and cast a
-look towards heaven, expressive of his joy at having a
-Redeemer and a <i>Father's house</i> beyond the sky. 'We
-too are ready,' said these men and women of the
-Reformation to one another, 'we are ready to meet
-death cheerfully, setting our eyes on the life that is
-to come.' One of these christian souls, who had
-known Berquin best, and who shed most tears over
-him, was the Queen of Navarre. Distressed and
-alarmed by his death and by the deaths of the christians
-sacrificed in other places for the Gospel, she
-prayed fervently to God to come to the help of his
-people. She called to mind these words of the Gospel:
-<i>Shall not God avenge his own elect, which cry day and
-night unto him?</i><span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_122" id="Ref_122" href="#Foot_122">[122]</a></span>
-A stranger to all hatred, free from
-every evil desire of revenge, she called to the Lord's
-remembrance how dear the safety of his children is to
-him, and implored his protection for them:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">O Lord our God, arise,</div>
-<div class="verse">Chastise thy enemies</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Thy saints who slay.</div>
-<div class="verse">Death, which to heathen men</div>
-<div class="verse">Is full of grief and pain,</div>
-<div class="verse">To all who in heaven shall reign</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">With thee is dear.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">They through the gloomy vale</div>
-<div class="verse">Walk firm, and do not quail,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">To rest with thee.</div>
-<div class="verse">Such death is happiness,</div>
-<div class="verse">Leading to that glad place</div>
-<div class="verse">Where in eternal bliss</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Thy sons abide.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">{62}</a></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Stretch out thy hand, O Lord,</div>
-<div class="verse">Help those who trust thy Word,</div>
-<div class="verse">And give for sole reward</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">This death of joy.</div>
-<div class="verse">O Lord our God, arise,</div>
-<div class="verse">Chastise thy enemies</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Thy saints who slay.<span class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_123" id="Ref_123" href="#Foot_123">[123]</a></span></div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This little poem by the Queen of Navarre, which
-contains several other verses, was the martyrs' hymn
-in the sixteenth century. Nothing shows more clearly
-that she was heart and soul with the evangelicals.</p>
-
-<p>Terror reigned among the reformed christians for
-some time after Berquin's martyrdom. They endured
-reproach, without putting themselves forward; they
-did not wish to irritate their enemies, and many of
-them retired to <i>the desert</i>, that is, to some unknown
-hiding-place. It was during this period of sorrow
-and alarm, when the adversaries imagined that by
-getting rid of Berquin they had got rid of the Reformation
-as well, and when the remains of the noble
-martyr were hardly scattered to the winds of heaven,
-that Calvin once more took up his abode in Paris,
-not far from the spot where his friend had been burnt.
-Rome thought she had put the reformer to death;
-but he was about to rise again from his ashes, more
-spiritual, more clear, and more powerful, to labour at
-the renovation of society and the salvation of mankind.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_95" id="Foot_95" href="#Ref_95">[95]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Louise de Savoie.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_96" id="Foot_96" href="#Ref_96">[96]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Marguerites de la Marguerite</i>, i. p. 502.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_97" id="Foot_97" href="#Ref_97">[97]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Illis licere venena sua spargere, nobis non licere admovere antidota.'—Erasmi
-<i>Epp.</i> p. 1109.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_98" id="Foot_98" href="#Ref_98">[98]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal d'un Bourgeois de Paris sous François I.</i> p. 380.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_99" id="Foot_99" href="#Ref_99">[99]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Flor. Rémond, <i>Hist. de l'Hérésie</i>, p. 348.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_100" id="Foot_100" href="#Ref_100">[100]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_101" id="Foot_101" href="#Ref_101">[101]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de la Reine de Navarre</i>, ii. p. 96.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_102" id="Foot_102" href="#Ref_102">[102]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal d'un Bourgeois de Paris</i>, p. 381.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_103" id="Foot_103" href="#Ref_103">[103]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_104" id="Foot_104" href="#Ref_104">[104]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Lingua illi ferro perfoderetur.'—Erasmi <i>Epp.</i> p. 1277. <i>Journal d'un
-Bourgeois de Paris</i>, p. 382.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_105" id="Foot_105" href="#Ref_105">[105]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Audita præter expectationem atroci sententia.'—Erasmi <i>Epp.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_106" id="Foot_106" href="#Ref_106">[106]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Constanti vultu.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_107" id="Foot_107" href="#Ref_107">[107]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Marguerites de la Marguerite</i>, i. p. 444.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_108" id="Foot_108" href="#Ref_108">[108]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Chronique du Roi François I.</i> p. 76, note.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_109" id="Foot_109" href="#Ref_109">[109]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Budæum triduo privatim egisse cum Berquino.'—Erasmi <i>Epp.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_110" id="Foot_110" href="#Ref_110">[110]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crévier, v. p. 206.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_111" id="Foot_111" href="#Ref_111">[111]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, p. 103, verso.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_112" id="Foot_112" href="#Ref_112">[112]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, p. 103, verso.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_113" id="Foot_113" href="#Ref_113">[113]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'At ego mortem subire, quam veritatis damnationem, vel tacitus
-approbare velim.'—Bezæ <i>Icones</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_114" id="Foot_114" href="#Ref_114">[114]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de la Reine de Navarre</i>, ii. p. 99.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_115" id="Foot_115" href="#Ref_115">[115]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal d'un Bourgeois de Paris</i>, p. 383.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_116" id="Foot_116" href="#Ref_116">[116]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crespin and Theodore Beza speak of the month of November; the
-Bourgeois de Paris mentions the 17th of April, but most of the authorities
-give the 22nd.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_117" id="Foot_117" href="#Ref_117">[117]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Des chausses d'or.'—<i>Journal d'un Bourgeois de Paris</i>, p. 384.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_118" id="Foot_118" href="#Ref_118">[118]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Dixisses illum in templo de rebus cœlestibus cogitare.'—Erasmi <i>Epp.</i>
-p. 1277.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_119" id="Foot_119" href="#Ref_119">[119]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Prædicant eo nihil fuisse integrius.'—Erasmi <i>Epp.</i> p. 1313.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_120" id="Foot_120" href="#Ref_120">[120]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Libertas, bonæ conscientiæ comes, perdidit virum.'—Ibid. p. 113.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_121" id="Foot_121" href="#Ref_121">[121]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Christo, nonnisi sub cruce, in Gallis triumphaturo.'—Bezæ <i>Icones</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_122" id="Foot_122" href="#Ref_122">[122]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Luke xviii. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_123" id="Foot_123" href="#Ref_123">[123]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-fn">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse quote1">'Reveille-toi, Seigneur Dieu,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Fais ton effort,</div>
-<div class="verse">Et viens venger en tout lieu</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Des tiens la mort.'</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent4"><i>Les Marguerites de la Marguerite</i>, i. p. 508.</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">{63}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XVII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">FIRST LABOURS OF CALVIN AT PARIS.<br />
- (1529.)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN REVISITS NOYON.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CALVIN, having bid farewell to the towns and
-châteaux of Berry, had arrived in the midst of
-those hills and plains, those green pastures and noble
-forests, which stretch along both sides of the Oise.
-He approached that little city of Noyon, which had
-been one time the capital of the empire of Charlemagne,
-and where Hugues Capet, the head of the third race,
-had been elected king. But his thoughts were not
-on these things: he was thinking of his father. As
-soon as he caught a glimpse of that beautiful Gothic
-cathedral, beneath whose shadow he had been brought
-up, he said to himself that its pavement would
-never more be trodden by his father's feet. He
-had never before returned to Noyon in such deep
-emotion. The death of Berquin, the death of his
-father, the future of the Church and of himself—all
-oppressed him. He found consolation in the affection
-of his family, and especially in the devoted attachment
-of his brother Anthony and of his sister Mary, who
-were one day to share his exile. Bowed down by
-so many afflictions, he would have sunk under the
-burden, 'like a man half dead, if God had not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">{64}</a></span>
-revived his courage while comforting him by his
-Word.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_124" id="Ref_124" href="#Foot_124">[124]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>His father—that old man with mind so positive, with
-hand so firm, and whose authority he had venerated—was
-not there to guide him: he was free. Gerard
-had decided that his son should devote himself to
-the law, by which he might rise to a high position in
-the world. Calvin aspired, indeed, to another future,
-but from obedience he had renounced his most ardent
-desires; and now, finding himself at liberty, he turned
-towards that christian career in which he was to be,
-along with Luther, the greatest champion of modern
-times. 'Earthly fathers,' he said on one occasion,
-'must not prevent the supreme and only Father of all
-from enjoying his rights.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_125" id="Ref_125" href="#Foot_125">[125]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As yet, however, Calvin did not meditate becoming
-a reformer in the same sense as Luther. At that time
-he would have liked to see all the Church transformed,
-rather than set himself apart and build up a
-new one. The faith which he desired to preach was
-that old christian truth which Paul had preached at
-Rome. The scribes had substituted for it the false
-traditions of man, but this was only one reason the
-more for proclaiming in the Church the doctrine which
-had founded the Church. After the first phase of
-christian life, in which man thinks only of Christ,
-there usually comes a second, where the christian
-does not voluntarily worship with assemblies opposed
-to his convictions. Calvin was now in the first of
-these phases. He thought only of preaching the Gospel.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">{65}</a></span>
-Did he not possess a pulpit in this very neighbourhood,
-and was it not his duty to glorify God from
-it? Had it been in his power, he would have done so
-in St. Peter's at Rome; why, then, should he refrain
-in his own church?</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN'S PROMOTION AND PREACHING.=</p>
-
-<p>Calvin had friends in Picardy, even among the dignitaries
-of the clergy. Early attached to their young
-fellow-townsman, these men had received him with joy;
-they had found him more advanced in piety and learning,
-and had observed nothing in him opposed to their
-opinions. They thought that he might become one of
-the pillars of the Church. The circumstance that he
-had studied the law did not check them; it rendered
-him, in their eyes, fitter still to maintain the interests
-of the faith ... and of the clergy. Far from repelling
-him, his former patrons endeavoured to bind him still
-closer to them. That noble friend of his boyhood,
-Claude de Hangest of Momor, now abbot of St. Eloy,
-offered to give him the living of Pont L'Evêque in exchange
-for that of St. Martin of Marteville. Calvin,
-seeing in this offer the opportunity of preaching in the
-very place where his ancestors had lived, accepted;
-and then resigned, in favour of his brother Anthony,
-the chapel of La Gésine, of which he had been titulary
-for eight years. The act is dated the 30th of April,
-1529.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_126" id="Ref_126" href="#Foot_126">[126]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The same persons who presided over these several
-changes encouraged Calvin to preach. When a young
-man who has gone through his studies for the ministry
-of the Word returns to his native place, every one is
-anxious to hear him. Curiosity was still more keenly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">{66}</a></span>
-aroused in Calvin's case, for his reputation had preceded
-him, and some little charge of heresy, put forward
-from time to time, served but to increase the
-general eagerness. Everybody wanted to hear the
-son of the episcopal secretary, the cooper's grandson.
-The men and women who knew him hastened to the
-church; people even came from Noyon. The holy
-place was soon filled. At last a young man, of middle
-height, with thin pale face, whose eyes indicated firm
-conviction and lively zeal, went up into the pulpit
-and explained the Holy Scriptures to his fellow-townsmen.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_127" id="Ref_127" href="#Foot_127">[127]</a></span>
-The effects of Calvin's preaching were
-various. Many persons rejoiced to hear, at last, a
-living word beneath that roof which had reechoed
-with so much vain and useless babbling. Of this number
-were, no doubt, certain notable men who were seen
-pressing round the preacher: Laurent of Normandy,
-who enjoyed great consideration in that district;
-Christopher Lefèvre, Lancelot of Montigny, Jacques
-Bernardy, Corneille de Villette, Nicholas Néret,
-Labbé surnamed Balafré, Claude Dupré, and Nicholas
-Picot, Anthony Calvin's brother-in-law. All were
-afterwards accused of having embraced the new doctrine,
-and were condemned by the parliament of Paris
-to be drawn on hurdles and burnt in the great square
-of Noyon; but they had already quitted the kingdom.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_128" id="Ref_128" href="#Foot_128">[128]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The words of the young speaker did not merely
-communicate fresh knowledge—they worked a transformation
-of the heart and life. But there were men
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">{67}</a></span>
-present quite ready to receive certain evangelical ideas,
-who yet did not mean to change either their life or their
-heart. The same word thus produced faith in some
-and opposition in others: it <i>divided the light from the
-darkness</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_129" id="Ref_129" href="#Foot_129">[129]</a></span>
-Certain bigots and priests, in particular,
-inveighed against the preaching of that serious-looking,
-earnest young man, and exclaimed: 'They are setting
-wolves to guard the sheep!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_130" id="Ref_130" href="#Foot_130">[130]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=DECIDES ON GOING TO PARIS.=</p>
-
-<p>Calvin stayed only two or three months at Noyon.
-Perhaps a growing opposition forced him to depart.
-He desired also to continue his Greek studies; but
-instead of returning to Orleans or Bourges, he resolved
-to go to Paris. The moment was favourable. Classical
-studies were at that time making great progress in the
-capital. Francis I., at the request of Budæus and
-Du Bellay, had just founded (1529) several professorships
-for teaching Latin, Greek, and Hebrew. It was
-a complete revolution, and Paris was full of animation
-when Calvin arrived. The fantastical framework
-which the scholastics, theologians, jurists, and philosophers
-had erected during the middle ages, fell to the
-ground in the midst of jeering and laughter, and the
-modern learning arose amid the unanimous applause of
-the rising generation. Pierre Danès, a pupil of Budæus
-and Lascaris, and afterwards a bishop, taught
-Greek;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_131" id="Ref_131" href="#Foot_131">[131]</a></span>
-Francis Vatable introduced young scholars
-to the knowledge of the Hebrew Scriptures, although
-he failed himself to find the counsel of God therein;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_132" id="Ref_132" href="#Foot_132">[132]</a></span>
-other illustrious professors completed this precious
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">{68}</a></span>
-course of instruction. Paris was a centre whence light
-emanated; and this was the reason which induced
-Calvin to forsake Noyon, Bourges, and even Orleans,
-and hasten his steps thither.</p>
-
-<p>The journey was a painful one; Calvin (whether on
-horseback or on foot is unknown) arrived in Paris
-about the end of June, quite worn out with fatigue.
-'It is impossible,' he said next morning, 'for me to go
-out of doors;'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_133" id="Ref_133" href="#Foot_133">[133]</a></span>
-indeed, he did not leave his room for
-four days. But the news of his arrival soon spread;
-his friends and admirers hastened to his inn, and
-during these four days his room was never empty.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_134" id="Ref_134" href="#Foot_134">[134]</a></span>
-All the agitation of the schools seemed to be transported
-thither.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN'S VISITORS.=</p>
-
-<p>They talked of Budæus, Vatable, and Danès, of
-Greek and Hebrew, and of the sun of learning then
-shining over the old Lutetia.... Calvin listened and
-learnt the state of men's minds. One of the first who
-hurried to him was Coiffard, his fellow-collegian at
-Orleans, who brought his father with him. People
-contended for the student of Noyon, who had already
-become celebrated. 'Come and stay with us,' said
-the young Parisian; and when Calvin declined, 'I entreat
-you,' said Coiffard in the most affectionate manner,
-'to grant me this favour.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_135" id="Ref_135" href="#Foot_135">[135]</a></span>
-The father also
-insisted, for the worthy citizen knew what a steady
-friend his rather frivolous son would find in the
-Picardin student. 'There is nothing in the world
-I desire so much,' he said, 'as to see you associate
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">{69}</a></span>
-with my son.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_136" id="Ref_136" href="#Foot_136">[136]</a></span>
-—'Come, do come,' urged the son,
-'and be my companion.' Calvin was touched by this
-affection; but he feared the interruptions of the family,
-its distance from college, and he had but one object—study.
-'I would accept your offer with both hands,' he
-said, 'but that I intend to follow Danès' Greek course,
-and his school is too far from your house.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_137" id="Ref_137" href="#Foot_137">[137]</a></span>
-The father and son went away greatly disappointed.</p>
-
-<p>Not long after this, a more important personage
-entered the room. It was Nicholas Cop, professor at
-St. Barbe, whose father, a native of Basle, had just
-been appointed physician to the king. Both father
-and son were strongly suspected of belonging to the
-'new opinions;' but at that time Francis cared little
-about them. The elder Cop had translated Galen
-and Hippocrates, and the king had confided to him
-the care of his health. A strict friendship erelong
-united Calvin and the son. The latter, although a
-professor in the university, listened to the student of
-Noyon as a disciple listens to his master; it is one of
-those marks of Calvin's superiority, which every one
-recognised instantly. He showed his friend 'how
-Christ discharges the office of physician, since he is
-sent by the Father to quicken the dead.'</p>
-
-<p>The conversations which these two young men
-then held together resulted in after years in an event
-which exercised a certain influence over the destiny
-of the reformer and of the Reform itself.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=VISIT TO A CONVENT.=</p>
-
-<p>An object of less importance occupied them now:
-it was Calvin's first business in Paris, and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">{70}</a></span>
-account he gives of it throws a new light on the
-future legislator. The custom of shutting up in
-convents the young persons who had any tendency
-towards the Gospel had already begun. 'Our friend
-Daniel, the advocate,' said Calvin to Cop, 'has a sister
-in a nunnery at Paris; she is about to take the veil,
-and Daniel wishes to know if it is with her full consent.'—'I
-will accompany you,' said the professor,
-and on the following Sunday, Calvin having recovered
-from his fatigue, the two friends set out for the convent.
-The future reformer, who was already opposed
-to monastic vows, especially when taken under constraint,
-cleverly devised a plan for learning whether
-any restriction was placed upon the young lady's
-liberty. 'Converse with the abbess,' he said to Cop,
-as they were going to the nunnery, 'and contrive
-that I may be able to talk privately with our friend's
-sister.' The abbess, followed by the girl, entered the
-parlour. 'We have granted her,' said the former,
-'the privilege of taking the solemn vows.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_138" id="Ref_138" href="#Foot_138">[138]</a></span>
-According
-to his instructions Cop began to talk with the
-superior on different subjects which had no connection
-with the matter in hand. During this time,
-Calvin, who believed he saw a victim before him,
-took advantage of the opportunity, and said to Daniel's
-sister: 'Are you taking this yoke upon you willingly,
-or is it placed on your neck by force?<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_139" id="Ref_139" href="#Foot_139">[139]</a></span>
-Do not fear
-to trust me with the thoughts that disturb you.' The
-girl looked at Calvin with a thoughtless air, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">{71}</a></span>
-answered him with much volubility: 'The veil is
-what I most desire, and the day when I shall make
-my vow can never come too soon.' The future reformer
-was astonished: he had before him a giddy
-young person, who had been led to believe that she
-would find great amusement in the cloister. 'Every
-time she spoke of her vows,' said Calvin, 'you might
-have fancied she was playing with her doll.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_140" id="Ref_140" href="#Foot_140">[140]</a></span>
-He desired, however, to address one serious word to her:
-'Mademoiselle,' he said to her, 'I beg of you not to
-trust too much to your own strength: I conjure you
-to promise nothing as if you could accomplish it yourself.
-Lean rather on the strength of God, in whom
-we live and have our being.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_141" id="Ref_141" href="#Foot_141">[141]</a></span>
-Perhaps Calvin
-thought that by speaking so seriously to the young
-girl, she would renounce her rash undertaking; but
-he was mistaken.</p>
-
-<p>He returned to his inn, and two days after (the
-25th of June) he wrote to Daniel an account of his visit
-to the convent. Having finished, he was beginning
-another letter to a canon of Orleans,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_142" id="Ref_142" href="#Foot_142">[142]</a></span>
-when one of
-his friends arrived, who had come to take him for a
-ride. We might suppress this incident as being of no
-importance; but it is perhaps also an unexpected feature
-in Calvin's habits. He is generally represented
-as absorbed in his books or reprimanding the disorderly.
-And yet he was no stranger to the decent
-relaxations of life: he could ride on horseback and
-took pleasure in the exercise. He accepted his friend
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">{72}</a></span>
-Viermey's offer. 'I shall finish the letter on my return,'
-he said,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_143" id="Ref_143" href="#Foot_143">[143]</a></span>
-and the two students set off on their
-excursion in the neighbourhood of Paris. A few
-days later Calvin hired a room in the college of
-Fortret, where he was near the professors, and resumed
-his study of languages, law, and philosophy.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_144" id="Ref_144" href="#Foot_144">[144]</a></span>
-He desired to learn. Having received the knowledge
-of divine things, he wished to acquire a true
-understanding of the world.</p>
-
-<p>But erelong the summons from on high sounded
-louder than ever in his heart. When he was in his
-room, surrounded by his law books, the voice of his
-conscience cried to him that he ought to study the
-Bible. When he went out, all his friends who felt a
-love for pure religion begged of him to devote himself
-to the Gospel.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_145" id="Ref_145" href="#Foot_145">[145]</a></span>
-Calvin was one of those fortresses
-that are not to be taken at the first assault. As he
-looked upon the books scattered about his study, he
-could not make up his mind to forsake them. But
-whenever in the course of his life God spoke clearly
-to him, he repressed his fondest desires. Thus urged
-from within and from without, he yielded at last. 'I
-renounce all other sciences,' he said, 'and give myself
-up entirely to theology and to God.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_146" id="Ref_146" href="#Foot_146">[146]</a></span>
-This news
-spread among the secret assemblies of the faithful,
-and all were filled with great satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>A mighty movement had taken place in Calvin's
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">{73}</a></span>
-soul; but it must be understood that there was no
-plan laid down in his mind. He had no ambition, no
-art, no <i>rôle</i>; but he did with a strong will whatever
-God set before him. The time he now spent in Paris
-was his apprenticeship. Having given himself to
-God, he set to work with the decision of an energetic
-character and the firmness of a persevering mind.
-He studied theology with enthusiasm. 'The science
-of God is the mistress-science,' he said; 'the others
-are only her servants.' He gave consistency to that
-little chosen band who, in the midst of the crowd
-of scholars, turned lovingly towards the Holy Scriptures.
-He excited young and noble minds; he studied
-with them and endeavoured to explain their
-difficulties.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=SPEAKS AT SECRET MEETINGS.=</p>
-
-<p>He did more. Berquin's death had struck all his
-friends with terror. 'If they have burnt this green
-wood,' said some, 'they will not spare the dry.'
-Calvin, not permitting himself to be checked by these
-alarms, began to explore that city which had become
-so dangerous. He joined the secret assemblies
-which met under the shadow of night in remote
-quarters,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_147" id="Ref_147" href="#Foot_147">[147]</a></span>
-where he explained the Scriptures with
-a clearness and energy of which none had ever
-heard the like. These meetings were held more particularly
-on the left bank of the Seine, in that part of
-the city which the catholics afterwards termed <i>Little
-Geneva</i>, and which, on the other hand, is now the
-seat of Parisian catholicism. One day the evangelicals
-would repair mysteriously to a house on the property
-of the abbey of St. Germain des Prés; another day
-they would meet in the precincts of the university,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">{74}</a></span>
-the <i>quartier latin</i> of our times. In the room would be a
-few wooden benches, on which the poor people, a few
-students, and sometimes one or two men of learning,
-took their seats. They loved that simple-hearted
-young man, who so effectually introduced into their
-minds and hearts the truths he found in the Scriptures.
-'The Word of Christ is always a fire,' they
-said; 'but when he explains it, this fire shines out
-with unusual brilliancy.'</p>
-
-<p>Young men formed themselves on his model; but
-there were many who rushed into controversy, instead
-of seeking edification as Calvin did. In the university
-quarter the pupils of Daniel and Vatable might
-be seen, with the Hebrew or Greek Testaments in
-their hands, disputing with everybody. 'It is thus
-in the Hebrew text,' they said; 'and the Greek text
-reads so and so.' Calvin did not, however, disdain
-polemics; following the natural bent of his mind, he
-attacked error and reprimanded the guilty. Some
-who were astonished at his language asked: 'Is not
-this the curé of Pont l'Evêque, the friend of Monseigneur
-de St. Eloy?' But, not allowing himself
-to be checked by these words, he confounded alike
-the superstitious papists and the incredulous innovators.
-'He was wholly given up to divinity and to
-God, to the great delight of all believers.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_148" id="Ref_148" href="#Foot_148">[148]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=HE CIRCULATES INFORMATION.=</p>
-
-<p>It was already possible to distinguish in him, in
-some features at least, the character of chief of the
-Reform. As he possessed great facility of correspondence,
-he kept himself informed, and others also,
-of all that was passing in the christian world. He
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">{75}</a></span>
-made about this time a collection of papers and documents
-relating to the most recent facts of the Reformation,
-and sent them to Duchemin, but not for
-him to keep.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_149" id="Ref_149" href="#Foot_149">[149]</a></span>
-'I send them to you on this condition,'
-wrote Calvin, 'that, in accordance with your
-good faith and duty, they may pass through your
-hands to our friends.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_150" id="Ref_150" href="#Foot_150">[150]</a></span>
-To this packet he added
-an epitome,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_151" id="Ref_151" href="#Foot_151">[151]</a></span>
-some commentaries, and a collection of
-notes made probably by Roussel during his residence
-at Strasburg. He purposed adding an appendix:<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_152" id="Ref_152" href="#Foot_152">[152]</a></span>'But I had no time,' he said.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_153" id="Ref_153" href="#Foot_153">[153]</a></span>
-Calvin desired that
-all the friends of the Gospel should profit by the
-light which he himself possessed. He brought the new
-ideas and new writings into circulation. A close
-student, an indefatigable evangelist, this young man
-of twenty was, by his far-seeing glance, almost a
-reformer.</p>
-
-<p>He did not confine his labours to Paris, Orleans,
-Bourges, or Noyon: the city of Meaux occupied his
-attention. Meaux, which had welcomed Lefèvre and
-Farel, which had heard Leclerc, the first martyr, still
-possessed Briçonnet. This former protector of the
-evangelicals would indeed no longer see them, and
-appeared absorbed in the honours and seductions of
-the prelacy. But some men thought that at the bottom
-of his heart he still loved the Gospel. What a triumph
-if the grace of God should once more blossom in his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">{76}</a></span>
-soul! Daniel had friends at Meaux; Calvin begged
-of him to open the door (or, to use his own expression,
-<i>the window</i>) of this city for him. In the number of
-these friends was a certain <i>Mæcenas</i>. The young
-doctor, writing from Meaux, gives a portrait of this
-individual which exactly fits the bishop. He does
-not name Briçonnet; but as he often suppresses names,
-or employs either initials or pseudonyms, we might
-almost say that the name was not necessary here.
-Daniel accordingly wrote to Mæcenas, who returned
-a very cold answer.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_154" id="Ref_154" href="#Foot_154">[154]</a></span>
-'I cannot walk with those
-people,' he said; 'I cannot conform my manners to
-theirs.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_155" id="Ref_155" href="#Foot_155">[155]</a></span>
-Daniel insisted; but it was all of no use:
-the timid Mæcenas would on no account have anything
-to do with Calvin. Briçonnet, we learn, was
-surrounded by friends who were continually repeating
-to him: 'A bishop ought to have no commerce with
-persons suspected of innovation.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_156" id="Ref_156" href="#Foot_156">[156]</a></span>
-Calvin, animated
-by the noblest ambition, that of bringing back to God
-a soul that was going astray, finding himself denied
-every time he knocked at the gate of this great personage,
-at last gave up his generous enterprise, and,
-shaking the dust from his feet, he said with severity:
-'Since he will not be with us, let him take pleasure in
-himself, and with a heart full, or rather inflated by his
-own importance, let him pamper his ambition.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_157" id="Ref_157" href="#Foot_157">[157]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">{77}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN'S MISSIONARY ZEAL.=</p>
-
-<p>Calvin did not, however, fail completely at Meaux:
-'You have given me prompt and effectual aid,' he
-wrote to Daniel; 'you have opened me a window,
-and have thus given me the privilege of being in future
-an indiscreet petitioner.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_158" id="Ref_158" href="#Foot_158">[158]</a></span>
-He took advantage of this
-opening to propagate the Gospel. 'I will do it,' he
-said, 'without imprudence or precipitation.' And,
-calling to mind that 'the doctrine of Christ is like
-old wine, which has ceased working, but which nevertheless
-gives nourishment to the body,'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_159" id="Ref_159" href="#Foot_159">[159]</a></span>
-he busied
-himself in filling vessels with this precious drink: 'I
-will take care,' he wrote to Daniel, 'that the inside
-shall be well filled with wine.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_160" id="Ref_160" href="#Foot_160">[160]</a></span>
-He ended his
-letter by saying: 'I want the <i>Odyssey</i> of Homer
-which I lent Sucquet: pray tell him so.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_161" id="Ref_161" href="#Foot_161">[161]</a></span>
-Luther
-took Plautus and Terence into the convent with him;
-Calvin asked for Homer.</p>
-
-<p>He soon returned to Paris, which opened a wider
-field of labour to him. On the 15th of January, 1530,
-he wrote Daniel a letter which he dated from the
-<i>Acropolis</i>, as if Paris were to him the citadel of catholicism
-or the Parthenon of France.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_162" id="Ref_162" href="#Foot_162">[162]</a></span>
-He was always
-trying to save some lost sheep, and such a desire filled
-his mind on the 15th of January. On that day he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">{78}</a></span>
-expected two friends to dinner. One of them, Robert
-Daniel, brother to the advocate of Orleans, an enthusiastic
-young man, was burning with desire to see the
-world. Calvin, who had already done all in his power
-to win him over, flattered himself that he would succeed
-that day; but the giddy young fellow, suspecting
-perhaps what awaited him, did not come. Calvin sent
-a messenger to Robert's lodging. 'He has decamped,'
-said the landlord; 'he has left for Italy.' At Meaux
-Calvin had desired to win over a great personage; at
-Paris he had hoped to win over a young adventurer:
-in both cases he failed. 'Alas!' he said, 'I am but
-a dry and useless log!' And once more he sought
-fresh strength in Christ.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=BEDA ATTACKS THE PROFESSORS.=</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the Sorbonne, proud of the victory it had
-gained in bringing Berquin to the stake, decided to
-pursue its triumphs. The war was about to begin
-again. It was Beda who renewed the combat—that
-Beda of whom Erasmus said: 'There are three thousand
-priests in that man alone!' He did not attack Calvin,
-disdaining, or rather ignoring him. He aimed at
-higher game, and having triumphed over one of the
-king's gentlemen, he attacked the doctors whom Francis
-had invited to Paris for the propagation of learning.
-Danès, Vatable, and others having been cited before
-the parliament, the fiery syndic rose and said: 'The
-king's doctors neglect Aristotle, and study the Holy
-Scriptures only.... If people continue to occupy themselves
-with Greek and Hebrew, it is all over with faith.
-These folks desire to explain the Bible, and they are
-not even theologians!... The Greek and Hebrew
-books of the Holy Scriptures come mostly from Germany,
-where they may have been altered. Many of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">{79}</a></span>
-the persons who print Hebrew books are Jews.... It
-is not, therefore, a sufficient argument to say: It is
-so and so in the Hebrew.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_163" id="Ref_163" href="#Foot_163">[163]</a></span>
-These doctors ought to
-be forbidden to interfere with Holy Scripture in their
-courses; or at least they should be ordered first to
-undergo an examination at the university.' The king's
-professors did not hold back in the cause of knowledge.
-They boldly assumed the offensive. 'If the
-university of Paris is now in small esteem among
-foreign nations,' they said to the parliament, 'it is because
-instead of applying themselves to the study of
-the Holy Gospels and of the ancient fathers—Cyprian,
-Chrysostom, Jerome, and Augustin—its theologians
-substitute for this true knowledge a science teaching
-nothing but craft and sophistry. It is not thus that
-God wills to enlighten his people. We must study
-sacred literature, and drink freely of all the treasures
-of the human mind.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_164" id="Ref_164" href="#Foot_164">[164]</a></span>
-Beda had gone too far. At
-court, and even in parliament, numerous voices were
-raised in behalf of learning and learned men. Parliament
-dismissed the charges of the syndic of the Sorbonne.</p>
-
-<p>The exasperated Beda now employed all his eloquence
-to get the professors condemned by the Sorbonne.
-'The new doctors,' he exclaimed, 'horrible
-to say! pretend that Holy Scripture cannot be understood
-without Greek, Hebrew, and other such languages.'
-On the 30th of April, 1530, the Sorbonne
-did actually condemn as rash and scandalous the proposition
-of the professors which Beda had denounced.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_165" id="Ref_165" href="#Foot_165">[165]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">{80}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=SMALL BEGINNINGS OF A GREAT WORK.=</p>
-
-<p>Calvin anxiously observed in all its phases this
-struggle between his teachers and the doctors of the
-Sorbonne. All the students were on the watch, as
-was Calvin also in his college; and when the decision
-of the parliament became known there, it was received
-with loud acclamations. While the Sorbonne placed
-itself on the side of tradition, Calvin placed himself
-still more decidedly on the side of Scripture. He
-thought that as the oral teaching of the apostles had
-ceased, their written teaching had become its indispensable
-substitute. The writings of Matthew and John,
-of Peter and Paul, were, in his opinion, the living
-word of these great doctors, their teaching for those
-ages which could neither see nor hear them. It
-appeared to Calvin as impossible to reform the Church
-without the writings of the apostles, as it would have
-been to form it in the first century without their
-preaching. He saw clearly that if the Church was to
-be renewed, it must be done by faith and by Scripture—a
-twofold principle which at bottom is but one.</p>
-
-<p>But the hour had not yet come when Calvin was to
-proclaim these great truths with the authority of a
-reformer. A modest and devout man, he was now
-performing a more humble work in the remotest
-streets and loneliest houses of the capital. One would
-have taken him for the most insignificant of men,
-and yet he was already a conqueror. The light of
-Scripture, with which his mind was saturated, was
-one day to shine like the lightning from east to west;
-and no man since St. Paul was to hold the Gospel torch
-so high and with so firm a hand. When that student,
-so thin, pale, and obscure, in appearance so mean, in
-manner so timid, passed down the street of St. Jacques
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">{81}</a></span>
-or of the Sorbonne; when he crept silently past the
-houses, and slipped unobserved into one of them,
-bearing with him the Word of life, there was not even
-an old woman that noticed him. And yet the time
-was to come when Francis I., with his policy, conquests,
-priests, court, and festivities, would only call up
-frivolous or disgusting recollections; while the work
-which this poor scholar was by God's grace then beginning,
-would increase day by day for the salvation
-of souls and prosperity of nations, and would advance
-calmly but surely to the conquest of the world.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_124" id="Foot_124" href="#Ref_124">[124]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvini <i>Opusc.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_125" id="Foot_125" href="#Ref_125">[125]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Unico omnium patri suum jus integrum maneat.'—Calvin <i>in
-Matthæum</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_126" id="Foot_126" href="#Ref_126">[126]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Desmay, <i>Vie de Calvin</i>, pp. 40-42. Drelincourt, <i>Défense de Calvin</i>,
-pp. 167, 168.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_127" id="Foot_127" href="#Ref_127">[127]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quo loco constat Calvinum ... ad populum conciones habuisse.'—Bezæ
-<i>Vita Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_128" id="Foot_128" href="#Ref_128">[128]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Archives Générales, x. 8946. <i>France Protestante</i>, article <i>Normandie</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_129" id="Foot_129" href="#Ref_129">[129]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Genesis i. 5.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_130" id="Foot_130" href="#Ref_130">[130]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Desmay, <i>Vie de Calvin</i>, p. 41. Drelincourt, <i>Défense de Calvin</i>, p. 168.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_131" id="Foot_131" href="#Ref_131">[131]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crévier, <i>Hist. de l'Université de Paris</i>, v. p. 245.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_132" id="Foot_132" href="#Ref_132">[132]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quo alios introduxisti, nusquam ipse ingressus.'—Bezæ <i>Icones</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_133" id="Foot_133" href="#Ref_133">[133]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Lassus de itinere pedem extrahere domo non potui.'—Calvinus
-Danieli, Berne MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_134" id="Foot_134" href="#Ref_134">[134]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Proximos quatuor dies, cum me ægre adhuc sustinerem.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_135" id="Foot_135" href="#Ref_135">[135]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Multis precibus, iisque non frigidis, sæpe institit.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_136" id="Foot_136" href="#Ref_136">[136]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nihil magis appetere quam me adjungi filio.'—Calvinus Danieli,
-Berne MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_137" id="Foot_137" href="#Ref_137">[137]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nihil unquam magis ambabus ulnis complexus sum, quam hanc
-amici voluntatem.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_138" id="Foot_138" href="#Ref_138">[138]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Eam obtinuisse ex solenni more voti nuncupandi potestatem.'—Calvinus
-Danieli, Berne MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_139" id="Foot_139" href="#Ref_139">[139]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Num jugum illud molliter exciperet? num fracta potius quam
-inflexa cervix?'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_140" id="Foot_140" href="#Ref_140">[140]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Diceres eam ludere cum puppis, quoties audivit voti nomen.'—Calvinus
-Danieli, Berne MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_141" id="Foot_141" href="#Ref_141">[141]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Omnia reponeret in Dei virtute in quo sumus et vivimus.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_142" id="Foot_142" href="#Ref_142">[142]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Habeo litteras inchoatas ad canonicum.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_143" id="Foot_143" href="#Ref_143">[143]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Viermæus cum quo equum ascendo.'—Calvinus Danieli, Berne MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_144" id="Foot_144" href="#Ref_144">[144]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In collegio Forterestano domicilium habuit.'—Flor. Rémond, <i>Hist.
-de l'Hérésie</i>, ii. p. 246.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_145" id="Foot_145" href="#Ref_145">[145]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Theodore Beza, <i>Vie de Calvin</i>, in French text, p. 12. 'Omnibus
-purioris religionis studiosis.'—Ibid. Latin text.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_146" id="Foot_146" href="#Ref_146">[146]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ab eo tempore sese Calvinus, abjectis reliquis studiis, Deo totum
-consecravit.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_147" id="Foot_147" href="#Ref_147">[147]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Qui tunc Lutetiæ occultos cœtus habebant.'—Bezæ <i>Vita Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_148" id="Foot_148" href="#Ref_148">[148]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Beza, <i>Vie de Calvin</i>, French text, p. 12. 'Summa piorum omnium
-voluptate.'—Ibid. Latin text.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_149" id="Foot_149" href="#Ref_149">[149]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Mitto ad te rerum novarum collectanea.'—Calvinus Chemino, Berne
-MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_150" id="Foot_150" href="#Ref_150">[150]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hac tamen lege, ut pro tua fide officioque per manus tuas ad amicos
-transeant.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_151" id="Foot_151" href="#Ref_151">[151]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Mitto Epitomem alteram G. nostri.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_152" id="Foot_152" href="#Ref_152">[152]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Cui velut appendicem assuere decreveram.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_153" id="Foot_153" href="#Ref_153">[153]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nisi me tempus defecisset.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_154" id="Foot_154" href="#Ref_154">[154]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Supinum illum Mæcenatem.'—Calvinus Danieli Aureliano, Idibus
-Septembris 1529. Geneva MSS. Calvin borrows this expression from
-Juvenal, i. 65:
-
- 'Multum referens de Mæcenate supino.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_155" id="Foot_155" href="#Ref_155">[155]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Non potest mores suos nobis accommodare.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_156" id="Foot_156" href="#Ref_156">[156]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Maimbourg, <i>Histoire du Calvinisme</i>, liv. ii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_157" id="Foot_157" href="#Ref_157">[157]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Sit assentator suus, et pleno, seu verius turgido pectore, foveat
-ambitionem.'—Calvinus Danieli, Geneva MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_158" id="Foot_158" href="#Ref_158">[158]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Apertam esse fenestram, ne post hæc simus verecundi petitores.'—Calvinus
-Danieli, Geneva MSS. An expression imitated from Suetonius,
-lib. xxviii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_159" id="Foot_159" href="#Ref_159">[159]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin, <i>in Lucam</i>, ch. v. 39.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_160" id="Foot_160" href="#Ref_160">[160]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Interim tamen penum vino instruendum curabo.'—Calvinus Danieli,
-Geneva MSS. This passage presents some difficulty. 'Penus' in
-Persius means a <i>safe</i> where meat is kept; in Festus and Lampridius,
-the <i>sanctuary</i> of the temple.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_161" id="Foot_161" href="#Ref_161">[161]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Odysseam Homeri quam Sucqueto commodaveram, finges a me
-desiderari.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_162" id="Foot_162" href="#Ref_162">[162]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Calvin's Letters</i>, i. p. 30. Philadelphia, edit. J. Bonnet.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_163" id="Foot_163" href="#Ref_163">[163]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ita habent Hebræa.'—<i>Actes du Parlement.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_164" id="Foot_164" href="#Ref_164">[164]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crévier, <i>Hist. de l'Université de Paris</i>, v. p. 249.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_165" id="Foot_165" href="#Ref_165">[165]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hæc propositio temeraria est et scandalosa.'—D'Argentré, <i>Collectio
-Judiciorum de novis Erroribus</i>, ii. p. 78.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">{82}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XVIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">MARGARET'S SORROWS AND THE FESTIVITIES OF THE COURT<br />
- (1530-1531.)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHEN was France to turn herself towards the
-Word of God? At the time of her brother's
-return from his Spanish captivity, Margaret had
-solicited him to grant liberty of preaching the Gospel,
-and the king, as will be remembered, had deferred
-the matter until his sons were restored to
-freedom. That moment seemed to have arrived.
-In order to recover his children, Francis had sacrificed
-at Cambray (June 1529), in <i>the Ladies' Peace</i>,
-the towns he had conquered, the allies who had
-been faithful to him, and two millions of crowns besides.</p>
-
-<p>It was not, however, until ten months later that the
-children of France returned. All the royal family
-hurried to the Spanish frontier to receive them; all,
-except Margaret. 'As it would be difficult to take
-you further without danger,' said her mother, 'the
-king and I have determined to leave you behind for
-your confinement.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_166" id="Ref_166" href="#Foot_166">[166]</a></span>
-Margaret, uneasy and perhaps
-a little jealous, wrote to Montmorency: 'When the
-King of Navarre is with you, I pray you to advise
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">{83}</a></span>
-him; but I much fear that you will not be able
-to prevent his falling in love with the Spanish
-ladies.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_167" id="Ref_167" href="#Foot_167">[167]</a></span>
-At the beginning of July the king's children
-were restored to their father; Margaret was
-transported with joy, and showed it by her enthusiastic
-letters to Francis I.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_168" id="Ref_168" href="#Foot_168">[168]</a></span>
-She loved these princes
-like a mother. More serious thoughts soon filled her
-mind: the epoch fixed by her brother had arrived, but
-would he keep his promise?</p>
-
-<p class="side">=MARGARET PROMOTES UNITY.=</p>
-
-<p>Margaret lost no time. Being left alone at Blois,
-she endeavoured to strengthen the good cause, and
-carried on an active correspondence with the leaders
-of the Reform. 'Alas!' said the priests, 'while King
-Francis is labouring to protect his kingdom from the
-inundations of the Rhine (that is, the Reformation),
-his sister the Queen of Navarre is trying to break the
-dykes and throw down the embankments.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_169" id="Ref_169" href="#Foot_169">[169]</a></span>
-There
-was one work above all which Margaret had at heart;
-she wished to put an end to the divisions among
-the evangelicals. She entreated the Frenchmen who
-were at Strasburg, 'waiting for the consolation of
-Israel,' to do all in their power to terminate the disunion;
-she even commanded Bucer to do so.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_170" id="Ref_170" href="#Foot_170">[170]</a></span>
-Bucer's
-fine talents, benevolent character, and cultivated understanding,
-the eloquence of his language, the dignity
-of his carriage, the captivating sound of his voice, his
-discerning of spirits, his ardent zeal—all seemed to
-fit him for a peace-maker. He set to work without
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">{84}</a></span>
-delay, and informed Luther of the princess's injunctions.
-'If our opinions are compared with yours,' he
-said, 'it will be easily seen that they are radically the
-same, although expressed in different terms. Let us
-not furnish our enemies with a weapon with which to
-attack truth.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_171" id="Ref_171" href="#Foot_171">[171]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>If Margaret had confidence in Bucer, he too had confidence
-in her. He admired the sincerity of her faith,
-the liveliness of her piety, the purity of her manners,
-the beauty of her understanding, the charms of her
-conversation, and the abundance of her good works.
-'Never was this christian heroine found wanting in
-her duty,' he wrote to Luther.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_172" id="Ref_172" href="#Foot_172">[172]</a></span>
-The Strasburgers
-thought that if Luther and the Germans on one side,
-and Margaret and the French on the other, were united,
-the cause of the Reformation would be triumphant in
-Europe. Whenever any good news arrived from
-France, Bucer thrilled with joy; he ran to communicate
-it to Capito, to Hedion, to Zell, and to Hohenlohe;
-and then he wrote to Luther: 'The brethren write to
-us from France, dear doctor, that the Gospel is spreading
-among them in a wonderful manner. A great number
-of the nobility have already received the truth.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_173" id="Ref_173" href="#Foot_173">[173]</a></span>
-There is a certain district in Normandy where the
-Gospel is spread so widely that the enemy call it <i>Little
-Germany</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_174" id="Ref_174" href="#Foot_174">[174]</a></span>
-The king is no stranger to the good
-doctrine;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_175" id="Ref_175" href="#Foot_175">[175]</a></span>
-and as his children are now at liberty, he
-will no longer pay such regard to what the pope and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">{85}</a></span>
-the emperor demand. Christ will soon be publicly
-confessed over the whole kingdom.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_176" id="Ref_176" href="#Foot_176">[176]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=DEATH OF MARGARET'S CHILD.=</p>
-
-<p>The Queen of Navarre was obliged to discontinue
-her correspondence with the reformers of Germany;
-great joys and great anguish gave another direction
-to her thoughts. About a fortnight after the return
-of the children of France, Margaret became the
-mother of a fine boy at the castle of Blois. When
-the king passed through that place on his return from
-the Pyrenees, he took his sister with him, after her
-churching, to Fontainebleau. But erelong bad tidings
-of her child summoned Margaret to Alençon, where
-he was staying with his nurse; he died on Christmas
-day, 1530, at the age of five months and a half. The
-mother who had watched near him, who had felt his
-sweet breath upon her cheek, saw him now lying dead
-in his little cradle, and could not turn away her eyes
-from him. At one time she thought he would revive,
-but alas! he was really dead. The queen felt as if
-her life had been torn from her; her strength was
-exhausted; her heart bled, but God consoled her.
-'I place him,' she said, 'in the arms of his Father;'
-and as she felt the necessity of giving glory to God
-publicly, she sent for one of her principal officers, and,
-with a voice stifled by tears and sighs, ordered that the
-child's death should be posted up in the principal
-quarters of the city, and that these words should be
-at the foot of the notice:</p>
-
- <p class="center"><span class="smc">The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away.</span></p>
-
-<p>A sentiment of joy mingled, however, with her inexpressible
-sorrow; and, confident that the little child
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">{86}</a></span>
-was in the presence of God, the pious mother ordered
-a <i>Te Deum</i> to be sung.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_177" id="Ref_177" href="#Foot_177">[177]</a></span>
-'I entreat you both,' she
-wrote to her brother and to her mother, 'to <i>rejoice at
-his glory</i>, and not give way to any sadness.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_178" id="Ref_178" href="#Foot_178">[178]</a></span>
-Francis,
-who had not long before lost two daughters, was moved
-at this solemn circumstance, and replied to his sister:
-'You have borne the grief of mine, as if they were
-your own lost children; now I must bear yours, as if
-it were my own loss. It is the third of yours and
-the last of mine, whom God has called away to his
-blessed communion, acquired by them with little
-labour, and desired by us with such great travail.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_179" id="Ref_179" href="#Foot_179">[179]</a></span>
-There are afflictions from God which awaken deep
-feelings, even in the most frivolous hearts, and lips
-which are ordinarily dumb sometimes utter harmonious
-sounds in the presence of death. Other consolations
-were not wanting to the queen. Du Bellay,
-at that time Bishop of Bayonne, and afterwards of
-Paris, hastened to Alençon: 'Ah!' said Margaret,
-'but for our Lord's help, the burden would have been
-more than I could bear.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_180" id="Ref_180" href="#Foot_180">[180]</a></span>
-The bishop urged her,
-on the part of the king, to go to St. Germain, where
-preparations were making for the coronation of Queen
-Eleanor, the emperor's sister. Margaret, who always
-obeyed her brother's orders, quitted Alençon, though
-with sorrow, in order to be present at his marriage.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=MARRIAGE OF FRANCIS AND ELEANOR.=</p>
-
-<p>The court had never been more brilliant. The less
-happiness there was in this marriage, the more pomp
-the king desired to display; joy of the heart was replaced
-by the sound of the fife and drum and of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">{87}</a></span>
-hautboy. The dresses were glittering, the festivities
-magnificent.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse">There were mysteries and games, and the streets were gaily drest,</div>
-<div class="verse">And the roads with flowers were strewn of the sweetest and the best;</div>
-<div class="verse">On every side were galleries, and, if 't would pleasure yield,</div>
-<div class="verse">We'd have conjured up again for thee a new Elysian field.<span
- class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_181" id="Ref_181" href="#Foot_181">[181]</a></span></div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Princes, archbishops, bishops, barons, knights, gentlemen
-of parliament, and the magistrates of the city,
-were assembled for this illustrious marriage; scholars
-and poets were not wanting. Francis I. would often
-repeat the proverb addressed by Fouquet, Count of
-Anjou, to Louis IV.:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse">Un roi non lettré</div>
-<div class="verse">Est un âne couronné.<span
- class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_182" id="Ref_182" href="#Foot_182">[182]</a></span></div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Philologers, painters, and architects had flocked to
-France from foreign countries. They had met in Paris
-men worthy to receive them. William Budæus, the
-three brothers Du Bellay, William Petit, the king's
-confessor; William Cop, the friend of Lascaris and
-Erasmus; Pierre du Châtel, who so gracefully described
-his travels in the East; Pellicier, the learned commentator
-on Pliny, whose papers have not, however, been
-printed;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_183" id="Ref_183" href="#Foot_183">[183]</a></span>
-Peter Danès, whose talents and knowledge
-Calvin esteemed so highly: all these scholars,
-who entertained sympathies, more or less secret, for
-the Reform, were then at court. These men of
-letters passed among the Roman party as belonging
-to Luther's flock.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_184" id="Ref_184" href="#Foot_184">[184]</a></span>
-Somewhat later, indeed, when one
-of them, Danès, was at the Council of Trent, a French
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">{88}</a></span>
-orator inveighed strongly against the lax morals of
-Rome. The Bishop of Orvieto said with contempt:
-'<i>Gallus cantat!</i>'—'<i>Utinam</i>,' sharply retorted Danès,
-then ambassador for France, '<i>utinam ad galli cantum
-Petrus resipisceret!</i>'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_185" id="Ref_185" href="#Foot_185">[185]</a></span>
-But the cock has often crowed,
-and Peter has shed no tears.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of all these men of letters was</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse">Margaret, the fairest flower</div>
-<div class="verse">That ever grew on earth,</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nodent">as Ronsard called her. But although her fine understanding
-enjoyed this select society, more serious
-thoughts occupied her mind. She could not forget,
-even in the midst of the court, the little angel that
-had flown away from her; she was uneasy about the
-friends of the Gospel; the worldly festivities around
-her left her heart depressed and unsatisfied. She
-endeavoured to pierce the thick clouds that hung over
-her, and soaring in spirit to the 'heavenly kingdom,'
-she grasped the hand that Christ stretched out to her
-from on high. She returned to the well of Jacob,
-where she had drunk when she was so tired with
-her journey. She had been as a parched and weary
-land, having neither dew nor moisture, and the Lord
-had refreshed her with the clear springs of his
-Holy Spirit. 'A continual sprinkling (to use her
-own words) kept up in her a heavenly eternity;'
-and she would have desired all who gathered round
-her to come to that well where she had so effectually
-quenched her own thirst. Accordingly, in the midst
-of the worldly agitation of the court, and of all the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">{89}</a></span>
-honours lavished on her rank and her wit, the poor
-mother, whose heart was bruised but consoled, looked
-out in silence for some lamb which she could recall
-from its wandering, and said:</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE FOUNTAIN PURE AND FREE.=</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse quote1">'Come to my fountain pure and free,</div>
-<div class="verse">Drink of its stream abundantly.'</div>
-<div class="verse">Hasten, sinners, to the call</div>
-<div class="verse">Of your God, who speaks to all:</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse quote1">'Come and drink—it gives relief</div>
-<div class="verse">To every form of mortal grief;</div>
-<div class="verse">Come and drink the draught divine,</div>
-<div class="verse">Out of this new fount of mine.</div>
-<div class="verse">Wash away each mortal stain</div>
-<div class="verse">In the blood of Jesu slain.</div>
-<div class="verse">No return I seek from thee</div>
-<div class="verse">But works of love and charity.'</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Hasten, sinners, to the brink</div>
-<div class="verse">Of this stream so pure, and drink!</div>
-<div class="verse">Fill your hearts, so that ye may</div>
-<div class="verse">Serve God better every day.</div>
-<div class="verse">Then, well washed of every stain</div>
-<div class="verse">That of earth might yet remain,</div>
-<div class="verse">By Jesu's love at last set free,</div>
-<div class="verse">Live in heaven eternally.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse quote1">'Come to my fountain pure and free,</div>
-<div class="verse">Drink of its stream abundantly!'</div>
-<div class="verse">Listen, sinners, to the call</div>
-<div class="verse">Of your God, who speaks to all.<span
- class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_186" id="Ref_186" href="#Foot_186">[186]</a></span></div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>These appeals were not unavailing. The Reformation
-was advancing in France by two different roads:
-one was on the mountains, the other in the plain.
-The Gospel gained hearts among the sons of labour
-and of trial; but it gained others also among the
-learned and high-born, whose faculty of inquiry had
-been aroused, and who desired to substitute truth in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">{90}</a></span>
-the place of monastic superstitions. Margaret was
-the evangelist of the court and of the king. Her
-mother, with Duprat and Montmorency, ruled in the
-council-chamber, the Duchess of Etampes in the court
-festivities, but the gentle voice of the Queen of Navarre
-supported Francis in his frequent periods of
-uneasiness and dejection. Yet not to the king alone
-did Margaret devote at this time the attentions of her
-ardent charity. All the affections of her heart were
-just now concentrated on a single object.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=LOUISA OF SAVOY DYING.=</p>
-
-<p>She had not recovered from the death of her child,
-when another blow fell upon the Queen of Navarre.
-The brilliant and gay festivities of the court were
-succeeded by the sullen silence of the grave; and the
-icy coldness, which had presided over the marriage of
-Francis with his enemy's sister, was followed by the
-keen anguish and the bitter sorrows of the tenderest
-of daughters. About the end of the year 1531 the
-Isle of France was visited by an epidemic. Louisa
-of Savoy was taken seriously ill at Fontainebleau,
-where the children of the king were staying. Margaret
-hurried thither immediately. Louisa, that great
-enemy of the Reformation, weakened by her dissolute
-life, was suffering from a severe fever, and yet, imagining
-that she would not die, she continued to attend to
-business of importance, and, between the paroxysms
-of the disease that was killing her, dictated her despatches
-to the king. Never had mother so depraved
-and daughter so virtuous felt such love for each other.
-As soon as she saw the Duchess of Angoulême, the
-Queen of Navarre anticipated 'the greatest of misfortunes,'
-and never left her side. The king's children
-afforded their grandmother some diversion. Charles,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">{91}</a></span>
-Duke of Angoulême, then nine years old, thought
-only of his father. 'If I only meet him,' said the
-boy one day, 'I will never let go his hand.'—'And
-if the king should go to hunt the boar?' said his aunt.—'Well!
-I shall not be afraid; papa will be able
-to take care of me.'—'When Madame heard these
-words,' wrote Margaret to her brother, 'she burst into
-tears, which has done her much good.'</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of all these mournful occupations, Margaret
-kept watch over the friends of the Gospel. 'Dear
-nephew,' she wrote to the grand-master Montmorency,
-'that good man Lefèvre writes to me that he is uncomfortable
-at Blois, because the folks there are trying
-to annoy him. For change of air, he would willingly
-go and see a friend of his, if such were the king's good
-pleasure.' Margaret, finding that the enemies of the
-Reform were tormenting the old man, gave him an
-asylum at Nerac in her own states. We shall meet
-with him there hereafter.</p>
-
-<p>On the 20th of September, Louisa, feeling a little
-better, left Fontainebleau for Romorantin; but she had
-hardly reached Grez, near Nemours, when her failing
-voice, her labouring breath, and her words so sad
-'that no one could listen to them, gave her daughter
-a sorrow and vexation impossible to describe.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_187" id="Ref_187" href="#Foot_187">[187]</a></span>
-'It is probable that she will die,' wrote Margaret to the
-king. Louisa, notwithstanding her weakness, still
-busied herself with affairs of state; she wished to die
-governing. Deep sorrow filled her daughter's heart.
-It was too much for her, this sight of a mother whom
-she loved with intense affection, trifling on the brink
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">{92}</a></span>
-of the grave, strengthening herself against death by
-means of her power and her greatness, 'as if they
-would serve her as a rampart and strong tower,'
-forgetting that there was another besides herself, who
-disposed of that life of which she fancied herself to be
-the mistress. Margaret did not rest content with
-only praying for her mother; she sat by her and spoke
-to her of the Saviour. 'Madame,' she said, 'I entreat
-you to fix your hopes elsewhere. Strive to make
-God propitious to you.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_188" id="Ref_188" href="#Foot_188">[188]</a></span>
-This woman, so ambitious,
-clever, false, and dissolute, whose only virtue was
-maternal love, does not appear to have opened her
-heart to her daughter's voice. She breathed her last
-on the 29th of September, 1531, in the arms of the
-Queen of Navarre.</p>
-
-<p>Thoughts of a different order were soon to engross
-Margaret's attention. Hers was a sincere and living
-piety, but she had an excessive fear of contests and
-divisions, and, like many eminent persons of that
-epoch, she desired at any cost, and even by employing
-diplomatic means, to achieve a reform which
-should leave catholicity intact. To set before herself
-a universal transformation of the Church was certainly
-a noble and a christian aim; but Calvin,
-Luther, Farel, and others saw that it could only be
-attained at the expense of truth. The Queen of
-Navarre's fault was her readiness to sacrifice everything
-to the realisation of this beautiful dream; and
-we shall see what was done in France (Francis lending
-himself to it from mere political motives) to attain
-the accomplishment of this magnificent but chimerical
-project.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_166" id="Foot_166" href="#Ref_166">[166]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de la Reine de Navarre</i>, i. p. 247.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_167" id="Foot_167" href="#Ref_167">[167]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de la Reine de Navarre</i>, i. p. 246.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_168" id="Foot_168" href="#Ref_168">[168]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. ii. p. 105.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_169" id="Foot_169" href="#Ref_169">[169]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Flor. Rémond, <i>Hist. de l'Hérésie</i>, p. 487.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_170" id="Foot_170" href="#Ref_170">[170]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Jussu reginæ Navarræ, ut hoc tandem dissidium tollatur.'—Buceri
-<i>Opera Anglicana</i>, fᵒ 693. Gerdesius, ii. p. 33.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_171" id="Foot_171" href="#Ref_171">[171]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Præbetur telum hostibus.'—Gerdesius, iv. p. 33.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_172" id="Foot_172" href="#Ref_172">[172]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nunquam suo officio deest christianissima illa heroīna,
-regis soror.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_173" id="Foot_173" href="#Ref_173">[173]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Procerum magnus numerus jam veritati accessit.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_174" id="Foot_174" href="#Ref_174">[174]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut cœperint eam vocare <i>parvam Allemaniam</i>.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_175" id="Foot_175" href="#Ref_175">[175]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Rex a veritate alienus non est.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_176" id="Foot_176" href="#Ref_176">[176]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Bona spes est, brevi fore, ut Christus publicum apud ipsos obtineat.'—Gerdesius,
-iv. p. 33.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_177" id="Foot_177" href="#Ref_177">[177]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Charles de Sainte-Marthe, <i>Oraison funèbre de Marguerite</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_178" id="Foot_178" href="#Ref_178">[178]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de la Reine de Navarre</i>, i. p. 269.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_179" id="Foot_179" href="#Ref_179">[179]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_180" id="Foot_180" href="#Ref_180">[180]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. i. pp. 272, 273.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_181" id="Foot_181" href="#Ref_181">[181]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Marot, <i>Chronique de François I.</i> p. 90.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_182" id="Foot_182" href="#Ref_182">[182]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'An unlettered king is a crowned ass.' <small>A.D.</small> 936.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_183" id="Foot_183" href="#Ref_183">[183]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Teissier, <i>Eloge des Hommes savants</i>, i. p. 200.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_184" id="Foot_184" href="#Ref_184">[184]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Flor. Rémond, <i>Hist. de l'Hérésie</i>, p. 884.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_185" id="Foot_185" href="#Ref_185">[185]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The Latin word <i>gallus</i> signifies both <i>Frenchman</i> and <i>cock</i>. 'The
-Frenchman crows,' said the bishop. 'Would to God,' retorted Danès,
-'that Peter (the pope) would repent at the crowing of the cock!'
-Sismondi, <i>Hist. des Français</i>, xvi. p. 359.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_186" id="Foot_186" href="#Ref_186">[186]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Les Marguerites de la Marguerite</i>, i. pp. 505-508.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_187" id="Foot_187" href="#Ref_187">[187]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de la Reine de Navarre</i>, i. p. 280; ii. p. 120.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_188" id="Foot_188" href="#Ref_188">[188]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de la Reine de Navarre</i>, i. p. 269.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">{93}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XIX.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">DIPLOMATISTS, BACKSLIDERS, MARTYRS.<br />
- (1531.)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=CHARLES SLANDERS THE PROTESTANTS.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE royal trio was now broken up. Margaret,
-knowing well that her mother had always influenced
-her brother in favour of popery, hoped to
-profit by an event that had cost her so many tears,
-and immediately attempted to incline her brother to
-the side of the Reform. But there were other influences
-at work at court: the Sorbonne, the bishops,
-Montmorency, and even the emperor endeavoured
-to set Francis against the evangelicals. Charles V.
-especially desired to take advantage of the alliance
-which drew him closer to France, in order to turn its
-sovereign against Luther. His envoy, Noircarmes,
-had very positive instructions on this point. One
-day, when this ambassador had gone to present his
-homage to the king, they had a long conversation
-together, and Noircarmes gave utterance to all the
-usual calumnies against the Reformation. Francis
-did not know what answer to make, but fixed the
-diplomatist's accusations in his memory, with the intention
-of repeating them to his sister. He paid her
-a visit, while still in a state of excitement. 'Madame,'
-said he angrily, 'do you know that your friends the
-protestants preach the community of goods, the nullity
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">{94}</a></span>
-of the marriage tie, and the subversion of thrones?
-Noircarmes says that if I do not destroy Lutheranism,
-my crown will be in danger.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_189" id="Ref_189" href="#Foot_189">[189]</a></span>
-To justify the
-innocent was one of the tasks which the Queen of
-Navarre had imposed upon herself. 'Sire,' she said
-to the king, 'the reformers are righteous, learned,
-peaceful men, who have no other love than that of
-truth, no other aim than the glory of God, and no
-other thought than to banish superstition and to correct
-morals.' The Queen of Navarre was so gracious,
-so true, so eloquent, that the king left her completely
-changed—at least for the day.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_190" id="Ref_190" href="#Foot_190">[190]</a></span>
-But it was not long
-before perfidious insinuations again roused his anger.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=REINHOLD AND THE COURTIERS.=</p>
-
-<p>Margaret, either by her own hand or through her
-agents, informed the protestants of Germany of the
-charges brought against them by Charles's ambassador,
-and called upon them to contradict Noircarmes.
-This they did immediately. One of them, Matthew
-Reinhold, a man devoted to the Gospel and a clever
-diplomatist, arrived in Paris about the middle of
-April 1531, and having been received by the king,
-attended by his lords and his bishops, he handed in a
-letter from the Elector of Saxony, the Landgrave of
-Hesse, and their allies. Francis opened it and appeared
-to read it with interest. 'Sire,' wrote the
-princes, 'a few monks (Tetzel and his friends) having
-through avarice hawked their indulgences about
-the country to the dishonour of Christ and the ruin
-of souls,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_191" id="Ref_191" href="#Foot_191">[191]</a></span>
-certain just and wise men have reproved
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">{95}</a></span>
-them; the sun has risen upon the Church, and has
-brought to light a world of scandals and errors.
-Help us, Sire, and use such means that these disputes
-may be settled, not by force of arms, but by a
-lawful judgment, which shall do no violence to the
-consciences of christians.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_192" id="Ref_192" href="#Foot_192">[192]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>While Francis was reading this letter, the lords and
-prelates of his court eyed the Lutheran from head
-to foot. They went up to him and asked the strangest
-questions. 'Is it true,' said a bishop, 'that the women
-in your country have several husbands?'—'All nonsense!'
-replied the German envoy. To other questions
-he returned similar answers; the eagerness of the
-speakers increased, and the conversation was becoming
-animated, when the king, who had finished the letter,
-declared that he thought it very reasonable, and, to
-the great surprise of the court, smiled graciously upon
-Reinhold.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_193" id="Ref_193" href="#Foot_193">[193]</a></span>
-A few days later (21st April) he gave
-the envoy an answer: 'In order to heal the sores of
-the christian republic,' he said, 'there must be a council;
-provided the Holy Ghost, who is the lord of truth,
-has the chief place in it.' Then he added: 'Do not
-fear the calumnies of your enemies.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_194" id="Ref_194" href="#Foot_194">[194]</a></span>
-The first step was taken.</p>
-
-<p>The grand idea of the counsellors of Francis I., and
-of the king himself, was, at this time, to substitute for
-the old policy of France a new and more independent
-policy, which would protect it against the encroachments
-of the papacy. Melanchthon was charmed at
-the king's letter. 'The Frenchman answered us in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">{96}</a></span>
-the most amiable manner,' he said.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_195" id="Ref_195" href="#Foot_195">[195]</a></span>
-A council guided
-by the Spirit of God was precisely what the German
-protestants demanded: they thought themselves on
-the point of coming to an understanding with the
-King of France. This hope took possession of Margaret
-also, and of the powerful party in the royal
-council who thought, like her, that the union of France,
-Germany, and England would lead to an internal and
-universal reform of christendom. The king, urged to
-form an alliance with the German princes, resolved to
-send an ambassador on his part, and selected for this
-mission one Gervais Waim. The choice was an unlucky
-one: Waim, a German by birth, but long resident
-in Paris,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_196" id="Ref_196" href="#Foot_196">[196]</a></span>
-desired that everything in Germany should
-remain as he had left it. A blind partisan of the
-ancient state of things, he regarded any change as an
-outrage towards the German nation, and was full of
-prejudices against the Reformation. Accordingly, he
-had hardly arrived at Wittemberg (this was in the
-spring of 1531), when he sought every opportunity
-of gratifying his blind hatred. He met with a grand
-reception; banquets and entertainments were given
-in his honour. One day there was a large party, at
-which Luther was present with his friends and many
-evangelical christians, who were desirous of meeting
-the envoy of the King of France. The latter, instead
-of conciliating their minds, grew warm, and exclaimed:
-'You have neither church nor magistrate nor marriage;
-every man does what he pleases, and all is confusion
-as among the brutes. The king my master knows
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">{97}</a></span>
-it very well.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_197" id="Ref_197" href="#Foot_197">[197]</a></span>
-On hearing this extravagant assertion,
-the company opened their eyes. Some got
-angry, others laughed, many despaired of ever coming
-to an understanding with Francis I. Melanchthon
-changed his opinion entirely. 'This man,' he said,
-'is a great enemy of our cause.... The kings of the
-earth think of nothing but their own interest; and if
-Christ does not provide for the safety of the Church,
-all is lost.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_198" id="Ref_198" href="#Foot_198">[198]</a></span>
-He never said a truer thing. Waim
-soon found that he had not been a good diplomatist,
-and that he ought not to have shocked the protestant
-sentiment; he therefore confined himself to his duty,
-and his official communications were of more value
-than his private conversations.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_199" id="Ref_199" href="#Foot_199">[199]</a></span>
- We shall see presently
-the important steps taken by France towards
-an alliance with evangelical Germany.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=IMPRUDENCE OF THE FRENCH DEPUTY.=</p>
-
-<p>Margaret, believing that the triumph of the good
-cause was not far off, determined to move forward
-a little. She had struck out of her prayer-book all
-the prayers addressed to the Virgin and to the saints.
-This she laid before the king's confessor, William Petit,
-Bishop of Senlis, a courtier, and far from evangelical,
-though abounding in complaisance for the sister of his
-master. 'Look here!' she said; 'I have cut out all
-the most superstitious portions of this book.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_200" id="Ref_200" href="#Foot_200">[200]</a></span>
-—'Admirable!'
-exclaimed the courtier; 'I should desire
-no other.' The queen took the prelate at his word:
-'Translate it into French,' she said, 'and I will have
-it printed with your name.' The courtier-bishop did
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">{98}</a></span>
-not dare withdraw; he translated the book, the queen
-approved of it, and it appeared under the title of
-<i>Heures de la Royne Marguerite</i> ('Queen Margaret's
-Prayer-book'). The Faculty of Divinity was angry
-about it, but they restrained themselves, not so much
-because it was the queen's prayer-book, as because the
-translator was a bishop and his Majesty's confessor.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=LECOQ'S SERMON BEFORE THE KING.=</p>
-
-<p>Nor did the Queen of Navarre stop here. There
-was at that time in Paris a curé, named Lecoq, whose
-preaching drew great crowds to St. Eustache. Certain
-ladies of the court, who affected piety, never missed
-one of his sermons. 'What eloquence!' said they,
-speaking of Lecoq, one day when there was a reception
-at St. Germain; 'what a striking voice! what a
-flow of words! what boldness of thought! what fervent
-piety!'—'Your fine orator,' said the king, who
-was listening to them, 'is no doubt a Lutheran in disguise!'—'Not
-at all, Sire,' said one of the ladies; 'he
-often declaims against Luther, and says that we must
-not separate from the Church.' Margaret asked her
-brother to judge for himself. 'I will go,' said Francis.
-The curé was informed that on the following Sunday
-the king and all his court would come to hear his
-sermon. The priest was charmed at the information.
-He was a man of talent, and had received evangelical
-impressions; only they were not deep, and the breath
-of favour might easily turn him from the right way.
-As this breath was just now blowing in the direction
-of the Gospel, he entered with all his heart into this
-conspiracy of the ladies, and began to prepare a discourse
-adapted, as he thought, to introduce the new
-light into the king's mind.</p>
-
-<p>When Sunday came, all the carriages of the court
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">{99}</a></span>
-drew up before the church of St. Eustache, which the
-king entered, followed by Du Bellay, Bishop of Paris,
-and his attendant lords and ladies. The crowd was
-immense. The preacher went up into the pulpit,
-and everybody prepared to listen. At first the
-king observed nothing remarkable; but gradually the
-sermon grew warmer, and words full of life were
-heard. 'The end of all visible things,' said Lecoq,
-'is to lead us to invisible things. The bread which
-refreshes our body tells us that Jesus Christ is the
-life of our soul. Seated at the right hand of God,
-Jesus lives by his Holy Spirit in the hearts of his
-disciples. <i>Quæ sursum sunt quærite</i>, says St. Paul,
-<i>ubi Christus est in dextera Dei sedens</i>. Yes, <i>seek those
-things which are above</i>! Do not confine yourselves
-during mass to what is upon the altar; raise yourselves
-by faith to heaven, there to find the Son of God.
-After he has consecrated the elements, does not the
-priest cry out to the people: <i>Sursum corda!</i> lift up
-your hearts! These words signify: Here is the bread
-and here is the wine, but Jesus is in heaven. For this
-reason, Sire,' continued Lecoq, boldly turning to the
-king, 'if you wish to have Jesus Christ, do not look
-for him in the visible elements; soar to heaven on the
-wings of faith. <i>It is by believing in Jesus Christ that
-we eat his flesh</i>, says St. Augustin. If it were true
-that Christ must be touched with the hands and
-devoured by the teeth,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_201" id="Ref_201" href="#Foot_201">[201]</a></span>
-we should not say <i>sursum</i>,
-upwards! but <i>deorsum</i>, downwards! Sire, it is to
-heaven that I invite you. Hear the voice of the Lord:
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">{100}</a></span>
-<i>sursum corda</i>, Sire, <i>sursum corda!</i>'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_202" id="Ref_202" href="#Foot_202">[202]</a></span>
-And the sonorous
-voice of the priest filled the whole church with
-these words, which he repeated with a tone of the
-sincerest conviction. All the congregation was moved,
-and even Francis admired the eloquence of the preacher.
-'What do you think of it?' he asked Du Bellay as they
-were leaving the church.—'He may be right,' answered
-the Bishop of Paris, who was not opposed to a moderate
-reform, and who was married.—'I have a great mind
-to see this priest again,' said the king.—'Nothing can
-be easier,' replied Du Bellay.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=FALL OF LECOQ.=</p>
-
-<p>Precautions, however, were taken that this interview
-should be concealed from everybody. The curé
-disguised himself and was introduced secretly into
-the king's private cabinet.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_203" id="Ref_203" href="#Foot_203">[203]</a></span>
-'Leave us to ourselves,'
-said Francis to the bishop.—'Monsieur le curé,' continued
-he, 'have the goodness to explain what you
-said about the sacrament of the altar.' Lecoq showed
-that a spiritual union with Christ could alone be of use
-to the soul. 'Indeed!' said Francis; 'you raise strange
-scruples in my mind.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_204" id="Ref_204" href="#Foot_204">[204]</a></span>
-This encouraged the priest,
-who, charmed with his success, brought forward other
-articles of faith.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_205" id="Ref_205" href="#Foot_205">[205]</a></span>
-His zeal spoilt everything; it was
-too much for the king, who began to think that the
-priest might be a heretic after all, and ordered him to
-be examined by a Romish doctor. 'He is an arch-heretic,'
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">{101}</a></span>
-said the inquisitor, after the examination.
-'With your Majesty's permission I will keep him
-locked up.' The king, who did not mean to go so
-far, ordered Lecoq 'to be set at liberty, and to be
-admitted to prove his assertions by the testimony of
-Holy Scripture.'</p>
-
-<p>Upon this the Cardinals of Lorraine and Tournon,
-'awakened by the crowing of the cock,'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_206" id="Ref_206" href="#Foot_206">[206]</a></span>
-arranged a
-conference. On one side was the suspected priest, on
-the other some of the most learned doctors, and the
-two cardinals presided as arbiters of the discussion.
-Tournon was one of the ablest men of this period,
-and a most implacable enemy of the Reformation; in
-later years he was the persecutor of the Waldenses,
-and the introducer of the Jesuits into France. The
-discussion began. 'Whoever thought,' said the doctors
-of the Sorbonne to Lecoq, 'that these words
-<i>sursum corda</i> mean that the bread remains bread?
-No; they signify that your heart should soar to
-heaven in order that the Lord may descend upon the
-altar.' Lecoq showed that the Spirit alone gives life;
-he spoke of Scripture; but Tournon, who had been the
-means of making more than one pope, and had himself
-received votes for his own election to the papacy,
-exclaimed in a style that the popes are fond of using:
-'The Church has spoken; submit to her decrees. If
-you reject the authority of the Church, you sail without
-a compass, driven by the winds to your destruction.
-Delay not!... Save yourself! Down with the yards
-and furl the sails, lest your vessel strike upon the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">{102}</a></span>
-rocks of error, and you suffer an eternal shipwreck.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_207" id="Ref_207" href="#Foot_207">[207]</a></span>
-The cardinals and doctors surrounded Lecoq and
-pressed him on every side. Here a theologian fell
-upon him with his elaborate scholastic proofs; there
-an abbé shouted in his ears; and the cardinals threw
-the weight of their dignity into the scales. The curé
-of St. Eustache was tossed to and fro in indecision.
-He had some small taste for the Gospel, but he loved
-the world and its honours more. They frightened
-and soothed him by turns, and at last he retracted
-what he had preached. Lecoq had none of the qualities
-of a martyr: he was rather one of those weak
-minds who furnished backsliders to the primitive
-Church.</p>
-
-<p>Happily there were in France firmer christians than
-he. While, in the world of politics, diplomatists were
-crossing and recrossing the Rhine; while, in the world
-of Roman-catholicism, the most eloquent men were
-becoming faithless to their convictions: there were
-christian men in the evangelical world, among those
-whose faith had laid hold of redemption, who sacrificed
-their lives that they might remain faithful to the
-Lord who had redeemed them. It was a season when
-the most contrary movements were going on.</p>
-
-<p>Toulouse, in olden times the sanctuary of Gallic
-paganism, was at this period filled with images, relics,
-and 'other instruments of Romish idolatry.' The
-religion of the people was a religion of the eye and
-of the ear, of the hands and of the knees—in short, a
-religion of externals; while within, the conscience,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">{103}</a></span>
-the will, and the understanding slept a deep sleep.
-The parliament, surnamed 'the bloody,' was the docile
-instrument of the fanaticism of the priests. They
-said to their officers: 'Keep an eye upon the heretics.
-If any man does not lift his cap before an image, he is
-a heretic. If any man, when he hears the <i>Ave Maria</i>
-bell, does not bend the knee, he is a heretic. If any
-man takes pleasure in the ancient languages and polite
-learning, he is a heretic.... Do not delay to inform
-against such persons.... The parliament will condemn
-them, and the stake shall rid us of them.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_208" id="Ref_208" href="#Foot_208">[208]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A celebrated Italian had left his country and settled
-at Agen. Julius Cesar della Scala, better known by
-the name of Scaliger, belonged to one of the oldest
-families of his native country, and on account of the
-universality of his knowledge, many persons considered
-him the greatest man that had ever appeared
-in the world. Scaliger did not embrace the reformed
-faith, as his son did, but he imported a love of learning,
-particularly of Greek, to the banks of the Garonne.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CATURCE AT TOULOUSE.=</p>
-
-<p>The licentiate Jean de Caturce, a professor of laws
-in the university, and a native of Limoux, having
-learnt Greek, procured a New Testament and studied
-it. Being a man of large understanding, of facile
-eloquence, and above all of thoughtful soul, he found
-Christ the Saviour, Christ the Lord, Christ the life
-eternal, and adored him. Erelong Christ transformed
-him, and he became a new man. Then the Pandects
-lost their charm, and he discovered in the Holy Scriptures
-a divine life and light which enraptured him.
-He meditated on them day and night. He was consumed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">{104}</a></span>
-by an ardent desire to visit his birthplace and
-preach the Saviour whom he loved and who dwelt in
-his heart. Accordingly he set out for Limoux, which
-is not far from Toulouse, and on All Saints' day, 1531,
-delivered 'an exhortation' there. He resolved to return
-at the Epiphany, for every year on that day
-there was a great concourse of people for the festival,
-and he wished to take advantage of it by openly
-proclaiming Jesus Christ.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE TWELFTH-NIGHT SUPPER.=</p>
-
-<p>Everything had been prepared for the festival.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_209" id="Ref_209" href="#Foot_209">[209]</a></span>
-On the eve of Epiphany there was usually a grand
-supper, at which, according to custom, the king of
-the feast was proclaimed, after which there was shouting
-and joking, singing and dancing. Caturce was
-determined to take part in the festival, but in such a
-way that it should not pass off in the usual manner.
-When the services of the day in honour of the three
-kings of the East were over, the company sat down
-to table: they drank the wine of the south, and at last
-the cake was brought in. One of the guests found
-the bean, the gaiety increased, and they were about
-to celebrate the new royalty by the ordinary toast:
-<i>the king drinks!</i> when Caturce stood up. 'There is
-only one king,' he said, 'and Jesus Christ is he. It
-is not enough for his name to flit through our brains—he
-must dwell in our hearts. He who has Christ in
-him wants for nothing. Instead then of shouting <i>the
-king drinks</i>, let us say this night: <i>May Christ, the
-true king, reign in all our hearts!</i>'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_210" id="Ref_210" href="#Foot_210">[210]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The professor of Toulouse was much esteemed in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">{105}</a></span>
-his native town, and many of his acquaintances already
-loved the Gospel. The lips that were ready to shout
-<i>the king drinks</i> were dumb, and many sympathised,
-at least by their silence, with the new 'toast' which
-he proposed to them. Caturce continued: 'My
-friends, I propose that after supper, instead of loose
-talk, dances, and revelry, each of us shall bring forward
-in his turn one passage of Holy Scripture.'
-The proposal was accepted, and the noisy supper was
-changed into an orderly christian assembly. First
-one man repeated some passage that had struck him,
-then another did the same; but Caturce, says the
-chronicle, 'entered deeper into the matter than the
-rest of the company,' contending that Jesus Christ
-ought to sit on the throne of our hearts. The professor
-returned to the university.</p>
-
-<p>This Twelfth-night supper produced so great a
-sensation, that a report was made of it at Toulouse.
-The officers of justice apprehended the licentiate in
-the midst of his books and his lessons, and brought
-him before the court. 'Your worships,' he said, 'I
-am willing to maintain what I have at heart, but let
-my opponents be learned men with their books, who
-will prove what they advance. I should wish each
-point to be decided without wandering talk.' The
-discussion began; but the most learned theologians
-were opposed to him in vain, for the licentiate, who
-had the Divine Word within him, answered 'promptly,
-pertinently, and with much power, quoting immediately
-the passages of Scripture which best served
-his purpose,' says the chronicle. The doctors were
-silenced, and the professor was taken back to prison.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_211" id="Ref_211" href="#Foot_211">[211]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">{106}</a></div>
-
-<p>The judges were greatly embarrassed. One of
-them visited the <i>heretic</i> in his dungeon, to see if he
-could not be shaken. 'Master Caturce,' said he, 'we
-offer to set you at full liberty, on condition that
-you will first retract only three points, in a lecture
-which you will give in the schools.' The chronicler
-does not tell us what these three points were. The
-licentiate's friends entreated him to consent, and for
-a moment he hesitated, only to regain his firmness
-immediately after. 'It is a snare of the Evil one,'
-he replied. Notwithstanding this, his friends laid
-a form of recantation before him, and when he had
-rejected it, they brought him another still more skilfully
-drawn up. But 'the Lord strengthened him so
-that he thrust all these papers away from him.' His
-friends withdrew in dismay. He was declared a
-heretic, condemned to be burnt alive, and taken to
-the square of St. Etienne.</p>
-
-<p>Here an immense crowd had assembled, especially
-of students of the university who were anxious to witness
-the degradation of so esteemed a professor. The
-'mystery' lasted three hours, and they were three
-hours of triumph for the Word of God. Never had
-Caturce spoken with greater freedom. In answer to
-everything that was said, he brought some passage of
-Scripture 'very pertinent to reprove the stupidity of
-his judges before the scholars.' His academical robes
-were taken off, the costume of a merry-andrew was
-put on him, and then another scene began.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE DOMINICAN SILENCED.=</p>
-
-<p>A Dominican monk, wearing a white robe and
-scapulary, with a black cloak and pointed cap, made
-his way through the crowd, and ascended a little
-wooden pulpit which had been set up in the middle
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">{107}</a></span>
-of the square. This by no means learned individual
-assumed an important air, for he had been commissioned
-to deliver what was called 'the sermon
-of the catholic faith.' In a voice that was heard all
-over the square, he read his text: <i>The Spirit speaketh
-expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart
-from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits and
-doctrines of devils</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_212" id="Ref_212" href="#Foot_212">[212]</a></span>
-The monks were delighted with
-a text which appeared so suitable; but Caturce, who
-almost knew his Testament by heart, perceiving that,
-according to their custom of distorting Scripture, he
-had only taken a fragment (<i>lopin</i>) of the passage,
-cried out with a clear voice: 'Read on.' The Dominican,
-who felt alarmed, stopped short, upon which
-Caturce himself completed the passage: <i>Forbidding
-to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats,
-which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving
-of them which believe</i>. The monks were confounded;
-the students and other friends of the
-licentiate smiled. 'We know them,' continued the
-energetic professor, 'these deceivers of the people,
-who, instead of the doctrine of faith, feed them with
-trash. In God's service there is no question of fish
-or of flesh, of black or of grey, of Wednesday or Friday....
-It is nothing but foolish superstition which
-requires celibacy and abstaining from meats. Such
-are not the commandments of God.' The Dominican
-in his pulpit listened with astonishment; the prisoner
-was preaching in the midst of the officers of justice,
-and the students heard him 'with great favour.' The
-poor Dominican, ashamed of his folly, left his sermon
-unpreached.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">{108}</a></div>
-
-<p>After this the martyr was led back to the court,
-where sentence of death was pronounced upon him.
-Caturce surveyed his judges with indignation, and, as
-he left the tribunal, exclaimed in Latin: 'Thou seat
-of iniquity! Thou court of injustice!' He was now
-led to the scaffold, and at the stake continued exhorting
-the people to know Jesus Christ. 'It is impossible
-to calculate the great fruit wrought by his death,'
-says the chronicle, 'especially among the students
-then at the university of Toulouse,' that is to say, in
-the year 1532.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_213" id="Ref_213" href="#Foot_213">[213]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Certain preachers, however, who had taught the
-new doctrine, backslided deplorably at this time, and
-checked the progress of the Word in the south; among
-them were the prothonotary of Armagnac, the cordelier
-Des Noces, as well as his companion the youthful
-Melchior Flavin, 'a furious hypocrite,' as Beza calls
-him. One of those who had received in their hearts
-the fire that warmed the energetic Caturce, held firm
-to the truth, even in the presence of the stake: he
-was a grey friar named Marcii. Having performed
-'wonders' by his preaching in Rouergue, he was
-taken to Toulouse, and there sealed with his blood the
-doctrines he had so faithfully proclaimed.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_214" id="Ref_214" href="#Foot_214">[214]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=TWO MODES OF REFORMATION.=</p>
-
-<p>We must soon turn to that external reformation
-imagined by some of the king's advisers, under the
-inspiration of the Queen of Navarre, and by certain
-German protestants who, under the influence of
-motives partly religious, partly political, proposed to
-reform Christendom by means of a council, without
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">{109}</a></span>
-doing away with the Romish episcopate. But we
-must first return to that humble and powerful teacher,
-the noble representative of a scriptural and living
-reformation, who, while urging the necessity of a
-spiritual unity, set in the foremost rank the imprescriptible
-rights of truth.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_189" id="Foot_189" href="#Ref_189">[189]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Seckendorf, pp. 1170, 1171.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_190" id="Foot_190" href="#Ref_190">[190]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Fratris iras pro viribus moderavit.'—Bezæ <i>Icones</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_191" id="Foot_191" href="#Ref_191">[191]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Propter quæstum, cum contumelia Christi et cum periculo animarum.'—<i>Corp.
-Ref.</i> ii. p. 472.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_192" id="Foot_192" href="#Ref_192">[192]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Sleidan, ch. viii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_193" id="Foot_193" href="#Ref_193">[193]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ihm eine gnädige Mine gemacht.'—Seckendorf, p. 118.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_194" id="Foot_194" href="#Ref_194">[194]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Sleidan, ch. viii. p. 232.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_195" id="Foot_195" href="#Ref_195">[195]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Gallus rescripsit humanissime.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 503.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_196" id="Foot_196" href="#Ref_196">[196]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, iv. p. 167.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_197" id="Foot_197" href="#Ref_197">[197]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Sondern gienge alles unter einander wie das Viehe.—Schelhorn,
-p. 289.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_198" id="Foot_198" href="#Ref_198">[198]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Illi reges sua agunt negotia.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 518.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_199" id="Foot_199" href="#Ref_199">[199]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 167.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_200" id="Foot_200" href="#Ref_200">[200]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bèze, <i>Hist. Eccl.</i> i. p. 8.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_201" id="Foot_201" href="#Ref_201">[201]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Corpus et sanguinem Domini, in veritate, manibus sacerdotum
-tractari, frangi, et fidelium dentibus atteri.' (The formula which Pope
-Nicholas exacted of Bérenger.)—Lanfranc, <i>De Euchar.</i> cap. v.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_202" id="Foot_202" href="#Ref_202">[202]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Speciebus illis nequaquam adhærendum, sed fidei alis ad cœlos
-evolandum esse. Illud subinde repetens: <i>Sursum corda! sursum corda!</i>'—Flor.
-Rémond, <i>Hist. de l'Hérésie</i>, ii. p. 225. See also Maimbourg, <i>Calvinisme</i>,
-pp. 22-24.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_203" id="Foot_203" href="#Ref_203">[203]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Bellaii opera, Gallus hic in secretiorem locum vocatus.'-Flor.
-Rémond, ii. p. 225.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_204" id="Foot_204" href="#Ref_204">[204]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Regi scrupulos non leves injecit.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_205" id="Foot_205" href="#Ref_205">[205]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Idem de aliis quoque fidei articulis.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_206" id="Foot_206" href="#Ref_206">[206]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-A play upon the priest's name, both in French and in Latin. 'Lotharingus
-et Turnonius cardinales Galli hujus cantu excitati.'—Flor. Rémond,
-ii. p. 225.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_207" id="Foot_207" href="#Ref_207">[207]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Antennas dimittite ac vela colligite, ne ad errorum scopulos illisa
-navi æternæ salutis naufragium faciatis.'—Flor. Rémond, <i>Hist. de
-l'Hérésie</i>, ii. p. 225.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_208" id="Foot_208" href="#Ref_208">[208]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Hist. Eccl.</i> i. p. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_209" id="Foot_209" href="#Ref_209">[209]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-This <i>jour des Rois</i> corresponds with our <i>Twelfth day</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_210" id="Foot_210" href="#Ref_210">[210]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Hist. Eccl.</i> i. p. 7. Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, fol. 106.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_211" id="Foot_211" href="#Ref_211">[211]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Hist. Eccl.</i> i. p. 7. Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, fol. 106.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_212" id="Foot_212" href="#Ref_212">[212]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-1 Timothy iv. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_213" id="Foot_213" href="#Ref_213">[213]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Hist. Eccl.</i> i. p. 7. Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, fol. 106.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_214" id="Foot_214" href="#Ref_214">[214]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">{110}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XX.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CALVIN'S SEPARATION FROM THE HIERARCHY:
- HIS FIRST WORK, HIS FRIENDS.<br />
- (1532.)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">LECOQ had been caught in the snares of the world;
-Caturce had perished in the flames; some elect
-souls appeared to be falling into a third danger—a sort
-of christianity, partly mystical, partly worldly, partly
-Romanist. But there was a young man among the
-evangelicals who was beginning to occasion some uneasiness
-in the lukewarm. Calvin—for it is of him
-we speak—was successively attacked on these three
-sides, and yet he remained firm. He did more than
-this, for every day he enlarged the circle of his
-christian activity. An advocate, a young <i>frondeur</i>, a
-pious tradesman, a catholic student, a professor of the
-university, and the Queen of Navarre—all received
-from him at this time certain impulses which carried
-them forward in the path of truth.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=DANIEL'S VIEWS FOR CALVIN.=</p>
-
-<p>The advocate Daniel loved him dearly, and desired
-to keep him in the Romish communion. His large
-understanding, his energetic character, his indefatigable
-activity seemed to promise the Church a St.
-Augustin or a St. Bernard; he must be raised to
-some important post where he would have a prospect
-of making himself useful. The advocate, who thought
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">{111}</a></span>
-Calvin far less advanced in the ways of liberty than
-he really was, had an idea of obtaining for him an
-ecclesiastical charge which, he imagined, would perfectly
-suit his young friend: it was that of official or
-vicar-general, empowered to exercise episcopal jurisdiction.
-Would Daniel succeed? Would he rob the
-Reformation of this young and brilliant genius?
-Influential men were ready to aid him in establishing
-Calvin in the ranks of the Romish hierarchy.
-Accordingly the first temptation to which he was
-exposed proceeded from clerical ambition.</p>
-
-<p>An ecclesiastic of high birth, John, Count of
-Longueville and Archbishop of Toulouse, had been
-appointed Bishop of Orleans in 1521, with permission
-to retain his archbishopric.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_215" id="Ref_215" href="#Foot_215">[215]</a></span>
-In 1532 a new bishop
-was expected at Orleans, either because Longueville
-was dead, or because, on account of his illness, a coadjutor
-had become necessary. The pluralist prelate
-was a fellow-countryman of Calvin's.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_216" id="Ref_216" href="#Foot_216">[216]</a></span>
-Daniel, thinking
-that he ought to seize this opportunity of procuring
-the post of official for the young scholar,
-made the first overtures to Calvin on the 6th of
-January, 1532. 'I never will abandon,' he said, 'the
-old and mutual friendship that unites us.' And
-then, having by this means sought to conciliate his
-favourable attention, he skilfully insinuated his wishes.
-'We are expecting the bishop's arrival every day; I
-should be pleased if, by the care of your friends, you
-were so recommended to him that he conferred on
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">{112}</a></span>
-you the charge of official or some other post.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_217" id="Ref_217" href="#Foot_217">[217]</a></span>
-There
-was much in this to flatter the self-love of a young
-man of twenty-three. If Calvin had been made vicar-general
-at so early an age, he would not have stopped
-there; that office often led to the highest dignities, and
-his brilliant genius, his great and strong character,
-would have made him a bishop, cardinal, who can say?
-... perhaps pope. Instead of freeing the Church he
-would have enslaved it; and instead of being plain
-John Calvin he might perhaps have been the Hildebrand
-of his age.</p>
-
-<p>What will Calvin do? Although settled as regards
-doctrine, he was still undecided with regard to the
-Church: it was a period of transition with him. 'On
-the one hand,' he said, 'I feel the call of God which
-holds me fast to the Church, and on the other I fear
-to take upon myself a burden which I cannot bear....
-What perplexity!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_218" id="Ref_218" href="#Foot_218">[218]</a></span>
-Erelong the temptation presented
-itself. 'Consider!' whispered an insidious
-voice; 'an easy, studious, honoured, useful life!'—'Alas!'
-he said, 'as soon as anything appears which
-pleases us, instantly the desires of the flesh rush impetuously
-after it, like wild beasts.' We cannot tell
-whether these 'wild beasts' were roused in his ardent
-soul, but at least, if there was any covetousness
-within, 'which tempted the heart,' he forced it to
-be still. Strong decision distinguishes the christian
-character of Calvin. The new man within him rejected
-with horror all that the old man had loved.
-Far from entering into new ties, he was thinking of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">{113}</a></span>
-breaking those which still bound him to the Roman
-hierarchy. He therefore did not entertain Daniel's
-proposal. Of the two roads that lay before him, he
-chose the rougher one, and gave himself to God
-alone.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN'S COMMENTARY ON SENECA.=</p>
-
-<p>Having turned his back on bishops and cardinals,
-Calvin looked with love upon the martyrs and their
-burning piles. The death of the pious Berquin and
-of other confessors had distressed him, and he feared
-lest he should see other believers sinking under the
-same violence. He would have desired to speak in
-behalf of the dumb and innocent victims. 'But, alas!'
-he exclaimed, 'how can a man so mean, so low-born,
-so poor in learning as I, expect to be heard?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_219" id="Ref_219" href="#Foot_219">[219]</a></span>
-He had finished his commentary upon Seneca's treatise of
-<i>Clemency</i>. Being a great admirer of that philosopher,
-he was annoyed that the world had not given him the
-place he deserved, and spoke of him to all his friends.
-If one of them entered his little room and expressed
-surprise at seeing him take such pains to make the
-writings of a pagan philosopher better known, Calvin,
-who thought he had discovered a vein of Gospel gold
-in Seneca's iron ore, would answer: 'Did he not write
-against superstition? Has he not said of the Jews,
-that the conquered give laws to their conquerors?
-When he exclaims: "We have all sinned, we shall all
-sin unto the end!"<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_220" id="Ref_220" href="#Foot_220">[220]</a></span>
-may we not imagine that we hear
-Paul speaking?'</p>
-
-<p>Another motive, however, as some think, influenced
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">{114}</a></span>
-Calvin to select the treatise on <i>Clemency</i>. There was
-a similarity (and Calvin had noticed it) between the
-epochs of the author and of the commentator. Seneca,
-who lived at the time of the first persecutions against
-the christians, had dedicated his treatise on <i>Clemency</i>
-to a persecutor. Calvin determined to publish it with
-a commentary, in the hope (it has been said) that the
-king, who was fond of books, would read this legacy
-of antiquity. Without absolutely rejecting this hypothesis,
-we may say that he was anxious to compose
-some literary work, and that he displayed solid learning
-set off by an elegant and pleasing style which
-at once gave him rank among the literati of his day.</p>
-
-<p>These are the words of Seneca, which, thanks to
-Calvin, were now heard in the capital of the kings of
-France: 'Clemency becomes no one so much as it does
-a king.—You spare yourself, when you seem to be
-sparing another. We must do evil to nobody, not
-even to the wicked; men do not harm their own diseased
-limbs. It is the nature of the most cowardly
-wild beasts to rend those who are lying on the ground,
-but elephants and lions pass by the man they have
-thrown down.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_221" id="Ref_221" href="#Foot_221">[221]</a></span>
-To take delight in the rattling of
-chains, to cut off the heads of citizens, to spill much
-blood, to spread terror wherever he shows himself—is
-that the work of a king? If it were so, far better
-would it be for lions, bears, or even serpents to reign
-over us!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_222" id="Ref_222" href="#Foot_222">[222]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE YOUNG AUTHOR'S DIFFICULTIES.=</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the work was finished, Calvin thought
-of publishing it; but the booksellers turned their backs
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">{115}</a></span>
-on him, for an author's first work rarely tempts them.
-The young commentator was not rich, but he came to
-a bold resolution. He felt, as it would appear, that
-authorship would be his vocation, that God himself
-called him, and he was determined to take the first
-step in spite of all obstacles. He said: 'I will publish
-the book on <i>Clemency</i> at my own expense;' but when
-the printing was finished, he became uneasy. 'Upon
-my word,' he said, 'it has cost me more money than
-I had imagined.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_223" id="Ref_223" href="#Foot_223">[223]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The young author wrote his name in Latin on the
-title-page of the first work he published, <i>Calvinus</i>,
-whence the word <i>Calvin</i> was derived, which was substituted
-for the family name of <i>Cauvin</i>. He dedicated
-his book to the abbot of St. Eloy (4th April, 1532),
-and then gave it to the world. It was a great affair
-for him, and he was full of anxiety at its chances and
-dangers. 'At length the die is cast,'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_224" id="Ref_224" href="#Foot_224">[224]</a></span>
-he wrote to
-Daniel on the 23rd of May; 'my Commentary on
-<i>Clemency</i> has appeared.'</p>
-
-<p>Two thoughts engrossed him wholly at this time:
-the first concerned the good that his book might do.
-'Write to me as soon as possible,' said he to his friend,
-'and tell me whether my book is favourably or coldly
-received.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_225" id="Ref_225" href="#Foot_225">[225]</a></span>
-I hope that it will contribute to the public
-good.' But he was also very anxious about the sale:
-all his money was gone. 'I am drained dry,' he said;
-'and I must tax my wits to get back from every quarter
-the money I have expended.'</p>
-
-<p>Calvin showed great activity in the publication of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">{116}</a></span>
-his first work; we can already trace in him the captain
-drawing out his plan of battle. He called upon several
-professors in the capital, and begged them to use his
-book in their public lectures. He sent five copies to
-his friends at Bourges, and asked Sucquey to deliver
-a course of lectures on his publication. He made
-the same request to Landrin with regard to the university
-of Orleans.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_226" id="Ref_226" href="#Foot_226">[226]</a></span>
-In short, he lost no opportunity
-of making his book known.</p>
-
-<p>Daniel had asked him for some Bibles. Probably
-Calvin's refusal to accept office in the Church had not
-surprised the advocate, and this pious man desired
-to circulate the book which had inspired his young
-friend with such courage and self-denial. But it was
-not easy to execute the commission. There was Lefèvre's
-Bible, printed in French at Antwerp in 1530;
-and the Latin Bible of Robert Stephens, which appeared
-at Paris in 1532. The latter was so eagerly
-bought up, that the doctors of the Sorbonne tried to
-prohibit the sale. It was probably this edition which
-Calvin tried to procure. He went from shop to shop,
-but the booksellers looked at him with suspicion, and
-said they had not the volume. Calvin renewed his inquiries
-in the Latin quarter, where at last he found
-what he sought at a bookseller's who was more independent
-of the Sorbonne and its proclamations
-than the others. 'I have executed your commission
-about the Bible,' he wrote to Daniel; 'and it cost me
-more trouble than money.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_227" id="Ref_227" href="#Foot_227">[227]</a></span>
-Calvin profited by the
-opportunity to entreat his friend to deliver a course
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">{117}</a></span>
-of lectures on the <i>Clemency</i>. 'If you make up your
-mind to do so,' he wrote, 'I will send you a hundred
-copies.' These copies were, no doubt, to be sold to
-Daniel's hearers. Such were the anxieties of the great
-writer of the sixteenth century at the beginning of his
-career. Calvin's first work (it deserves to be noted)
-was on <i>Clemency</i>. Did the king read the treatise?...
-We cannot say; at any rate, Calvin was not more fortunate
-with Francis I. than Seneca had been with Nero.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=AN UNHAPPY FRONDEUR.=</p>
-
-<p>Another case of a very different nature occupied
-his attention erelong. Calvin had a great horror of
-falsehood: calumny aroused his anger, whether it
-was manifested by gross accusations, or insinuated by
-equivocal compliments. Among his friends at the
-university there was a young man whom he called
-his excellent brother, whose name has not been preserved.
-All his fellow-students loved him; all the
-professors esteemed him;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_228" id="Ref_228" href="#Foot_228">[228]</a></span>
-but occasionally he showed
-himself a little rough. This unknown student, having
-received the good news of the Gospel with all his
-soul, felt impelled to speak about it out of the abundance
-of his heart, and rebelled at the obligation he
-was under of concealing his convictions. There was
-still in him some remnant of the 'old man,' and feeling
-indignant at the weakness of those around him,
-and being of a carping temper, he called them
-cowards. He could not breathe in the atmosphere
-of despotism and servility in which he lived. He
-loved France, but he loved liberty more. One day this
-proud young man said to his friends: 'I cannot bend
-my neck beneath the yoke to which you so willingly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">{118}</a></span>
-submit.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_229" id="Ref_229" href="#Foot_229">[229]</a></span>
-Farewell! I am going to Strasburg, and
-renounce all intention of returning to France.'</p>
-
-<p>Strasburg did not satisfy him. The eminent men
-who resided there sometimes, and no doubt with good
-intentions, placed peace above truth. The caustic
-opinions of the young Frenchman displeased Bucer
-and his friends. He was a grumbler by nature, and
-spoke out bluntly on all occasions.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_230" id="Ref_230" href="#Foot_230">[230]</a></span>
-He had a sharp
-encounter with a Strasburger, whose name Calvin
-does not give, and who was perhaps just as susceptible
-as the Parisian was hasty. The young Frenchman
-was declaiming against baptismal regeneration, when
-on a sudden his adversary, whom Calvin judges with
-great moderation, began to accuse the poor refugee
-of being an anabaptist. This was a dreadful reproach
-at that time. Wherever he went the Strasburger
-scattered his accusations and invectives. Every
-heart was shut against the poor fellow; he was not
-even permitted to make the least explanation. He
-was soon brought to want, and claimed the assistance
-of friends whom he had formerly helped. It
-was all of no use. Reduced to extreme necessity,
-having neither the means of procuring food nor of
-travelling, he managed however to return to France
-in a state of the greatest destitution. He found Calvin
-at Noyon, where the latter chanced to be at the
-beginning of September 1532.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN RECEIVES HIM KINDLY.=</p>
-
-<p>The young man, soured and disappointed, drew a
-sad picture of Strasburg. 'There was not a single
-person in the whole city from whom I could obtain a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">{119}</a></span>
-penny,' he said. 'My enemy left not a stone unturned;
-scattering the sparks of his wrath on every
-side, he kindled a great fire.... My sojourn there was
-a real tragedy, which had the ruin of an innocent
-man for its catastrophe.' Calvin questioned him on
-baptism, and the severe examination was entirely to
-the advantage of the young refugee. 'Really,' said
-the commentator on <i>Clemency</i>, 'I have never met
-with any one who professed the truth on this point
-with so much frankness.' Calvin did not lose a moment,
-but sat down (4th of September) to write to
-Bucer, whom he styled the <i>bishop</i> of Strasburg.
-'Alas!' he said, 'how much stronger calumny is
-than truth! They have ruined this man's reputation,
-perhaps without intention, but certainly without
-reason. If my prayers, if my tears have any value
-in your eyes, dear Master Bucer, have pity on the
-wretchedness of this unfortunate man!<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_231" id="Ref_231" href="#Foot_231">[231]</a></span>
-You are
-the protector of the poor, the help of the orphan;
-do not suffer this unhappy man to be reduced to the
-last extremity.'</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after writing this touching appeal, Calvin
-returned to Paris. As for the young man, we know
-not what became of him. He was not, however, the
-only one who first attacked and then called for pity.</p>
-
-<p>The literary movement of the capital manifested
-itself more and more every day in a biblical direction.
-Guidacerio of Venice, devoting himself to scriptural
-studies, published a commentary on the <i>Song of Solomon</i>,
-and an explanation of the <i>Sermon on the Mount</i>,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_232" id="Ref_232" href="#Foot_232">[232]</a></span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">{120}</a></span>
-to the great annoyance of the doctors of the Sorbonne,
-who were angry at seeing laymen break through their
-monopoly of interpreting Scripture. Priests in their
-sermons, students in their essays, put forward propositions
-contrary to the Romish doctrine; and Beda,
-who was beside himself, filled Paris with his furious
-declamations. He soon met with a cutting reply.
-Some young friends of learning gave a public representation
-of a burlesque comedy entitled: 'The university
-of Paris is founded on a monster.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_233" id="Ref_233" href="#Foot_233">[233]</a></span>
-Beda
-could not contain himself: 'They mean me,' he
-exclaimed, and called together the Faculties. They
-laid the matter before the inquisitors of the faith, who
-had the good sense to let it drop.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_234" id="Ref_234" href="#Foot_234">[234]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE MERCHANT DE LA FORGE.=</p>
-
-<p>When Calvin returned to Paris, he did not join this
-literary world, which was jeering at the attacks of
-the priests: he preferred the narrow and the thorny
-way. Every day he attended the meetings which
-were held secretly in different parts of the capital. He
-associated with pious families, sat at the hearths of the
-friends of the Gospel, and discoursed with them on the
-truth and on the difficulties which the Reformation
-would have to encounter in France. A pious and
-open-hearted merchant, a native of Tournay, Stephen
-de la Forge by name, particularly attracted him at this
-time. When he entered his friend's warehouse, he
-was often struck by the number of purchasers and by
-the bustle around him. 'I am thankful,' said La
-Forge, 'for all the blessings that God has given me;
-and I will not be sparing of my wealth, either to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">{121}</a></span>
-succour the poor or to propagate the Gospel.' In
-fact, the merchant printed the Holy Scriptures at his
-own expense, and distributed copies along with the
-numerous alms he was in the habit of giving. Noble,
-kind-hearted, ready to share all that he possessed with
-the poor, he had also a mind capable of discerning
-error. He was good, but he was not weak. Certain
-doctors, infidel and immoral philosophers, were beginning
-at that time to appear in Paris, and to visit at
-La Forge's, where Calvin met them. The latter asked
-his friend who these strange-looking people were:
-'They pretend to have been banished from their country,'
-said La Forge; 'perhaps.... But if so, believe
-me it was for their misdeeds and not for the Word of
-God.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_235" id="Ref_235" href="#Foot_235">[235]</a></span>
-They were the chiefs of the sectarians afterwards
-known by the name of <i>Libertines</i>, who had just
-come from Flanders. La Forge not only gave his
-money, but was able somewhat later to give himself,
-and to die confessing Jesus Christ. When Calvin
-remembered at Geneva the sweet conversations they
-had enjoyed together, he exclaimed with a sentiment
-of respect: 'O holy martyr of Jesus Christ! thy
-memory will always be sacred among believers.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_236" id="Ref_236" href="#Foot_236">[236]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Besides La Forge, Calvin had another intimate
-friend at Paris, whose personal character possessed a
-great attraction for him, although the tendency of his
-mind was quite different from that of his own. Louis
-du Tillet was one of those gentle moderate christians,
-who fear the cross and are paralysed by the opinion of
-the world. The <i>frondeur</i> and he were two extremes:
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">{122}</a></span>
-Calvin was a mean between them. Du Tillet wished to
-maintain the Catholic Church, even when reforming
-it, for he respected its unity. The reformer had been
-struck with his charity, his humility, and his love of
-truth; while Louis, on the other hand, admiring 'the
-great gifts and graces which the Lord had bestowed on
-his friend,' was never tired of listening to him. He
-belonged to a noble family of Angoulême; his father
-was vice-president of the Chamber of Accounts; his
-eldest brother was the king's valet-de-chambre; and
-his other brother was second chief-registrar to the
-parliament. He was continually fluctuating between
-Calvin and his own relatives, between Scripture and
-tradition, between God and the world. He would
-often leave Calvin to go and hear mass; but erelong,
-attracted by a charm for which he could not account,
-he returned to his friend, whose clear ideas threw some
-little light into his mind. Du Tillet exclaimed: 'Yes,
-I feel that there is much ignorance and darkness
-within me.' But the idea of forsaking the Church
-alarmed him, and he had hardly uttered such words
-as these when he hurried off again to confess.</p>
-
-<p>Calvin, thanks to the numerous friends who saw him
-closely, began to be appreciated even by those who
-calumniated his faith. 'This man at least leads an
-austere life,' they said: 'he is not a slave to his belly;
-from his youth he has abhorred the pleasures of the
-flesh;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_237" id="Ref_237" href="#Foot_237">[237]</a></span>
-he indulges neither in eating nor drinking.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_238" id="Ref_238" href="#Foot_238">[238]</a></span>
-... Look at him ... his mind is vigorous; his soul
-unites wisdom with daring.... But his body is thin
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">{123}</a></span>
-and spare; one clearly sees that his days and nights
-are devoted to abstinence and study.'—'Do not suppose
-that I fast on account of your superstitions,' said
-Calvin. 'No! it is only because abstinence keeps
-away the pains that disturb me in my task.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN AND COP.=</p>
-
-<p>Professor Nicholas Cop, son of that William Cop,
-the king's physician, the honour of whose birth (says
-Erasmus) both France and Germany disputed,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_239" id="Ref_239" href="#Foot_239">[239]</a></span>
-had
-recognised an inward life in Calvin, and a vigorous
-faith which captivated him, and he never met him in
-the neighbourhood of the university without speaking
-to him. They were often seen walking up and down
-absorbed in talk, while the priests looked on distrustfully.
-These conversations disturbed them: 'Cop
-will be spoilt,' they said, and they endeavoured to
-prejudice him against his friend; but their intimacy
-only became stricter.</p>
-
-<p>Calvin's reputation, which was beginning to extend,
-reached the ears of the Queen of Navarre, and that
-princess, who admired men of genius and delighted
-in agreeable conversation, wished to see the young
-literary christian. Thus there was an early intercourse
-between them. The christian and learned
-scholar undertook the defence of the sister of Francis I.
-in a letter written to Daniel in 1533, and this princess
-afterwards made known to him the projected
-marriage of her daughter Jeanne d'Albret—circumstances
-which indicate an intimate connection between
-them. During the time when the piety of the Queen
-of Navarre was the purest, a mutual respect and
-affection united these two noble characters. 'I conjure
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">{124}</a></span>
-you,' said Margaret to Calvin, 'do not spare me
-in anything wherein you think I can be of service to
-you. Rest assured that I shall act with my whole
-heart, according to the power that God has given
-me.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_240" id="Ref_240" href="#Foot_240">[240]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=MARGARET AND CALVIN.=</p>
-
-<p>'A man cannot enter the ministry of God,' says
-Calvin, 'without having been proved by temptation.'
-The queen's wit, the court of St. Germain, intercourse
-with men of genius and of rank, the prospect of exercising
-an influence that might turn to the glory of God—all
-these things might tempt him. Would he become
-Margaret's chaplain, like Roussel? Would he quit
-the narrow way in which he was treading, to enter
-upon that where christians tried to walk with the
-world on their right hand and Rome on their left?
-The queen's love for the Saviour affected Calvin, and
-he asked himself whether that was not a door opened
-by God through which the Gospel would enter the
-kingdom of France.... He was at that moment on the
-brink of the abyss. What likelihood was there that
-a young man, just at the beginning of his career,
-would not gladly seize the opportunity that presented
-itself of serving a princess so full of piety and genius—the
-king's sister? Margaret, who made Roussel a
-bishop, would also have a diocese for Calvin. 'I should
-be pleased to have a servant like you,' she told him
-one day. But the rather mystical piety of the princess,
-and the vanities with which she was surrounded, were
-offensive to that simple and upright heart. 'Madame,'
-he replied, 'I am not fitted to do you any great service;
-the capacity is wanting, and also you have enough
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">{125}</a></span>
-without me.... Those who know me are aware that I
-never desired to frequent the courts of princes; and I
-thank the Lord that I have never been tempted, for I
-have every reason to be satisfied with the good Master
-who has accepted me and retains me in his household.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_241" id="Ref_241" href="#Foot_241">[241]</a></span>
-Calvin had no more longing for the semi-catholic
-dignities of the queen than for the Roman dignities of
-the popes. Yet he knew how to take advantage of
-the opportunity offered him, and nobly conjured Margaret
-to speak out more frankly in favour of the Gospel.
-Carried away by an eloquence which, though simple,
-had great power, she declared herself ready to move
-forward.</p>
-
-<p>An opportunity soon presented itself of realising
-the plan she had conceived of renewing the universal
-Church without destroying its unity; but the means
-to be employed were not such as Calvin approved
-of. They were about to have recourse to carnal
-weapons. 'Now the only foundation of the kingdom
-of Christ,' he said, 'is the humiliation of man. I know
-how proud carnal minds are of their vain shows;
-but the arms of the Lord, with which we fight, will
-be stronger, and will throw down all their strongholds,
-by means of which they think themselves invincible.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_242" id="Ref_242" href="#Foot_242">[242]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Luther now appears again on the scene; and on this
-important point Luther and Calvin are one.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_215" id="Foot_215" href="#Ref_215">[215]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Cum facultate retinendi simul archiepiscopatum tolosanum.'—<i>Gallia
-Christiana.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_216" id="Foot_216" href="#Ref_216">[216]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Scis nos episcopum nationis tuæ habere.'—Daniel Calvino, Berne
-MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_217" id="Foot_217" href="#Ref_217">[217]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut officialis dignitate aut aliqua alia te ornaret.'—Daniel Calvino,
-Berne MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_218" id="Foot_218" href="#Ref_218">[218]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin, <i>Lettres Françaises</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_219" id="Foot_219" href="#Ref_219">[219]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Unus de plebe, homuncio mediocri seu potius modica eruditione
-præditus.'—Calvinus, <i>Præf. de Clementia</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_220" id="Foot_220" href="#Ref_220">[220]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Peccavimus omnes ... et usque ad extremum ævi delinquemus.'—<i>De
-Clementia</i>, lib. i.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_221" id="Foot_221" href="#Ref_221">[221]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ferarum vero, nec generosarum quidem, præmordere et urgere
-projectos.'—<i>De Clementia</i>, cap. v.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_222" id="Foot_222" href="#Ref_222">[222]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Si leones ursique regnarent.'—Ibid. cap. xxvi.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_223" id="Foot_223" href="#Ref_223">[223]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Plus pecuniæ exhauserunt.'—Calvinus Danieli, Geneva MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_224" id="Foot_224" href="#Ref_224">[224]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Tandem jacta est alea.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_225" id="Foot_225" href="#Ref_225">[225]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quo favore vel frigore excepti fuerint.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_226" id="Foot_226" href="#Ref_226">[226]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut Landrinum inducas in protectionem.'—Calvinus Danieli,
-Geneva MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_227" id="Foot_227" href="#Ref_227">[227]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'De Bibliis exhausi mandatum tuum.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_228" id="Foot_228" href="#Ref_228">[228]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ita se gessit, ut gratiosus esset apud ordinis nostri homines.'—Calvinus
-Bucero, Strasburg MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_229" id="Foot_229" href="#Ref_229">[229]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Cum non posset submittere diutius cervicem isti voluntariæ servituti.'—Calvinus
-Bucero, Strasburg MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_230" id="Foot_230" href="#Ref_230">[230]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Cassait toutes les vitres.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_231" id="Foot_231" href="#Ref_231">[231]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Si quid preces meæ, si quid lacrimæ valent, hujus miseriæ succurras.'—Calvinus
-Bucero, Berne MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_232" id="Foot_232" href="#Ref_232">[232]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Versio et Commentarii</i>, published at Paris in 1531.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_233" id="Foot_233" href="#Ref_233">[233]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Academiam parisiensem super monstrum esse fundatam.'—Morrhius
-Erasmo, March 30, 1532.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_234" id="Foot_234" href="#Ref_234">[234]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Res delata est ad inquisitores fidei.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_235" id="Foot_235" href="#Ref_235">[235]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quod ex Stephano a Fabrica (<i>De la Forge</i>) intellexi, istos potius
-ob maleficia ... egressos esse.'—<i>Adv. Libertinos.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_236" id="Foot_236" href="#Ref_236">[236]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_237" id="Foot_237" href="#Ref_237">[237]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Calvinus strictiorem vivendi disciplinam secutus est.'—Flor.
-Rémond, <i>Hist. de l'Hérésie</i>, ii. p. 247.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_238" id="Foot_238" href="#Ref_238">[238]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Cibi ac potus abstinentissimus.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_239" id="Foot_239" href="#Ref_239">[239]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Illum incomparabilem, quem certatim sibi vindicant, hinc Gallia,
-hinc Germania.'—Erasmi <i>Epp.</i> p. 15.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_240" id="Foot_240" href="#Ref_240">[240]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Calvin's Letters</i>, i. p. 342. Philadelphia, ed. J. Bonnet.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_241" id="Foot_241" href="#Ref_241">[241]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres Françaises de Calvin. A la Reine de Navarre</i>, i. p. 114, ed.
-J. Bonnet.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_242" id="Foot_242" href="#Ref_242">[242]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin, <i>in 2ᵃᵐ Epist. ad Corinth.</i> ch. x.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">{126}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CONFERENCES AT SMALCALD AND CALAIS.<br />
- (<span class="smc">March to October 1532.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=DU BELLAY'S PROJECTS.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">FRANCE, or at least the king and the influential men,
-appeared at this time to be veering towards a moderate
-Reform. Francis I. seemed to have some liking
-for his sister's religion; but there were other motives
-inclining him to entertain these ideas. Finding himself
-without allies in Europe, he endeavoured to gain the
-friendship of the protestants, hoping that with their
-help he would be in a condition to oppose the emperor
-and restore the French preponderance in Italy. One
-man in particular set himself the task of directing his
-country into a new path; this was William du Bellay,
-brother to the Bishop of Paris, and 'one of the greatest
-men France ever had,' says a catholic historian.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_243" id="Ref_243" href="#Foot_243">[243]</a></span>
-A skilful, active, and prudent diplomatist, Du Bellay
-called to mind the memorable struggles that had formerly
-taken place between the popes and the kings of
-France; he believed that christendom was in a state of
-transition, and desired, as the Chancellor de l'Hôpital
-did in later years, that the new times should be marked
-with more liberty, and not with more servitude, as the
-Guises, the Valois, and the Bourbons would have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">{127}</a></span>
-wished. He went even farther: he thought that the
-sixteenth century would substitute for the papacy of
-the middle ages a form of christianity, catholic of
-course, but more in conformity with the ancient Scriptures
-and the modern requirements. From that hour
-his dominant idea, his chief business, was to unite
-catholic France to protestant Germany.</p>
-
-<p>Having received the instructions of Francis I., Du
-Bellay left Honfleur, where the king was staying,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_244" id="Ref_244" href="#Foot_244">[244]</a></span>
-on the 11th of March, 1532, and crossed the Rhine about
-the middle of April. At Schweinfurth-on-the-Maine,
-between Wurtzburg and Bamberg, he found an assembly
-composed of a few protestant princes on one side,
-and a few mediators on the other, among whom was
-the elector-archbishop of Mayence. As this brings us
-into Germany, it is necessary that we should take a
-glance at what had happened there since the great
-diet of Augsburg in 1530.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_245" id="Ref_245" href="#Foot_245">[245]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The catholics and protestants had made up their
-minds at that time for a contest, and everything foreboded
-the bursting of the storm in the next spring
-(1531). There were, so to say, two contrary currents
-among the friends of the Reformation in Germany.
-One party (the men of prudence) wished
-that the evangelical states should seek powerful alliances
-and prepare to resist the emperor by force of
-arms; the other (the men of piety) called to mind
-that the Reformation had triumphed at Augsburg by
-faith, and added that from faith all its future triumphs
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">{128}</a></span>
-were to be expected. These two parties had frequent
-meetings at Wittemberg, Torgau, and elsewhere.
-One man especially, with open countenance and firm
-look, whose lips seemed always ready to speak, made
-his clear and sonorous voice heard: this was Luther.
-'To God alone,' he told the elector, 'belongs the
-government of the future; your Highness must therefore
-persevere in that faith and confidence in God
-which you have just displayed so gloriously at Augsburg.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_246" id="Ref_246" href="#Foot_246">[246]</a></span>
-But the jurists of Torgau were not entirely
-of that opinion, and they endeavoured to prove that
-their rights in the empire authorised the protestants to
-repel force by force. Luther was not to be shaken. 'If
-war breaks out,' he replied, 'I call God and the world
-to witness, that the Lutherans have in no wise provoked
-it; that they have never drawn the sword,
-never thrown men into prison, never burnt, killed,
-and pillaged, as their adversaries have done; and, in
-a word, that they have never sought anything but
-peace and quietness.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_247" id="Ref_247" href="#Foot_247">[247]</a></span>
-The politicians smiled at such
-enthusiasm, and said that in real life things must go
-on very differently. A conference was appointed for
-the consideration of what was to be done, and in the
-meanwhile great efforts were made to win over new
-allies to the protestant cause.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=ALLIANCE OF SMALCALD.=</p>
-
-<p>On the 29th of March, 1531, the deputies of the
-protestant states met at Smalcald, in the electorate
-of Hesse. In the eyes of the peace party this was a
-place of evil omen: the town was fortified, and there
-were iron mines in the neighbourhood, from which arms
-have been manufactured and cannons founded. As
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">{129}</a></span>
-the deputies proceeded to the castle of Wilhelmsburg,
-built on a hill near the town, they wore a mournful
-anxious look. They were disappointed in the hope
-they had entertained of seeing Denmark, Switzerland,
-Mecklenburg, and Pomerania join them. Nevertheless
-they did not hesitate, notwithstanding their
-weakness, to assert their rights against the power of
-Charles V. Nine princes and eleven cities entered
-into an alliance for six years 'to resist all who should
-try to constrain them to forsake the Word of God and
-the truth of Christ.'</p>
-
-<p>This resolution was received with very different
-sentiments. Some said that it was an encroachment
-on the spirituality of the Church; others maintained
-that since liberty of conscience was a civil as well as
-a religious right, it ought to be upheld, if necessary,
-by force of arms. They soon went farther. Some
-persons proposed, with a view of making the alliance
-closer, to introduce into all the evangelical churches
-a perfect uniformity both of worship and ecclesiastical
-constitution; but energetic voices exclaimed that this
-would be an infringement of religious liberty under
-the pretence of upholding it. When the deputies
-met again at Frankfort, on the 4th of June, these generous
-men said boldly: 'We will maintain diversity
-for fear that uniformity should, sooner or later, lead
-to a kind of popery.' They understood that the inward
-unity of faith is better than the superficial unity
-of form.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_248" id="Ref_248" href="#Foot_248">[248]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After various negotiations the evangelicals met at
-Schweinfurth to receive the proposals of their adversaries;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">{130}</a></span>
-and it was during this conference (April and
-May 1532) that the ambassador of the King of France
-arrived. When the protestants saw him appear, they
-were rather embarrassed; but still they received
-him with respect. He soon found out in what a
-critical position the men of the confession of Augsburg
-were placed. True, the mediators offered them
-peace, but it was on condition that they made no
-stipulations in favour of those who might embrace
-the Gospel hereafter. This proposal greatly irritated
-the Landgrave of Hesse, his chancellor Feig, and
-the other members of the conference. 'What!' exclaimed
-the Hessians, 'shall a barrier be raised between
-protestantism and popery, and no one be allowed
-to pass it?... No! the treaty of peace must equally
-protect those who now adhere to the confession of
-Augsburg and those who may hereafter do so.'—'It
-is an affair of conscience,' wrote the evangelical theologians,
-and Urban Regius in particular; 'this is a
-point to be given up on no account.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_249" id="Ref_249" href="#Foot_249">[249]</a></span>
-The electoral
-prince himself was resolved to adopt this line of
-conduct.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=LUTHER OPPOSES DIPLOMACY AND WAR.=</p>
-
-<p>Luther was not at Schweinfurth, but he kept on
-the look-out for news. He spoke about the meeting
-to his friends; he attacked the schemes of the politicians;
-all these negotiations, stipulations, conventions,
-signatures, ratifications, and treaties in behalf
-of the Gospel annoyed him. When he learnt what
-they were going to do at Schweinfurth, he was dismayed.
-To presume to save the faith with protocols
-was almost blasphemous in his eyes! One of his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">{131}</a></span>
-powerful letters fell like a bomb-shell into the midst
-of the conference. 'When we were without any support,'
-he said, 'and entirely new in the empire, with
-struggles and combats all around us, the Gospel
-triumphed and truth was upheld, despite the enemies
-who wished to stifle them both. Why should
-not the Gospel triumph now with its own strength?
-Why should it be necessary to help it with our diplomacy
-and our treaties? Is not God as mighty now
-as then? Does the Almighty want us to vote the aid
-that we mean to give him in future by our human
-stipulations?'...</p>
-
-<p>These words of Luther caused general consternation.
-People said to one another that 'the Doctor had
-been ill, and that he had consoled his friends by saying:
-"Do not be afraid; if I were to sink now, the
-papists would be too happy; therefore I shall not die."
-They added that his advice against treaties was no doubt
-a remnant of his fever; the great man is not quite right
-in his mind; the prince-electoral and the excellent chancellor
-Bruck wrote to the elector, who was in Saxony,
-that everybody was against Luther, who appeared to
-have no understanding of business.' But the reformer
-did not suffer himself to be checked; on the contrary,
-he begged the elector to write a sharp letter to his representatives.
-'The princes and burgesses have embraced
-the Gospel at their own risk and peril,' he
-said, 'and in like manner every one must in future
-receive and profess it at his own expense.' At the
-same time he began to agitate Wittemberg, and drew
-up an opinion which Pomeranus signed with him. In
-it he said: 'I will never take upon my conscience
-to provoke the shedding of blood, even to maintain
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">{132}</a></span>
-our articles of faith. It would be the best means of
-destroying the true doctrine, in the midst of the confusions
-of war.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_250" id="Ref_250" href="#Foot_250">[250]</a></span>
-The reformer thought that if the
-Lutherans and the Zwinglians, the Germans and the
-Swiss united, they would feel so strong, that they
-would assume the initiative and draw the sword—which
-he wished to avert by all means in his power.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=DU BELLAY'S OVERTURES.=</p>
-
-<p>But the politicians were not more inclined to give
-way than the theologians. On the contrary, they
-made preparations for receiving the ambassador of
-France, in which, however, there was some difficulty.
-The diplomatist's arrival compromised them with the
-imperialists; they could not receive him in the assembly
-at Schweinfurth, since catholic princes would be
-present. The protestants therefore went a few miles
-off, to the little town of Königsberg in Franconia,
-between Coburg, Bamberg, and Schweinfurth. Here
-they formed themselves into a secret committee and
-received the ambassador. 'Most honoured lords,'
-said Du Bellay, 'the king my master begs you will
-excuse him for not having sent me to you sooner.
-That proceeds neither from negligence nor from want
-of affection, but because he desired to come to some
-understanding with the King of England, who also
-wishes to help you in your great enterprise. The
-negotiations are not yet ended; but my august master,
-desirous of avoiding longer delay, has commissioned me
-to say that you will find him ready to assist you. Yes,
-though he should do it alone; though his brother of
-England (which he does not believe) were to refuse;
-though the emperor should march his armies against
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">{133}</a></span>
-you, the king will not abandon you. On the honour
-of a prince, he said. I have received ample powers to
-arrange with you about the share of the war expenses
-which his Majesty is ready to pay.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_251" id="Ref_251" href="#Foot_251">[251]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The circumstances were not favourable for the proposals
-of Francis I. The pacific ideas of Luther prevailed.
-The Elector of Saxony, who was then ill,
-desired to die in peace. He therefore sided with the
-reformer, and it was agreed to name in the act of
-alliance the princes and cities that had already adhered
-to the confession of Augsburg, and that they alone
-should be included in the league. These peaceful
-ideas of the protestants did not harmonise with the
-warlike ideas of King Francis. Du Bellay was not
-discouraged, and skilfully went upon another tack;
-while the Saxon diplomatists were compelled to yield
-to the will of their master, Du Bellay remarked a
-young prince, full of spirit and daring, who spared
-nobody and said aloud what he thought. This was
-the Landgrave of Hesse, who complained unceasingly
-either of Luther's advice, or of the resolution of the
-conference. 'The future will show,' he told everybody,
-'whether they have acted wisely in this matter.'
-The minister of Francis I., who was of the landgrave's
-opinion, entered into communication with him.</p>
-
-<p>An important question—the question of Wurtemberg—at
-that time occupied Germany. In 1512
-Duke Ulrich, annoyed because he had not more influence
-in the Suabian league, had seceded from it,
-quarrelled with the emperor, thrown that prince's
-adherents into prison, burdened his subjects with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">{134}</a></span>
-oppressive taxes, and caused trouble in his own family.
-In consequence of all this, the emperor expelled
-him from his states in 1519 and 1520, and he took
-refuge in his principality of Montbéliard. It seemed
-that adversity had not been profitless to him. In
-1524, when Farel went to preach the Reformation at
-Montbéliard, Ulrich (as we have seen<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_252" id="Ref_252" href="#Foot_252">[252]</a></span>
-) defended religious
-liberty. When the emperor was at Augsburg
-in 1530, wishing to aggrandise the power of Austria,
-he had given the duchy of Wurtemberg to his brother
-Ferdinand, to the great indignation of the protestants,
-and especially of the landgrave. 'We must
-restore the legitimate sovereign in Wurtemberg,' said
-this young and energetic prince: 'that will take the
-duchy from the catholic party and give it to the protestants.'
-But all the negotiations undertaken with
-this view had failed. If, however, one of the great
-powers of Europe should take up the cause of the
-dukes of Wurtemberg, their restoration would be
-easier. Francis I. had not failed to see that he could
-checkmate the emperor here. 'As for the Duke of
-Wurtemberg,' said Du Bellay to the Königsberg conference,
-'the king my lord will heartily undertake to
-serve him to the utmost of his power, without infringing
-the treaties.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_253" id="Ref_253" href="#Foot_253">[253]</a></span>
-The landgrave had taken
-note of these words, and their result was to establish
-the Reformation in a country which is distinguished
-by its fervent protestantism and its zeal in propagating
-the Gospel to the ends of the world.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=PEACE OF NUREMBERG.=</p>
-
-<p>A mixed assembly of catholics and protestants
-having met at Nuremberg in the month of May, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">{135}</a></span>
-protestants demanded a council in which everything
-should be decided 'according to the pure Word of
-God.' The members of the Romish party looked
-discontented: 'It is a captious, prejudiced, and anti-catholic
-condition,' they said. Yet, as the Turks
-were threatening the empire, it was necessary to
-make some concessions to the Reformation, in order
-to be in a condition to resist them. The violent
-fanatics represented to no purpose that Luther was
-not much better than Mahomet; peace was concluded
-at Nuremberg on the 23rd of July, 1532, and it was
-agreed that, while waiting for the next free and general
-council, the <i>status quo</i> should be preserved, and
-all Germans should exercise a sincere and christian
-friendship. This first religious peace cheered with
-its mild beams the last days of the elector John of
-Saxony. On the 14th of August, 1532, that venerable
-prince, whom even the imperialists styled 'the
-Father of the German land,' was struck with apoplexy.
-'God help me!' he exclaimed, and immediately expired.
-'Wisdom died with the elector Frederick,'
-said Luther, 'and piety with the elector John.'</p>
-
-<p>Yet Du Bellay was always harassed by the desire
-of emancipating from Rome that France which the
-Medici, the Guises, the Valois, and afterwards the
-Bourbons, were about to surrender to her. He therefore
-increased his exertions among the protestants to
-induce them to accept the friendship, if not the alliance,
-of his master. But they had no great confidence in
-'the Frenchman;' they were afraid that they would be
-surprised, deceived, and then abandoned by Francis;
-they 'shook with fear.' The ambassador was more
-urgent than ever; he accepted the conditions of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">{136}</a></span>
-protestants, and the two parties signed a sort of agreement.
-Du Bellay returned to Francis I., who was then
-in Brittany, and the king having heard him, sent him
-instantly to England, to give Henry VIII. a full
-account of all his negotiations with the protestant
-princes.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_254" id="Ref_254" href="#Foot_254">[254]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Thus politicians were intriguing on every side. In
-Germany, France, and England, the princes imagined
-that they could conquer by means of diplomacy; but
-far different were the forces by which the victory was
-to be gained. In the midst of all this activity of courts
-and cabinets, there was an inner and secret activity
-which stirred the human mind and excited in it a
-burning thirst, which the truth and the life of God
-alone could quench. Centuries before, as early as
-1020, the revival had begun in Aquitaine, at Orleans,
-and on the Rhine. Men had proclaimed that christians
-'ought to be filled with the Holy Ghost; that
-God would be with them, and would give them the
-treasures of his wisdom.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_255" id="Ref_255" href="#Foot_255">[255]</a></span>
-This inward movement had
-gone on growing from age to age. The Waldenses in the
-twelfth century, the purest portion of the Albigenses in
-the thirteenth, Wickliffe and the Lollards in the fourteenth,
-and John Huss and his followers in the fifteenth,
-are the heroes of this noble war. This christian life
-arose, increased, and spread; if it was extinguished in
-one country, it reappeared in another. The religious
-movement of the mind gained strength; the electricity
-was accumulated in the battery; the mine was charged,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">{137}</a></span>
-and the explosion was certain erelong. All this was
-being accomplished under the guidance of a sovereign
-commander. He applied the match in the sixteenth
-century by the hand of Luther; once more he sprang
-the mine by the powerful preaching of Calvin, Knox,
-and others. It was this that won the victory, and not
-diplomacy. However, we have not yet done with it.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=MEETING OF FRANCIS AND HENRY.=</p>
-
-<p>At this time Francis I. was enraptured with
-Henry VIII., calling him his 'good brother' and
-'perpetual ally.' Wearied of the pope and of the
-popedom, which appeared as if unable to shake off the
-tutelage of Charles V., the King of France saw Germany
-separating from Rome, and England doing the
-same, and Du Bellay was continually asking him why
-he would not conclude a triple alliance with these two
-powers? Such a coalition, formed in the name of the
-revival of learning and of reform in the Church, would
-certainly triumph over all the opposition made to it by
-ignorance and superstition. Francis I. had not made
-up his mind to break entirely with the pope, though
-he was resolved to unite with the pope's enemies. In
-order to conclude a close alliance with Henry, he chose
-the moment when that prince was most out of humour
-with the court of Rome. The articles were drawn up
-on the 23rd of June, 1532.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_256" id="Ref_256" href="#Foot_256">[256]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The two kings were not content with making preparations
-only for the great campaign they meditated
-against the emperor and Rome: they determined to
-have an interview. On the 11th of October, 1532,
-the gallant Henry, accompanied by a brilliant court,
-crossed the Channel and arrived at Calais, at that time
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">{138}</a></span>
-an English possession; while the elegant Francis,
-attended by his three sons and many of his nobles,
-arrived at Boulogne one or two days later. The great
-point with Francis was glory—a victory to be gained
-over Charles V.; the great point with Henry was to
-gratify his passions, and as Clement VII. thwarted him,
-he had a special grudge against the pope. With such
-hatreds and such intentions, it was easy for the two
-kings to come to an understanding.</p>
-
-<p>Their first meeting was at Boulogne, in the abbot's
-palace, where they stayed four days under the same
-roof. Francis was inexhaustible in attentions to his
-guest; but the important part of their business was
-transacted in one of their closets, where these impetuous
-princes confided to each other their anger and
-their plans. The King of England gave vent to 'great
-complaints and grievances' against Clement VII. 'He
-wants to force me to go to Rome in person. If
-he means to institute an inquiry, let him send his
-proctors to England. Let us summon the pope (he
-added) to appear before a free council empowered to
-inquire into the abuses under which princes and people
-suffer so severely, and to reform them.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_257" id="Ref_257" href="#Foot_257">[257]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Francis, who also had 'goodwill to complain,'
-filled the abbot's palace with his grievances: 'I have
-need of the clergy-tenths (the tenth part of the Church
-revenues), in order that I may resist the Turk; but
-the holy father opposes my levying them. I have
-need of all the resources of my subjects; but the holy
-father is continually inventing new exactions, which
-transfer the money of my kingdom into the coffers of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">{139}</a></span>
-the popedom. He makes us pay annates, maintain
-pontifical officers at a great expense, and give large
-presents to prothonotaries, valets, chamberlains, ushers,
-and others. And what is the consequence? The
-clergy are poor; the ruined churches are not repaired;
-and the indigent lack food.... Most assuredly
-the Roman government is only <i>a net to catch
-money</i>. We must have a council.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_258" id="Ref_258" href="#Foot_258">[258]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The two princes resolved to 'take from the pope
-the obedience of their kingdoms,' as Guicciardini says.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_259" id="Ref_259" href="#Foot_259">[259]</a></span>
-However, before resorting to extreme measures, Francis
-desired to begin with milder means, and Henry
-was forced to consent that France should forward his
-grievances to Rome.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE MASKED LADY.=</p>
-
-<p>After living together for four days at Boulogne,
-Henry and Francis went to Calais, where the latter
-found his apartments hung with cloth of gold, embroidered
-with pearls and precious stones. At table,
-the viands were served on one hundred and seventy
-dishes of solid gold. Henry gave a grand masked
-ball, at which the King of France was considerably
-tantalised by a masked lady of very elegant manners
-with whom he danced. She spoke French like a
-Frenchwoman, abounded in wit and grace, and knew,
-in its most trifling details, all the scandal of the
-court of France. The king declared the lady to be
-charming, and her neck the prettiest he had ever seen.
-He little imagined then that this neck would one day
-be severed by the orders of Henry VIII. At the
-end of the dance, the King of England, with a smile,
-removed the lady's mask, and showed the features of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">{140}</a></span>
-Anne Boleyn, Marchioness of Pembroke, who (it will
-be recollected) had been brought up at the court of
-the French king's sister.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_260" id="Ref_260" href="#Foot_260">[260]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Pleasure did not make the two princes forget business.
-They were again closeted, and signed a treaty,
-in accordance with which they engaged to raise an
-army of 65,000 infantry and 15,000 cavalry, intended
-apparently to act against the Turks.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_261" id="Ref_261" href="#Foot_261">[261]</a></span>
-Du Bellay's
-policy was in the ascendant. 'The great king,' he
-said, 'is staggering from his obedience.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_262" id="Ref_262" href="#Foot_262">[262]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=FRANCIS THREATENS SEPARATION.=</p>
-
-<p>Wishing to make a last effort before determining
-to break with the pope, Francis summoned Cardinals
-de Tournon and de Gramont, men devoted to his
-person, and said to them: 'You will go to the holy
-father and lay before him in confidence both our
-grievances and our dissatisfaction. You will tell him
-that we are determined to employ, as soon as may be
-advisable, all our alliances, public as well as private,
-to execute great things ... from which much damage
-may ensue and perpetual regret for the future. You
-will tell him that, in accord with other christian
-princes, we shall assemble a council without him, and
-that we shall forbid our subjects in future to send
-money to Rome. You will add—but as a secret and
-after taking the pope aside—that in case his holiness
-should think of censuring me and forcing me to go
-to Rome for absolution, I shall come, but <i>so well
-attended</i> that his holiness will be only too eager to
-grant it me....</p>
-
-<p>'Let the pope consider well,' added the king, 'that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">{141}</a></span>
-the Germans, the Swiss League, and several other
-countries in Christendom, have separated from Rome.
-Let him understand that if two powerful kings like
-us should also secede, we should find many imitators,
-<i>both Italians and others</i>;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_263" id="Ref_263" href="#Foot_263">[263]</a></span>
- and that, at the least, there
-would be a greater war in Europe than any known
-in time past.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_264" id="Ref_264" href="#Foot_264">[264]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Such were the proud words France sent to Rome.
-The two kings separated. A young prince, held
-captive by Charles V., gave them the first opportunity
-of acting together against both emperor and
-pope.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_243" id="Foot_243" href="#Ref_243">[243]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Le Grand, <i>Hist. du Divorce de Henri VIII.</i> i. p. 20.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_244" id="Foot_244" href="#Ref_244">[244]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ex oppido unde fluctu Lexoviorum.'—Rommel, <i>Philippe le M.</i> ii.
-p. 259.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_245" id="Foot_245" href="#Ref_245">[245]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>History of the Reformation of the Sixteenth Century</i>, vol. iv. bk. xiv.
-ch. xii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_246" id="Foot_246" href="#Ref_246">[246]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Lutheri <i>Epp.</i> iv. p. 201—Dec. 1530.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_247" id="Foot_247" href="#Ref_247">[247]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Warnung an seine lieben Deutschen.</i> Lutheri <i>Opp.</i> lib. xx. p. 298.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_248" id="Foot_248" href="#Ref_248">[248]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Seckendorf, pp. 1174-1192, sqq.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_249" id="Foot_249" href="#Ref_249">[249]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Urban Regius to the Landgrave.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_250" id="Foot_250" href="#Ref_250">[250]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Lutheri <i>Epp.</i> iv. pp. 335, 337, 369, 372, sqq.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_251" id="Foot_251" href="#Ref_251">[251]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, pp. 168, 169, Paris, 1588. The historian is very
-well informed, especially on everything concerning his brother's missions.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_252" id="Foot_252" href="#Ref_252">[252]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Hist. of the Ref. of the Sixteenth Cent.</i> vol. iii. bk. xii. chap. xi.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_253" id="Foot_253" href="#Ref_253">[253]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, pp. 171, 172.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_254" id="Foot_254" href="#Ref_254">[254]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, pp. 171, 172.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_255" id="Foot_255" href="#Ref_255">[255]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Deus tibi comes nunquam deerit, in quo sapentiæ thesauri
-atque divitiarum consistunt.' See Ademarus, monk of Angoulême in 1029,
-<i>Chronic.</i> <i>Gesta Synodi Aurelianensis</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_256" id="Foot_256" href="#Ref_256">[256]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The articles are given in Herbert's <i>Life of Henry VIII.</i> p. 366, sqq.
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 171.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_257" id="Foot_257" href="#Ref_257">[257]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 173.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_258" id="Foot_258" href="#Ref_258">[258]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, pp. 173, 174.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_259" id="Foot_259" href="#Ref_259">[259]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Guicciardini, <i>Hist. des Guerres d'Italie</i>, ii. liv. xx. p. 893.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_260" id="Foot_260" href="#Ref_260">[260]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'The French king talked with the marchioness a space.'—<i>Hall</i>, p. 794.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_261" id="Foot_261" href="#Ref_261">[261]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Le Grand, <i>Hist. du Divorce de Henri VIII.</i> p. 238.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_262" id="Foot_262" href="#Ref_262">[262]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Brantôme, <i>Mémoires</i>, i. p. 235.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_263" id="Foot_263" href="#Ref_263">[263]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The words <i>tant italiens que autres</i>, are not in the speech delivered at
-Calais according to Du Bellay; but they are in the written instructions
-given to the two cardinals. <i>Preuves des Libertés</i>, p. 260.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_264" id="Foot_264" href="#Ref_264">[264]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, pp. 175, 176, sqq.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">{142}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">A CAPTIVE PRINCE ESCAPES FROM THE HANDS OF THE EMPEROR.<br />
- (<span class="smc">Autumn 1532.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE news of the meeting of Francis I. and Henry VIII. alarmed Germany, Italy, and all Europe.
-'The kings of France and England,' it was said, 'are
-going to take advantage of the emperor's campaign
-against the Turks, to unite their armies with those of
-the protestants and gain a signal victory.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_265" id="Ref_265" href="#Foot_265">[265]</a></span>
-But nobody
-was more alarmed than the pope. Abruptly
-addressing the Bishop of Auxerre, the minister of
-France, he made the bitterest complaints to him.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_266" id="Ref_266" href="#Foot_266">[266]</a></span>
-Already he saw France, like England, shaking off the
-yoke of Rome. 'I have it from good authority,'
-says Brantôme, 'that the King of France was on the
-point of renouncing the pope, as the King of England
-had done.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_267" id="Ref_267" href="#Foot_267">[267]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On leaving Boulogne, Francis went to Paris, where
-he spent the winter and took his measures for 'the
-great effort' with which he threatened the pope. The
-priests were very uneasy, and began to dread a reform
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">{143}</a></span>
-similar to that in England. Calling to mind that in
-Denmark, Sweden, and elsewhere, a great part of the
-ecclesiastical property had been transferred to the
-treasury of the State, they granted the king all he
-asked; and the prince thus obtained between five
-and six hundred thousand ducats, which put him in
-a condition to do 'the great things' with which the
-cardinals were to menace the pontiff.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_268" id="Ref_268" href="#Foot_268">[268]</a></span>
-An unexpected
-event furnished the opportunity of employing
-the priests' money in favour of the Reformation.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CHARLES V. HASTENS TO ITALY.=</p>
-
-<p>The haughty Soliman had invaded Hungary, in
-July 1532, at the head of numerous and terrible
-hordes. Displaying a luxury without precedent, he
-gave audience on a golden throne, with a crown of
-solid gold at his side, and the scabbards of his
-swords covered with pearls. But erelong the sickly
-Charles succeeded in terrifying this magnificent barbarian.
-Having raised an army which combined the
-order and strength of the German lansquenets with
-the lightness and impetuosity of the Italian bands and
-the pride and perseverance of the Spanish troops, he
-forced Soliman to retreat. The emperor was all the
-more delighted, as the conference between Henry and
-Francis made him impatient to settle with the Mussulmans.
-It was even said in the empire that it was this
-conference which brought Charles back, as he desired
-to join the pope in combating projects which threatened
-them both. The emperor passed the Alps in the
-autumn of 1532.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_269" id="Ref_269" href="#Foot_269">[269]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">{144}</a></span>
-Among the nobles and warriors who accompanied
-him, was a young prince of eighteen, Christopher,
-son of Duke Ulrich of Wurtemberg. He was only
-five years old when his father was expelled from his
-duchy by the Austrians; and the latter, wishing to
-make him forget Wurtemberg, resolved to separate
-him from his country and his parents. The little boy
-and his guardians having left Stuttgard, stopped to
-pass the night in a town near the frontier. A lamb
-was gambolling in the yard; the poor boy, delighted
-with the gentleness of the animal, ran and took it up
-in his arms, and began to play with it. In the morning,
-just as they were leaving, little Christopher, less
-distressed at their taking away his sceptre than at their
-separating him from his pet companion, kissed it with
-tears in his eyes, and said to the host: 'Pray take
-care of it, and when I return I will pay you for your
-trouble.'</p>
-
-<p>Christopher was taken to Innsbruck, where his life
-was a hard one. The young prince who, in later
-times, filled his country with evangelical schools, had
-no one to cultivate his mind, and he who was one day
-to sit at the table of kings was often half-starved; his
-dress was neglected, and even the beggars, when they
-saw him, were moved with compassion. From Innsbruck
-he was transferred to Neustadt (Nagy-Banya)
-in Hungary, beyond the Theiss. One day a troop of
-Turkish horsemen, having crossed the Carpathians,
-scoured the country that lay between the mountains
-and the river, and, catching sight of the prince,
-rushed upon him to carry him off. But a faithful
-follower, who had observed their movements, shouted
-for help, and succeeded in saving Christopher from the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">{145}</a></span>
-hands of the Mussulmans. And thus the heir of
-Wurtemberg grew up in the bosom of adversity.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE PRINCE AND HIS GOVERNOR.=</p>
-
-<p>The noble-hearted man who had saved him at the
-peril of his own life was Michael Tifernus. In his
-early childhood he had been carried off by the Turks,
-and, being abandoned by them, he had succeeded in
-reaching a village near Trieste, where some kind people
-took care of him. Tifernus (who derived this name
-from the place of his adoption, for his parents' name
-was never known) was sent to a school in Vienna, where
-he received a sound education. King Ferdinand, who
-was guilty of negligence towards Christopher rather
-than of ill-will, gave him Tifernus for tutor. The
-latter attached himself passionately to the prince, who,
-under his care, became an accomplished young man.
-In the midst of the splendours of the court of Austria
-and of the Roman worship, grew up one who was erelong
-to rescue Wurtemberg from both Austria and
-Rome. An important circumstance occurred to agitate
-the young prince deeply, and throw a bright light over
-his dark path.</p>
-
-<p>Christopher accompanied the emperor in 1530 to the
-famous diet of Augsburg. He was struck by the noble
-sight of the fidelity and courage of the protestants.
-He heard them make their confession of faith; his
-elevated soul took the side of the oppressed Gospel;
-and when, at this very diet, Charles solemnly invested
-his brother Ferdinand with the duchy of Wurtemberg,—when
-Christopher saw the standard of his fathers
-and of his people in the hands of the Austrian archduke—the
-feeling of his rights came over him; he
-viewed the triumphant establishment of the evangelical
-faith in the country of his ancestors as a task
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">{146}</a></span>
-appointed him. He would recover his inheritance,
-and, uniting with the noble confessors of Augsburg,
-would bring an unexpected support to the Reformation.</p>
-
-<p>The emperor, after the war against the Turks, desired
-the prince to accompany him to Italy and Spain;
-perhaps it was his intention to leave him there; but
-Christopher made no objection. He had arranged his
-plans: two great ideas, the independence of Wurtemberg
-and the triumph of the Reformation, had taken
-possession of his mind, and while following the emperor
-and appearing to turn his back on the states of his
-fathers, he said significantly to his devoted friend
-Tifernus: 'I shall not abandon my rights in Germany.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_270" id="Ref_270" href="#Foot_270">[270]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=PRINCE CHRISTOPHER'S ESCAPE.=</p>
-
-<p>Charles V. and his court were crossing the Alps in
-the autumn of 1532. The young duke on horseback
-was slowly climbing the passes which separate Austria
-from Styria, contemplating the everlasting snows
-in the distance, and stopping from time to time on
-the heights from whose base rushed the foaming torrents
-which descend from the sides of the mountains.
-He had a thoughtful look, as of one absorbed by
-some great resolution. The news of the interview
-of Francis I. and Henry VIII., which had alarmed
-Austria, had inflamed his hopes; and he said to himself
-that now was the time for claiming his states.
-He had conversed with his governor about it, and it
-now remained to carry the daring enterprise into
-execution. To escape from Charles V., surrounded
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">{147}</a></span>
-by his court and his guards, seemed impossible; but
-Christopher believing that God can <i>deliver out of the
-mouth of the lion</i>, prayed him to be his guide during
-the rest of his life. As etiquette was not strictly
-observed in these mountains, Christopher and his
-governor lagged a little in the rear of their travelling
-companions. A tree, a rock, a turn in the road
-sufficed to hide them from view. Yet, if one of the
-emperor's attendants should turn round too soon and
-look for the laggards, the two friends would be ruined.
-But no one thought of doing so: erelong they were at
-some distance from the court, and could see the imperial
-procession stretching in the distance, like a
-riband, along the flanks of the Norican Alps. On a
-sudden the two loiterers turned their horses, and set
-off at full gallop. They asked some mountaineers to
-show them a road which would take them to Salzburg,
-and continued their flight in the direction indicated.
-But there were some terrible passes to cross; Christopher's
-horse broke down, and it was impossible to
-proceed. What was to be done? Perhaps the imperialists
-were already on their track.</p>
-
-<p>The two friends were not at a loss. There was a
-lake close at hand; they dragged the useless animal
-by the legs towards it, and buried it at the bottom of
-the water, in order that there might be no trace of
-their passage. 'Now, my lord,' said his governor,
-'take my horse and proceed; I shall manage to get
-out of the scrape.' The young duke disappeared,
-and not before it was time. 'What has become of
-Prince Christopher?' asked Charles's attendants. 'He
-is in the rear,' was the reply; 'he will soon catch us
-up.' As he did not appear, some of the imperial
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">{148}</a></span>
-officers rode back in search of him. The little
-lake into which the prince's horse had been thrown
-was partly filled with tall reeds, among which
-Tifernus lay concealed. Presently the imperialists
-passed close by him; he heard their steps, their voices;
-they went backwards and forwards, but found nothing.
-At last, they returned and mournfully reported the
-uselessness of their search. It was believed that
-the two young men had been murdered by brigands
-among the mountains. The court continued its
-progress towards Italy and Rome. All this time
-Christopher was fleeing on his governor's horse, and
-by exercising great prudence he reached a secure
-asylum without being recognised, and here he kept
-himself in concealment under the protection of his
-near relatives the dukes of Bavaria. Tifernus joined
-him in his retreat.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CHRISTOPHER CLAIMS HIS STATES.=</p>
-
-<p>The report of Christopher's death was circulated
-everywhere; the Austrians, who had no doubt about
-it, felt surer than ever of Wurtemberg; they were
-even beginning to forget the prince, when a document
-bearing his name and dated the 17th of November,
-1532,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_271" id="Ref_271" href="#Foot_271">[271]</a></span>
-was suddenly circulated all over Germany.
-Faithful to his resolution, the young prince in this
-noble manifesto gave utterance to the bitterest complaints,
-and boldly claimed his inheritance in the face
-of the world. This paper, which alarmed Ferdinand
-of Austria, caused immense joy in Wurtemberg and
-all protestant Germany. The young prince had everything
-in his favour: an age which always charms, a
-courage universally acknowledged, virtues, talents,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">{149}</a></span>
-graceful manners, an ancient family, a respected name,
-indisputable rights, and the love of his subjects.
-They had not seen him, indeed, since the day when
-he had bedewed the pet lamb with his tears; but
-they hailed him as their national prince who would
-recover their independence. Protected by the Duke
-of Bavaria, by the Landgrave of Hesse, and by the
-powerful King of France, Christopher had all the
-chances in his favour. He had more: he had the
-support of God. As a friend of the Gospel, he
-would give fresh strength to the great cause of the
-Reformation. Du Bellay would use all his zeal to
-reestablish him on the throne, and thus procure an
-ally for France who would help her to enter on the
-path of religious liberty.</p>
-
-<p>We must now return to the country of Margaret
-of Navarre, and see how this princess began to realise
-her great project of having the pure Gospel preached
-in the bosom and under the forms of the Roman
-Catholic Church.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_265" id="Foot_265" href="#Ref_265">[265]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'The people was marvellously affrayed less you would have joined
-armies.'—Hawkins to Henry VIII., Nov. 21, 1532. <i>State Papers</i>, vii.
-p. 388.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_266" id="Foot_266" href="#Ref_266">[266]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hys Holynes taketh it greatly for ill.'—Ibid. p. 381.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_267" id="Foot_267" href="#Ref_267">[267]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Brantôme, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 235.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_268" id="Foot_268" href="#Ref_268">[268]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 174. <i>Relation des Ambassadeurs Vénitiens</i>, i.
-p. 52.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_269" id="Foot_269" href="#Ref_269">[269]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Hammer, iii. p. 118. Schoertlin, <i>Lebens Beschreibung</i>. Ranke,
-<i>Deutsche Geschichte</i>, iii. p. 425.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_270" id="Foot_270" href="#Ref_270">[270]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Entschlossen seine Gerechtigkeiten in Deutschland nicht zu verlassen.'—Ranke,
-<i>Deutsche Geschichte</i>, iii. pp. 448-451. This narrative is
-based upon Gabelkofer, extracted by Sattler and Pfister.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_271" id="Foot_271" href="#Ref_271">[271]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-This document will be found in Sattler, ii. p. 229. See also Ranke,
-<i>Deutsche Geschichte</i>, iii. p. 450.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">{150}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE GOSPEL PREACHED AT THE LOUVRE AND IN
- THE METROPOLITAN CHURCHES.<br />
- (<span class="smc">Lent 1533.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE alliance with England, and the hope of being
-able, sooner or later, to triumph over Charles V.,
-filled the King of France with joy; and accordingly
-the carnival of the year 1533 was kept magnificently
-at Paris. The court was absorbed in entertainments,
-balls, and banquets. The young lords and ladies
-thought of nothing but dancing and intriguing, at
-which soberer minds were scandalised. 'It is quite
-a Bacchanalia,' said the evangelicals.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_272" id="Ref_272" href="#Foot_272">[272]</a></span>
-As soon as
-the carnival was ended, Francis started for Picardy;
-leaving the King and Queen of Navarre at Paris.
-Margaret now breathed more freely. She had been
-compelled, willingly or unwillingly, to take part in
-all the court fêtes; and she now determined to make
-up for it by organising a great evangelical preaching
-instead of the 'bacchanalia' at which she had
-sometimes been present. Was not Francis holding
-out his hand to the King of England and to the protestants
-of Germany? The opportunity should be
-seized of preaching the new doctrine boldly. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">{151}</a></span>
-Queen of Navarre sent for Roussel and communicated
-her intention to him. She will open the great
-churches of the capital, and from their pulpits the
-inhabitants of Paris shall hear the mighty summons.
-The poor almoner, in whom courage was not the
-most prominent virtue, was alarmed at first. In the
-handsome saloons of Margaret he might indulge in his
-pious and rather mystical aspirations; but to enter
-the pulpits of Paris ... the very thought dismayed
-him, and he begged the queen to find some other
-person. Roussel did not deny that it was right to
-preach the Gospel publicly, but declared himself to
-be incompetent for the work. 'The minister of the
-Gospel,' he said, 'ought to possess an invincible faith.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_273" id="Ref_273" href="#Foot_273">[273]</a></span>
-The enemy against which he fights is the kingdom of
-hell with all its powers.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_274" id="Ref_274" href="#Foot_274">[274]</a></span>
-... He must defend himself
-on the right hand and on the left.... What do you
-require of me? To preach peace, but under the cross!
-To bring in the kingdom of God, but among the strongholds
-of the devil.... To speak of repose in the midst
-of the most furious tempests, of life in the midst of
-death, of blessedness in the midst of hell! Who is
-fitted for such things?... Doubtless it is a noble
-task, but no one ought to undertake it unless he
-is called to it. Now I feel nothing in me which a
-minister of the Gospel of Christ ought to possess at
-this moment.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_275" id="Ref_275" href="#Foot_275">[275]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=ROUSSEL'S HESITATION.=</p>
-
-<p>Such a man as Calvin would certainly have been
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">{152}</a></span>
-preferable, but Margaret would neither have dared
-nor wished to put him in the front. These sermons
-undoubtedly formed part of the chaplain's duty;
-and hence the Queen, an energetic and impulsive
-woman, being determined to profit by the opportunity
-of giving the Gospel free entrance into Paris, persisted
-with Roussel, promised him the help of her prayers
-and of her favour, and at last prevailed on him to
-preach. In truth, his modesty is an honour to
-him: no doubt there was boldness wanted; but
-many humble and candid souls would have hesitated
-like him. He was fitter than he imagined for
-the work which the Queen of Navarre had taken in
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>This obstacle having been surmounted, Margaret
-met with another. It was the custom for the Sorbonne
-to appoint the preachers, and it was impossible
-to get them to accept Roussel. 'They will nominate
-some furious and insolent monks,' says Calvin, 'who
-will make the churches ring with their insults
-against truth.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_276" id="Ref_276" href="#Foot_276">[276]</a></span>
-The struggle began, and despite
-the absence of Francis, despite the influence of the
-Queen of Navarre, the Sorbonne gained the day, and
-the pulpits of the capital were closed against the
-almoner. Margaret was very indignant at these
-doctors, who looked upon themselves as the doorkeepers
-of the kingdom of heaven, and by their
-tyranny prevented the door from being opened; but
-Roussel was by no means sorry to be prohibited from
-a work beyond his strength.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=PREACHINGS AT THE LOUVRE.=</p>
-
-<p>But nothing could stop the queen. Being resolved
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">{153}</a></span>
-to give the Gospel to France, she said to herself that it
-must be done now or never. Her zeal carried her to
-an extraordinary act. The Sorbonne closed the doors
-of the churches against Roussel: Margaret opened to
-him the palace of the king. She had a saloon prepared
-in the Louvre, and gave orders to admit all who desired
-to enter. Was the king informed of this? It is
-possible, and even probable, that he was. He did not
-fear to show the pope and Charles V. how far his alliance
-with Henry VIII. and the protestants would extend.
-He would not have liked to appear schismatic
-and heretical; but he sometimes was pleased that his
-sister should do so; and he could always vindicate
-himself on the ground of absence.</p>
-
-<p>A Lutheran sermon at the Louvre! That was truly
-a strange thing; and accordingly the crowd was so
-great that there was not room for them. Margaret
-threw open a larger hall, but that too was filled, as
-well as the corridors and ante-chamber.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_277" id="Ref_277" href="#Foot_277">[277]</a></span>
-A third time
-the place of meeting was changed.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_278" id="Ref_278" href="#Foot_278">[278]</a></span>
-She had vainly
-selected the largest hall; the galleries and adjoining
-rooms were filled, and room was wanting still. These
-evangelical preachings at the Louvre excited a lively
-curiosity in Paris. They were all the fashion, and the
-worthy Roussel, to his great surprise, became quite
-famous. He preached every day during Lent,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_279" id="Ref_279" href="#Foot_279">[279]</a></span>
-and every day the crowd grew larger. Nobles, lawyers,
-men of letters, merchants, scholars, and tradespeople
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">{154}</a></span>
-of every class flocked to the Louvre from all parts of
-Paris, especially from the quarters of the University
-and St. Germain. At the hour of preaching, the citizens
-poured over the bridges in a stream, or crossed
-the Seine in boats. Some were attracted by piety,
-some by curiosity, and others by vanity. Four or five
-thousand hearers crowded daily round Roussel.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_280" id="Ref_280" href="#Foot_280">[280]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When the worthy citizens, students, and professors
-had climbed the stairs at the Louvre, crossed the antechambers,
-and reached the door of the principal saloon,
-they stopped, opened their eyes wide, and looked
-wonderingly on the sight presented to them in the
-monarch's palace. The King and Queen of Navarre
-were in the chief places, seated in costly chairs, whence
-the active Margaret cast a satisfied glance on all those
-courtiers, those notables of the city, those curious
-Parisians, those friends of Reform, who were flocking
-to hear the Word of God. There were people of
-every rank: John Sturm, already so decided for the
-Gospel, was seen by the side of the elegant John de
-Montluc, afterwards Bishop of Valence. At length
-the minister appeared; he prayed with unction, read
-the Scriptures with gravity, and then began his exhortations
-to the hearers. His language was simple,
-but it stirred their hearts profoundly. Roussel proclaimed
-the salvation obtained by a living faith, and
-urged the necessity of belonging to the invisible
-Church of the saints. Instead of attacking the Roman
-religion, he addressed his appeals to the conscience;
-and this preaching of the Gospel (rather softened down
-as it was) won, instead of irritating, men's minds.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">{155}</a></span>
-Accustomed as they were to the babbling of the monks,
-the congregation listened seriously to the practical
-preaching of the minister of God. Here were no
-scholastic subtleties, no absurd legends, no amusing
-anecdotes, no burlesque declamations, and no unclean
-pictures: it was the Gospel.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_281" id="Ref_281" href="#Foot_281">[281]</a></span>
-As they quitted the
-Louvre, men conversed about the sermon or the
-preacher. Sturm of Strasburg and John de Montluc,
-in particular, often talked together.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_282" id="Ref_282" href="#Foot_282">[282]</a></span>
-The satisfaction
-was general. 'What a preacher!' they said; 'we have
-never heard anything like it! What freedom in his
-language! what firmness in his teaching!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_283" id="Ref_283" href="#Foot_283">[283]</a></span>
-Some of
-his hearers wrote in their admiration to Melanchthon,
-who informed Luther, Spalatin, and others of it.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_284" id="Ref_284" href="#Foot_284">[284]</a></span>
-Germany rejoiced to see France begin to move at last.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret, who had a lively imagination and warm
-heart, was all on fire. She spoke to the worldlings
-of that 'peace of God which passeth all understanding.'
-She said to the friends of the Gospel:
-'The Almighty will graciously complete what he has
-graciously begun through us.' She added: 'I will
-spend myself in it.' She excited and stirred up
-everybody about her, and the crowded congregations
-of the Louvre were in great measure the result of her
-incessant activity. She knew how by a word or a message
-to attract courtiers whose only thoughts were of
-debauchery, and catholics whose only wish was for the
-pope. Like a sabbath-bell, she called Paris to hear the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">{156}</a></span>
-voice of God, and drew the crowd. Possessing in the
-highest degree, so long as her brother did not check it,
-that energy which women often show in religious
-matters, she was resolved to prosecute her work and
-win the prize of the contest.</p>
-
-<p>She returned to her first idea. She said to herself
-that the best way to effect a reform in the Church
-without occasioning a schism, was for the Gospel to
-be preached in the churches of Paris and of France.
-The ceremonies of the Roman worship and the jurisdiction
-of the bishops would remain, but Christ would
-be proclaimed. This system, which was fundamentally
-that of Melanchthon and even of Luther at this time,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_285" id="Ref_285" href="#Foot_285">[285]</a></span>
-she did her best to realise. The victory she had just
-achieved at the Louvre doubled her courage; she determined
-to have the churches which had been refused
-to her at first. She therefore began to work upon the
-king, and, as he was thinking only of his alliances with
-Henry VIII. and the protestants, she obtained from
-him an order authorising the Bishop of Paris to appoint
-whom he pleased to preach in his diocese.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_286" id="Ref_286" href="#Foot_286">[286]</a></span>
-The prelate,
-who was a brother of the diplomatist Du Bellay,
-passed like him for a friend of the Reformation. At
-Margaret's request he named two evangelical Augustine
-monks—Courault and Berthaud. 'Strange!'
-said the public voice; 'here are men of the order to
-which Luther belonged going to preach the doctrine
-of the great reformer in the capital of France.' All the
-evangelicals were overjoyed and wrote to their friends
-everywhere that 'Paris was supplied with three excellent
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">{157}</a></span>
-preachers, announcing the truth ... with a
-little more boldness than was customary.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_287" id="Ref_287" href="#Foot_287">[287]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=ESSENCE OF EVANGELICAL PREACHING.=</p>
-
-<p>Courault, a sincere scriptural christian, who did not
-participate in Margaret's subtleties, preached at St.
-Saviour's. The inhabitants of the quarter of St. Denis
-and from other parts crowded to this church. Many
-persons who had said of the preachings at the Louvre,
-'They are not for us,' hastened to the place which belonged
-to the people. The man who occupied the pulpit
-was about the middle age; he did not possess Roussel's
-grace, he was even somewhat rough, and preached the
-Gospel without reserve and without disguise. His
-lively and aggressive style, his expressive and rather
-threatening gestures arrested attention. He attacked
-unsparingly the errors of the Church and the vices
-of christians. Courault did not come, as the Roman
-preachers had done up to that very hour, to impose
-on his hearers certain laws, ceremonies, and acts of
-worship by means of which they could be reconciled
-to God and merit his favour. He spoke not of feasts,
-or of dedications, or of customs, or of those mechanical
-prayers and chantings, in which the understanding
-and the heart have no share, and with which
-the Church burdened believers. He had a special
-horror of all that mixes up the worship of the creature
-with the adoration of God, and would not suffer the
-perfect work of Christ to be obscured by the invocation
-of other mediators. He preached that the true
-worship of the New Testament was faith in the Gospel,
-and the love which proceeds from faith; that it was
-communion with Christ, patience under the cross, and
-a holy activity in doing good, accompanied by the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">{158}</a></span>
-constant prayers of the heart. This preaching, so
-new in the capital, attracted an immense crowd. The
-enthusiasm was universal. 'This man is in the first
-rank among good men,' was the general opinion.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_288" id="Ref_288" href="#Foot_288">[288]</a></span>
-'He is like a sentinel on a tower who, with his eyes
-fixed on the east, proclaims that the sun, so long
-hidden, will shine at last upon the earth.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_289" id="Ref_289" href="#Foot_289">[289]</a></span>
-Light beamed from Courault's discourses. His sight was
-weak, and in after years, during his exile in Switzerland,
-where he was Calvin's colleague, he became
-quite blind; but his language was always marked by
-great clearness. It was said of him that 'although
-blind he enlightens the soul.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_290" id="Ref_290" href="#Foot_290">[290]</a></span>
-Among his hearers
-was Louis du Tillet, Calvin's friend, and the youthful
-canon was deeply excited by the living faith of the
-aged Augustine. 'Oh! what piety I found in him!'
-he exclaimed on a later occasion.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_291" id="Ref_291" href="#Foot_291">[291]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Berthaud, the other preacher named by the bishop,
-subsequently deserted the Gospel and died a canon of
-Besançon: so that each of them reminds us of our
-Saviour's words: <i>There shall two be in the field; the
-one shall be taken, and the other left</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_292" id="Ref_292" href="#Foot_292">[292]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>These evangelical preachings in the palace of the
-king and in the churches of Paris were important facts,
-and there has been nothing like it since in France.
-The alarm was consequently at its height. People
-asked whether the sentinels of the Church were asleep,
-and whether the bark of St. Peter would founder,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">{159}</a></span>
-while the Gospel ship seemed floating onwards in full
-sail.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=AGITATION OF THE SORBONNE.=</p>
-
-<p>But the doctors of the Sorbonne were not asleep;
-on the contrary, they were on the watch, they sent
-their spies into the evangelical assemblies, received
-their reports, and took counsel together every day.
-The members of this society, the principal, the prior,
-the senior, the recorder, the professors, the proctors,
-and the librarians declared boldly and unanimously
-that all was lost if they did not make haste to
-check the evil. The evangelicals and the men of
-letters were informed of these fanatical discussions.
-'What a horde of scribes and pharisees!' they exclaimed.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_293" id="Ref_293" href="#Foot_293">[293]</a></span>
-But that did not stop the horde. 'What
-must be done?' they asked; and Beda replied: 'Let
-the preachers be seized and put to death like Berquin.'
-Some, more moderate or more politic, knowing
-that Roussel was preaching by order of the
-king's sister, shrank from this proposal, fearing they
-would offend their sovereign.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_294" id="Ref_294" href="#Foot_294">[294]</a></span>
-'What foolish policy!'
-exclaimed Beda, 'what ineffable cowardice!... Is
-not the Sorbonne the oracle of Europe? Shall it render
-ambiguous answers, like the pagan oracles of old?'</p>
-
-<p>Beda prevailed, and Roussel was denounced to the
-king. 'Apply to my chancellor,' said Francis, who
-did not wish to say either yes or no. The Sorbonne
-delegates then waited upon Duprat. 'Apply to the
-bishop,' said the cardinal, who was afraid of displeasing
-the king. The Sorbonnists went to their
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">{160}</a></span>
-diocesan, rather anxious about the reception they
-would receive from him; and with good reason, for
-the liberal Du Bellay only laughed at them.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_295" id="Ref_295" href="#Foot_295">[295]</a></span>
-The exasperated but indefatigable doctors now turned to
-the first president, who was one of their party; but
-that magistrate, believing the Sorbonne to be in disgrace,
-was not anxious to support their cause. The
-wrath of the doctors now became unbounded. Would
-there no longer be any justice in France for the
-champions of the papacy? The friends of letters,
-who had carefully noted all these repulses, smiled at
-the confusion of the priests; and Sturm in particular,
-the reviver of learning at Strasburg, and now professor
-at Paris, did not spare them: 'Look at these
-<i>Thersites</i>!' he said, comparing them to the ugliest,
-most cowardly, and most ridiculous of the Grecian
-host at Troy. 'They are at the end of their tether
-and cannot succeed,' continued Sturm; 'for those
-who can help them will not, and those who will
-cannot.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_296" id="Ref_296" href="#Foot_296">[296]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The doctors of the Sorbonne now lost all moderation.
-'The king,' said they, 'who publicly supports
-the heretics, his sister and the Archbishop of Paris,
-who protect them, are as guilty as they.' Orders
-were sent through all the camp: every pulpit became a
-volcano. Furious declamations, superstitious sermons,
-scholastic discourses, violent and grotesque speeches—the
-supporters of Rome made use of all. 'Do you
-know what an heretical minister is?' asked a monk.
-'He is a pig in a pulpit, decorated with cap and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">{161}</a></span>
-surplice, and preaching to a congregation ... of
-asses.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_297" id="Ref_297" href="#Foot_297">[297]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE FIREBRAND LE PICARD.=</p>
-
-<p>The most active firebrand in this conflagration
-was Le Picard, a bachelor of divinity, professor of the
-college of Navarre, and subsequently dean of St.
-Germain l'Auxerrois. He was twenty-nine years old,
-of a 'stormy' temper if ever there was one, and in
-truth he did 'storm' in the churches and at the
-meetings of the priests. He went into the pulpit to
-oppose Courault; and the people who had gone to
-hear the Augustine monk, crowded also to hear his
-opponent. The latter gesticulated much, shouted
-loudly, invoked the Virgin, and attacked the king,
-accusing him bluntly of heresy. He was a true
-precursor of those who advised the massacre of St.
-Bartholomew; and indeed he made a proposal, not
-long after, worthy of the Guises and the Medici.
-'Let the government pretend to be Lutheran,' he
-said, 'in order that the reformed may assemble openly;
-then we can fall upon them and clear the kingdom
-of them once for all.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_298" id="Ref_298" href="#Foot_298">[298]</a></span>
-A monk, charmed with his
-virtues, has written his life under the title of <i>The
-Perfect Ecclesiastic</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_299" id="Ref_299" href="#Foot_299">[299]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=SEDITION OF BEDA AND MONKS.=</p>
-
-<p>Yet if Le Picard was the most active champion,
-Beda was still general. Placed as on a hill, he overlooked
-the field of battle, examined where it was necessary
-to send help, wrote every day to the orators of his
-party—to Le Picard, Maillard, Ballue, Bouchigny, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">{162}</a></span>
-others, and conjured them not to relax for an instant in
-their attacks. 'Stir up the people by your discourses,'
-he said.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_300" id="Ref_300" href="#Foot_300">[300]</a></span>
-It was a critical moment: it was in the
-balance whether France would remain catholic or
-become heretic. 'Though the monarch deserts the
-papacy,' he said, 'agitate, still agitate!' Then the
-fanatical monks went into the pulpits and aroused
-the people by their fiery eloquence: 'Let us not
-suffer this heresy, the most pestilential of all, to take
-root among us.... Let us pluck it up, cast it out,
-and annihilate it.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_301" id="Ref_301" href="#Foot_301">[301]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>All the forces of the papacy were engaged at this
-time as in a battle where the general launches his
-reserves into the midst of the struggle. The mendicant
-friars, those veteran soldiers of the popedom, who
-had access into every family, were set to work.
-Dominicans, Augustines, Carmelites, and Franciscans,
-having received their instructions, entered the houses
-of Paris. The women and children, who were used to
-them, saluted them with 'Good morning, friar John or
-friar James;' and while their wallet was being filled,
-they whispered in the ears of the citizens: 'The pope
-is above the king.... If the king favours the heretics,
-the pope will free us from our oaths of fidelity.'</p>
-
-<p>They went still further. Whenever it is felt desirable
-to arouse the people, they require to be excited
-by some spectacle. A <i>neuvaine</i> was ordered in honour
-of St. James. The crowd flocked to adore the good
-saint with his long pilgrim's staff; and for nine
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">{163}</a></span>
-days the devout of both sexes, kneeling round his
-image, crossing themselves and employing other usual
-ceremonies, loudly called upon the saint to give a
-knock-down blow with his staff to those who protected
-the heretics.</p>
-
-<p>These incendiary discourses and bigoted practices
-succeeded. The people began to be restless and to
-utter threats.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_302" id="Ref_302" href="#Foot_302">[302]</a></span>
-They paraded in bands through the
-streets, they collected in groups in the public places,
-and cries were heard of: 'The pope for ever! down
-with his enemies!... Whoever opposes the holy
-father, even if he be a king, is a knave and a tyrant,
-to whom the Grand Turk is preferable.... We will dye
-our streets with the blood of those people.'... There
-was already in the veins of the inhabitants of Paris the
-blood of the men of the Reign of Terror. The crowds
-who filled the streets stopped before the booksellers'
-shops, where books and pictures, defamatory of the
-reformers and even of the Queen of Navarre, were
-displayed. Among the books was a 'stage play'
-aimed at the king's sister: it was probably that entitled:
-<i>The Malady of Christendom, with thirteen
-characters</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_303" id="Ref_303" href="#Foot_303">[303]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But even that was not sufficient. There was still
-wanting a theological decision from the first academical
-authority of christendom, which should place Roussel
-in the same rank as the arch-heretic Luther. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">{164}</a></span>
-Sorbonne, wishing to strike a decisive blow, published
-a certain number of the so-called pernicious and scandalous
-doctrines imputed to Roussel, and condemned
-them as being similar to the errors of Luther. The
-alarm and agitation were now at their height; the
-people fancied they could see the monk of Wittemberg
-breathing his impious doctrines over Paris. Rome
-fought boldly, and everything was in confusion.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_304" id="Ref_304" href="#Foot_304">[304]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>What became of Calvin during all this uproar?
-'What is this madness,' he said on a later occasion,
-'which impels the pope and his bishops, the priests
-and the friars, to resist the Gospel with such obstinate
-rebellion?... The servants of God must be furnished
-with invincible constancy in order to sustain without
-alarm the commotions of the people. We are sailing
-on a sea exposed to many tempests; but nothing
-ought to turn us aside from doing our duty conscientiously.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_305" id="Ref_305" href="#Foot_305">[305]</a></span>
-The Lord consoles and strengthens his
-servants when they are thus agitated.... He has in
-his hand the management of every whirlwind and of
-every storm, and appeases them whenever it seems
-good to him.... We shall be roughly handled, but he
-will not suffer us to be drowned.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_306" id="Ref_306" href="#Foot_306">[306]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_272" id="Foot_272" href="#Ref_272">[272]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Bacchanalia factis multis regiis conviviis.'—Siderander Bedroto,
-Strasburg MSS. ed. Schmidt.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_273" id="Foot_273" href="#Ref_273">[273]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Exigit invictum fidei robur.'—Roussel to Œcolampadius, <i>Ep. Ref.
-Helvet.</i> p. 20.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_274" id="Foot_274" href="#Ref_274">[274]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Adversus totum inferorum regnum, a dexteris et a sinistris.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_275" id="Foot_275" href="#Ref_275">[275]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nihil minus in me sentiam quam quod ad evangelicum dispensatorem
-et ministrum attinet.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_276" id="Foot_276" href="#Ref_276">[276]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quisque erat clamosissimus et stolido furore præditus.'—Calvinus
-Danieli, <i>Epp.</i> p. 3. Genève, 1575.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_277" id="Foot_277" href="#Ref_277">[277]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Vix enim locus inveniebatur qui satis capax esset.'—Letter dated
-Paris, May 28, 1533, by Peter Siderander. Strasburg MSS. Schmidt,
-<i>G. Roussel</i>, p. 201.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_278" id="Foot_278" href="#Ref_278">[278]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Adeo ut ter mutare locum coactus sit.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_279" id="Foot_279" href="#Ref_279">[279]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Concionatus est autem quotidie per totam hanc quadragesimam.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_280" id="Foot_280" href="#Ref_280">[280]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut nulla fere concio facta fuerit quin hominum quatuor vel quinque
-millia adfuerint.'—Siderander, Strasburg MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_281" id="Foot_281" href="#Ref_281">[281]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Schmidt, <i>G. Roussel</i>, p. 85.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_282" id="Foot_282" href="#Ref_282">[282]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See Sturm to Montluc, June 17, 1562.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_283" id="Foot_283" href="#Ref_283">[283]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Gerardus libere docet Evangelium in ipsa Lutetia ... in
-aula reginæ Navarræ magna animi constantia.'—Melanchthon, <i>Corp.
-Ref.</i> ii. p. 658.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_284" id="Foot_284" href="#Ref_284">[284]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hæc certa sunt et mihi, ex Parisiis, ab optimis viris diligenter perscripta.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_285" id="Foot_285" href="#Ref_285">[285]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Negotiations of Smalcald, Aug. 1531.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_286" id="Foot_286" href="#Ref_286">[286]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Allatum est regium diploma quo parisiensi episcopo permittitur
-præficere quos velit singulis parochiis concionatores.'—Calvini <i>Epp.</i> p. 3.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_287" id="Foot_287" href="#Ref_287">[287]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Hist. des Eglises Réformées</i>, i. p. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_288" id="Foot_288" href="#Ref_288">[288]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Qui inter bonos postremus non erat.'—Calvini <i>Epp.</i> p. 3.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_289" id="Foot_289" href="#Ref_289">[289]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In specula nostra, donec appareat quod nunc absconditum est.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_290" id="Foot_290" href="#Ref_290">[290]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Hist. des Eglises Réformées</i>, i. p. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_291" id="Foot_291" href="#Ref_291">[291]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Correspondance de Calvin et Du Tillet</i>, p. 78.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_292" id="Foot_292" href="#Ref_292">[292]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Matthew, xxiv. 40.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_293" id="Foot_293" href="#Ref_293">[293]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Turba illa scribarum et pharisæorum.'—Strasburg MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_294" id="Foot_294" href="#Ref_294">[294]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Non facile contra regem temere ausi sunt certamen suscipere.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_295" id="Foot_295" href="#Ref_295">[295]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hic aperte eos illusit.'—Sturm to Bucer, ed. Strobel, p. 106.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_296" id="Foot_296" href="#Ref_296">[296]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Isti Thersitæ . . . hi qui possunt nollent, et qui cuperent non auderent
-adesse.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_297" id="Foot_297" href="#Ref_297">[297]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-One of the stalls in a church at Toulouse represents a similar scene,
-with these words: <i>Calvin the pig preaching</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_298" id="Foot_298" href="#Ref_298">[298]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Labitte, <i>Démocratie des Prédicateurs de la Ligue</i>, p. 3.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_299" id="Foot_299" href="#Ref_299">[299]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-H. de Coste, <i>Le parfait Ecclésiastique, ou Histoire de Le Picard</i>, 12mo,
-Paris, 1658.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_300" id="Foot_300" href="#Ref_300">[300]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Beda sollicitabat suos oratores ut ne cessarent in suis demegoriis
-concitare populum.'—Sturm to Bucer. Strasburg MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_301" id="Foot_301" href="#Ref_301">[301]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Populum stimulare ne hæresim hanc pestilentissimam radices agere
-pateretur.'—Siderander Bedroto. Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_302" id="Foot_302" href="#Ref_302">[302]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ad extremum populus etiam mussitare et minari cœpit.'—Sturm to
-Bucer.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_303" id="Foot_303" href="#Ref_303">[303]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Typographi in suis pægmatis scriptura et pictura et ludo scenico
-læserunt reginam.'—Ibid. <i>The Moralité de la Maladie de la Chrétienté</i>,
-8vo, appeared at Paris this very year (1533). The learned biographer
-of Roussel and of Sturm supposes, very reasonably as it appears to me,
-that this is the <i>ludus scenicus</i>, the play of which Sturm speaks.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_304" id="Foot_304" href="#Ref_304">[304]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Omnino res cœpit esse <span title="thorubôdês">θορυβώδης</span>.'—Sturm to Bucer.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_305" id="Foot_305" href="#Ref_305">[305]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'En rondeur de conscience.'—Calv. <i>Opusc.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_306" id="Foot_306" href="#Ref_306">[306]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin, <i>in Acta</i> xix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">{165}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXIV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">DEFEAT OF THE ROMISH PARTY IN PARIS AND MOMENTARY
- TRIUMPH OF THE GOSPEL.<br />
- (1533.)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=FRANCIS PUNISHES BOTH PARTIES.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">MARGARET and her husband, with the Bishop du
-Bellay, alarmed at the storm, resolved to lay
-their complaints before Francis I. The kingly authority
-was threatened; these hot-headed 'wallet-bearers'
-were the predecessors of those who instigated the
-murders of Henry III. and Henry IV. The King of
-Navarre on the one hand, and the Bishop of Paris
-on the other, laid before their sovereign an alarming
-picture of the state of the capital. 'The blood of
-Berquin does not satisfy these fanatics,' they said; 'they
-are calling for fresh acts of cruelty.... And who will
-be their victims now?... They are planning a crime,
-a revolt!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_307" id="Ref_307" href="#Foot_307">[307]</a></span>
-But while Francis was listening to his
-sister's denunciations with one ear, he was receiving
-those of the Sorbonne in the other. 'Sedition!' said
-one party. 'Heresy!' cried the other. 'Sire,' repeated
-the theologians incessantly, 'shut the pulpits against
-Roussel and his colleagues.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_308" id="Ref_308" href="#Foot_308">[308]</a></span>
-Thus pulled in different
-directions, the king, puzzled which to believe, resolved
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">{166}</a></span>
-to punish both parties alike. 'I will confine them all
-to their houses,' he said; 'Beda with his orators on
-one side, and Gerard Roussel with his preachers on the
-other. We shall then have some peace and be able at
-our leisure to examine these contradictory accusations.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_309" id="Ref_309" href="#Foot_309">[309]</a></span>
-Thus, at the same moment, Beda, Maillard,
-Ballue, and Bouchigny of the church party, and
-Roussel, Courault, and Berthaud of the evangelical
-party, received orders not to leave their houses. The
-schoolmaster thus punished the quarrelsome boys
-by putting them in opposite corners.</p>
-
-<p>Preparations were made for investigating the two
-cases, but the matter was not so easy as the king had
-imagined. The theologians were indignant at finding
-themselves placed in the same rank with the Lutherans.
-Far from submitting to be prosecuted for sedition, they
-claimed to prosecute the others for heresy. They
-would not be the accused or even the accusers; they
-took their stand as inquisitors of the faith and as
-judges.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_310" id="Ref_310" href="#Foot_310">[310]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=BEDA BREAKS LOOSE.=</p>
-
-<p>The terrible Beda, shut up in the college of
-Montaigu,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_311" id="Ref_311" href="#Foot_311">[311]</a></span>
- and not daring to go out, found himself
-condemned, considering his restless temper, to the
-severest penance. At first he was content to keep
-his agents at work, who were ready at any moment to
-bear his orders. But when he learnt that his right to
-judge was disputed, and that he was to be put in the
-same rank with Roussel, the turbulent doctor could
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">{167}</a></span>
-restrain himself no longer. His room was too narrow
-to contain his anger. He made light of the king's
-commands, and, disobeying his orders, mounted his
-mule and rode into the city. From time to time he
-stopped. The catholic tribune, the defender of the
-pope, was soon recognised; a crowd gathered round
-him; he addressed the people from his mule, and did
-his best to arouse their fanatical passions. While the
-catholics flocked round him, some evangelicals were
-watching the orator and his audience from a distance.
-'I saw him riding on his mule,' says Siderander.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_312" id="Ref_312" href="#Foot_312">[312]</a></span>
-Beda thought himself stronger than the king, and in
-some respects he was; he reigned over the savage
-appetites of an ignorant and fanatical populace. Such
-was the power in the sixteenth century by which the
-pope triumphed more than once in the capital of
-France and elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>Beda was vigorously supported by all his subalterns:
-Le Picard especially, who had not been put
-under arrest, expressed his indignation in his fanatical
-discourses that the king should desire to hold the
-balance even between the Church and heresy; and
-advocated a resort to force to insure the triumph of
-the oppressed papacy. A riot seemed about to break
-out. The friends of learning and of the king were
-alarmed. Might not the Roman party take advantage
-of Francis's absence to establish another power than
-his in Paris, and to treat this monarch as the Seize in
-after years treated his grandson Henry III.?</p>
-
-<p>The King of Navarre and the Bishop of Paris
-hastened to Meaux, where Francis was staying with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">{168}</a></span>
-his court, and informed him that Beda, Le Picard, and
-their colleagues had thrown aside all reserve, and that,
-unless energetic measures were taken, the public tranquillity
-and perhaps his crown might be endangered.
-The king gave way to a paroxysm of anger. Beda's
-freak of parading the streets of Paris on his mule,
-notwithstanding the prohibition, was one of those
-insults that Francis felt very keenly. He ordered
-Cardinal Duprat and the Bishop of Senlis to make all
-haste to Paris, and stop the intrigues of the Sorbonne
-and the promenades of Beda, and also arrest Le
-Picard. 'As for the inquiry about heresy,' said the
-king, 'I reserve that for myself.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_313" id="Ref_313" href="#Foot_313">[313]</a></span>
-Heresy was treated
-with more tenderness than the first catholic faculty of
-christendom. Francis began to find the Lutherans
-gentle as lambs in comparison with the hot-headed
-papists. Certain personages, whose arrival was soon
-to be announced by the officers of his court, confirmed
-him in this opinion.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=SORBONNE THREATENS FRANCIS.=</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely had the two prelates left Meaux, when a
-deputation from the Sorbonne arrived. When Francis
-received them, he was evidently in a bad humour, but
-he did not address them sharply, as the courtiers had
-expected. The theologians approached him with all
-the required formalities; they desired, if possible, to
-win him by meekness. But by degrees they raised
-their tone; they beset him with their accusations, and
-irritated him with their pretensions, repeating again
-and again that it was the prerogative of the Sorbonne,
-and not of the prince, to give their opinion in a matter
-of heresy. There was some truth in this, but the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">{169}</a></span>
-truth did not please Francis, who claimed to be master
-in everything. Still he contained himself, until the
-doctors, coming to threats of revolt, and shouting their
-loudest, reminded him of the possibility of a deposition
-of kings by the popes.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_314" id="Ref_314" href="#Foot_314">[314]</a></span>
-These recollections of the
-middle ages, with which they menaced the haughty
-monarch, who claimed to begin a new era, and who
-desired that the Reformation should serve at least to
-abate the pretensions of Rome, and emancipate princes
-from its yoke, made the king shudder, and aroused a
-terrible fit of anger. His face grew red, his eyes flashed
-fire, and putting aside his usual courtesy, he drove the
-reverend fathers from his presence, calling them beasts,
-and saying: 'Get about your business, you donkeys!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_315" id="Ref_315" href="#Foot_315">[315]</a></span>
-At this moment Francis inaugurated modern times—though
-certainly in a fashion rather cavalier.</p>
-
-<p>However, Cardinal Duprat was on the road. What
-would he do, this vile courtier of the popes, who
-at their demand had destroyed the bulwark of the
-Gallican liberties, and who hated the Reformation?
-The Sorbonne placed their hope in him. But Duprat
-served his master before all things, and he could not
-hide from himself that the hot-headed catholics were
-threatening the king's crown. He resolved to strike
-heavily. As soon as he reached Paris, he had Le
-Picard arrested, as being the most compromised. He
-confined him in his own palace, seized his books and
-papers, and had him interrogated by the advocate-general.
-The seditious bachelor raved in his prison,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">{170}</a></span>
-and protested aloud against the indignity of such
-treatment; but all his storming was of no use. He was
-condemned to be shut up in the abbey of St. Magloire,
-and forbidden to teach.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_316" id="Ref_316" href="#Foot_316">[316]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Nor did Duprat stop here. He was shocked that
-paltry priests should dare speak against that royal
-majesty of Francis I. for which he, a cardinal and
-chancellor, had nothing but humble flatteries. He
-never ceased to be the mortal enemy of the Gospel,
-and originated many a measure of persecution against
-the reformed; but his chief quality was a slavish
-devotion to the wishes of his master. To the mendicant
-monks sent out by the Sorbonne he opposed
-'inquirers'—the name he gave to the spies who were
-in every parish, and who skilfully interrogated men
-and women, nobles and sacristans, to find out whether
-the preachers or the friars had attacked the king's
-government in their hearing. Many of the townspeople
-were unwilling to say anything; yet the
-clever and dreaded minister attained his ends, and
-having discovered the most refractory priests, he
-summoned them before him. This summons from a
-cardinal of the holy Church, from the most powerful
-person in the kingdom, alarmed these violent clerics;
-on a sudden their courage collapsed, and they appeared
-before his eminence with downcast eyes, trembling
-limbs, and confused manner. 'Who permitted or
-who authorised you to insult the king and to excite
-the people?' asked the haughty Duprat.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_317" id="Ref_317" href="#Foot_317">[317]</a></span>
-The priests
-were too much terrified to conceal anything: 'It was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">{171}</a></span>
-with the consent and the good pleasure of our reverend
-masters,' they replied.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_318" id="Ref_318" href="#Foot_318">[318]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The theologians of the Sorbonne were now summoned
-in their turn. They were quite as much
-alarmed as their creatures, and, seeing the danger,
-denied everything.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_319" id="Ref_319" href="#Foot_319">[319]</a></span>
-They managed to take shelter
-behind certain clever reservations: they had <i>hinted</i>
-the insult, but they had not <i>commanded</i> it. At heart
-both chiefs and followers were all equally fanatical, and
-not one of them needed any stimulus to do his duty
-in this holy war. These reverend gentlemen, having
-thus screened themselves under denials, withdrew,
-fully convinced that no one would dare lay hands
-upon them. But a hundred Bedas would not have
-stopped the terrible cardinal. In the affair of the
-concordat, had he taken any notice of the fierce
-opposition of the sovereign courts, of the universities,
-or even of the clergy of France? Duprat smiled at
-his own unpopularity, and found a secret pleasure in
-attracting the general hatred upon himself. Catholics
-and evangelicals—he will brave and crush them all.
-He went to the bottom of the matter, and having
-discovered who were the Æoluses that had raised
-these sacerdotal tempests, he informed the king of the
-result.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=FRANCIS ACTS VIGOROUSLY.=</p>
-
-<p>Francis had never been so angry with the catholics.
-He had met with men who dared resist him!... It
-was his pride, his despotism, and not his love of truth,
-that was touched. Besides, was he not the ally of
-Henry VIII., and was he not seeking to form a league
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">{172}</a></span>
-with the protestants of Germany? Severe measures
-against the ultramontane bigots would convince his
-allies of the sincerity of his words. He had another
-motive still: Francis highly valued the title 'patron
-of letters,' and he looked upon the friars as their
-enemy. He put himself forward as the champion of
-the learning of the age, and not of the Gospel; but for
-a moment it was possible to believe in the triumph
-of the Reformation under the patronage of the
-Renaissance.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CONDEMNATION OF BEDA.=</p>
-
-<p>On the 16th of May, 1533, the indefatigable Beda,
-the fiery Le Picard, and the zealous friar Mathurin,
-the three most intrepid supporters of the papacy in
-France, appeared before the parliament. An event so
-extraordinary filled both university and city with
-surprise and emotion. Devout men raised their eyes
-to heaven; devout women redoubled their prayers to
-Mary; but Beda and his two colleagues, proud of their
-Romish orthodoxy, appeared before the court, and compared
-themselves with the confessors of Christ standing
-before the proconsuls of Rome. No one could believe
-in a condemnation; was not the King of France
-the eldest son of the Church? But the disciples of
-the pope did not know the monarch who then reigned
-over France. If they wanted to show what a priest
-was like, the sovereign wanted to show what a king
-was like. When signing the letters-royal in which
-Francis had suggested the arrest to parliament, he
-exclaimed: 'As for Beda, on my word, he shall never
-return to Paris!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_320" id="Ref_320" href="#Foot_320">[320]</a></span>
-The king's ordinance had been
-duly registered; the court was complete; and not a
-sound could be heard, when the president, turning to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">{173}</a></span>
-the three doctors, said: 'Reverend gentlemen, you
-are banished from Paris, and will henceforward live
-thirty leagues from this capital; you are at liberty,
-however, to select what residences you please, provided
-they be at a distance from each other. You
-will leave the city in twenty-four hours. If you break
-your ban, you will incur the penalty of death. You
-will neither preach, give lessons, nor hold any kind of
-meeting, and you will keep up no communication with
-one another, until the king has ordered otherwise.'</p>
-
-<p>Beda, Le Picard, Mathurin, and their friends, were
-all terrified. Francis had, however, reserved for the
-last a decision which must have abated their courage
-still more. As if he wished to show the triumph of
-evangelical ideas, he cancelled the injunction against
-Roussel; and Margaret's almoner was able once more
-to preach the Gospel in the capital. 'If you have any
-complaint against him,' said the king to the Sorbonne,
-'you can bring him before the lawful tribunals.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_321" id="Ref_321" href="#Foot_321">[321]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This decree of the parliament fell like a thunderbolt
-in the midst of the Sorbonne. Stunned and stupefied,
-unable to say or do anything, the doctors shook off
-their stupor only to be seized with a fit of terror.
-They visited each other, conversed together, and whispered
-their alarms. Had the fatal moment really come
-which they had feared so long? Was Francis about
-to follow the example of Frederick of Saxony and
-Henry of England? Would the cause of the holy
-Roman Church perish under the attacks of its enemies?
-Would France join the triumphal procession of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">{174}</a></span>
-Reformation?... The old men, pretty numerous at
-the Sorbonne, were overwhelmed. One of them, a
-broken-down, feeble hypochondriac, was so terribly
-disturbed by the decree, that he fairly lost his senses.
-He suffered a perpetual nightmare. He fancied he
-saw the king and the parliament, with all France, destroying
-the Sorbonne, and trampling on the necks of
-the doctors while their palace was burning. The poor
-man expired in the midst of these terrible phantoms.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_322" id="Ref_322" href="#Foot_322">[322]</a></span>
-Yet the blow which stunned some, aroused others.
-The more intrepid doctors met and conferred together,
-and strove to encourage their partisans and to enlist
-new ones: they took no rest night or day.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_323" id="Ref_323" href="#Foot_323">[323]</a></span>
-Unable
-to believe that this decree really expressed the king's
-will, they determined to send a deputation to the
-south of France, whither he had gone; but Francis
-had not forgotten their hint about the deposition of
-kings by the popes, and, angry as ever, he rejected
-every demand.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=HOPES OF THE REFORMERS.=</p>
-
-<p>Nor was the Sorbonne alone agitated: all the city
-was in commotion, some being against the decree,
-others for it. The bigots, in their compassion for 'the
-excellent Beda,'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_324" id="Ref_324" href="#Foot_324">[324]</a></span>
-exclaimed: 'What an indignity, to
-expose so profound a divine, so high-born a man, to
-such a harsh punishment!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_325" id="Ref_325" href="#Foot_325">[325]</a></span>
- But, on the other hand,
-the friends of learning leapt for joy.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_326" id="Ref_326" href="#Foot_326">[326]</a></span>
-A great movement
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">{175}</a></span>
-seemed to be accomplishing; it was a solemn
-time. Some of the most intelligent men imagined
-that France was about to be regenerated and transformed....
-Sturm in his college was delighted. What
-news to send to Germany, to Bucer, to Melanchthon!...
-He ran to his study, took up his pen, and wrote in his
-transport: 'Things are changing, the hinges are turning....
-It is true there still remain here and there
-a few aged Priams, surrounded by servile creatures,
-who cling to the things that are passing away.... But,
-with the exception of this small number of belated
-men, no one any longer defends the cause of the
-Phrygian priests.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_327" id="Ref_327" href="#Foot_327">[327]</a></span>
-The classic Sturm could only
-compare the spirit of the ultramontanists to the superstition
-and fanaticism of the priests of Phrygia, so
-notorious for those qualities in ancient times. But the
-friends of the Reform and of the Renaissance were
-indulging in most exaggerated illusions. A few old
-folks, mumbling their <i>Ave-Marias</i> and <i>Pater-nosters</i>,
-seemed to them to constitute the whole strength of the
-papacy. They had great hopes of the new generation:
-'The young priests,' they said, 'are rushing into the
-shining paths of wisdom.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_328" id="Ref_328" href="#Foot_328">[328]</a></span>
-Francis I. having shown
-an angry face to the Sorbonne, every Frenchman was
-about to follow his example, according to the belief
-of the friends of letters. They indulged in transports
-of joy, and, as it were, a universal shout welcomed the
-opening of a new era. But alas! France was still far
-distant from it; she was not judged worthy of such
-happiness. Instead of seeing the triple banner of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">{176}</a></span>
-Gospel, morality, and liberty raised upon her walls,
-that great and mighty nation was destined, owing to
-Romish influence, to pass through centuries of despotism
-and wild democracy, frivolity and licentiousness,
-superstition and unbelief.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE FOUR DOCTORS EXILED.=</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of the contrary movements now agitating
-Paris, there was a certain number of spectators
-who, while leaning more to one party than to the
-other, set about studying the situation. In one of the
-colleges was a student of Alsace, the son of an ironmonger
-at Strasburg, who, wishing to give himself a
-Greek or Latin name, called himself <i>Siderander</i>, 'man
-of iron.' Such, however, was not his nature; he was
-particularly curious; he had a passion for picking up
-news, and his great desire to know other people's
-business made him supple as the willow, rather than
-hard as the metal. Siderander was an amiable well-educated
-young man, and he gives us a pretty faithful
-picture of the better class of students of that day.
-On Monday, May 26, he was going to hear a lecture
-on logic by Sturm, who, leaving the paths of barren
-scholasticism, was showing by example as well as by
-precept how clearness of thought may be united
-with elegance of language. Just as the Alsatian was
-approaching the college of Montaigu, where Sturm
-lectured, he met with a piece of good-luck. He saw
-an immense crowd of students and citizens collected
-in front of the college, where they had been waiting
-since the morning to witness the departure of the
-Hercules of the Sorbonne.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_329" id="Ref_329" href="#Foot_329">[329]</a></span>
-He ran as fast as he
-could, his heart throbbing with joy at the thought of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">{177}</a></span>
-seeing Beda, the great papist, going into banishment....
-For such a sight, the student would have walked
-from Strasburg. The rumour had spread through
-Paris that the three or four disgraced doctors were to
-leave the capital on that day. Everybody wished to
-see them: some for the joy they felt at their disgrace;
-others, to give vent to their sorrow. But, sad misfortune!
-the lucky chance which had delighted the
-student failed him. The government was alarmed,
-and fearing a riot, the exiles did not appear. The
-crowd was forced to disperse without seeing them, and
-Siderander went away in great disappointment. The
-next morning, at an early hour, the four culprits, Beda,
-Le Picard, Mathurin, and a Franciscan, came forth
-under guard and without noise. The doctors, humiliated
-at being led out of the city like malefactors,
-did not even raise their heads. But the precautions
-of the police were useless: many people were on the
-look-out, the news spread in a moment through the
-quarter, and a crowd of burgesses, monks, and common
-people filled the streets to see the celebrated theologians
-pass, dejected, silent, and with downcast eyes.
-The glory of the Sorbonne had faded; even that of
-Rome was dimmed; and it seemed to many as if the
-papacy was departing with its four defenders. The
-devout catholics gave way to sighs and groans, indignation
-and tears; but at the very moment when these
-bigots were paying the last honours to popery, others
-were saluting the advent of the new times with transports
-of joy. 'They are sycophants,' said some
-among the crowd, 'banished from Paris on account of
-their lies and their traitorous proceedings.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_330" id="Ref_330" href="#Foot_330">[330]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">{178}</a></div>
-
-<p>The disciples of the Gospel did not confine themselves
-to words. Matters were in good train, and it was
-desirable to persevere until the end was reached. While
-the Sorbonne bent its head, the Reformation was looking
-up. The Queen of Navarre and her husband, with
-many politicians and men of rank, encouraged Roussel,
-Courault, and others to preach the Gospel fearlessly;
-even these evangelists were astonished at their sudden
-favour. Roussel in particular advanced timidly, asking
-whether the Church would not interpose its <i>veto</i>?
-But no; Bishop du Bellay, the diplomatist's brother,
-did not interfere. During the whole period of the
-king's absence, Paris was almost like a country in the
-act of reforming itself. Men thought themselves
-already secure of that religious liberty which, alas!
-was to cost three centuries of struggle and the purest
-blood, and whose lamentable defeats were to scatter
-the confessors of Jesus Christ into every part of the
-world. When a great good is to be bestowed on the
-human race, the deliverance is only accomplished by
-successive efforts. But at this time men thought they
-had attained the end at a single bound. From the
-pulpits that were opened to them in every quarter of
-Paris, the evangelists proclaimed that the truth had
-been revealed in Jesus Christ; that the Word of God,
-contained in the writings of the prophets and apostles,
-did not require to be sanctioned or interpreted by an
-infallible authority; and that whoever listened to it or
-read it with a sincere heart, would be enlightened and
-saved by it. The tutelage of the priests was abolished,
-and emancipated souls were brought into immediate
-contact with God and his revelation. The great
-salvation purchased by the death of Christ upon the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">{179}</a></span>
-cross was announced with power, and the friends of
-the Gospel, transported with joy, exclaimed: 'At last
-Christ is preached publicly in the pulpits of the
-capital, and all speak of it freely.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_331" id="Ref_331" href="#Foot_331">[331]</a></span>
-May the Lord
-increase among us day by day the glory of his
-Gospel!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_332" id="Ref_332" href="#Foot_332">[332]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=SATIRES OF THE STUDENTS.=</p>
-
-<p>The most serious causes always find defenders
-among trivial men, who do not thoroughly understand
-them, but yet despise their adversaries. The
-Reformation has no reason to be proud of some of its
-auxiliaries in the sixteenth century. A serious cause
-ought to be seriously defended; but history cannot
-pass by these manifestations, which are as much in her
-domain as those of another kind. Satire was not spared
-in this matter. The students especially delighted
-in it: they posted up a long placard, written carefully
-with ornamented letters in French verse, in which
-the four theologians were described in the liveliest and
-most fantastic colours.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_333" id="Ref_333" href="#Foot_333">[333]</a></span>
-Two of their colleagues were
-also introduced, for the four doctors on whom the
-king's wrath had fallen were not the only criminals.
-A cordelier especially was notorious for his curious
-sermons, full of bad French and bad Latin, and still
-more notorious for the clever and popular eloquence
-he displayed, whenever a collection was to be made in
-favour of his order. This Pierre Cornu, who had
-been nicknamed <i>des Cornes</i>, was wonderfully touched
-off in the poem of the students. Groups of scholars,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">{180}</a></span>
-burgesses, and Parisian wits gathered round the
-placards, some bursting with laughter and others with
-anger. The vehement and ridiculous Cornu especially
-excited the mirth of the idlers. A profane author
-who had nothing to do with the Reformation, speaks
-of him in his writings:—'Ha! ha! Master Cornu,'
-said one, 'you are not the only man to have horns....
-Friend Bacchus wears a pair; and so do Pan, and
-Jupiter Ammon and hosts besides.'—'Ha! ha! dear
-Master Cornibus,' said another, 'give me an ounce of
-your sermon, and I will make the collection in your
-parish.' Strange circumstance! The public voice
-seemed at this time opposed to these forerunners of
-the preachers of the League. The Sorbonne, however,
-had friends who replied to these jests by bursts of
-passion. 'The man who wrote these verses is a
-heretic,' they exclaimed.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_334" id="Ref_334" href="#Foot_334">[334]</a></span>
-From insults they passed
-to threats; from threats they came to blows, and the
-struggle began. The bigots wished to pull down
-the placard. A creature of the Faculty succeeded;
-springing into the air, he tore it down and ran off
-with his spoil.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_335" id="Ref_335" href="#Foot_335">[335]</a></span>
-Then the crowd dispersed.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=SORBONNE CALLS FOR THE STAKE.=</p>
-
-<p>In that age placards played a great part, similar
-to that played by certain pamphlets in later times.
-There was no need to buy them at the bookseller's;
-everybody could read the impromptu tracts at the
-corners of the streets. Rome was not in the humour
-to leave these powerful weapons in the hands of her
-enemies, and the Sorbonne determined to appeal to
-the people against the abhorred race of innovators. It
-did not jest, like the youth of the schools; it went
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">{181}</a></span>
-straight to the point, and invoked the stake against
-its adversaries. Two days after that on which the
-former placard was posted up, another was found on
-the walls, containing these unpolished verses:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">To the stake! to the stake! with the heretic crew,</div>
-<div class="verse">That day and night vexes all good men and true.</div>
-<div class="verse">Shall we let them Saint Scripture and her edicts defile?</div>
-<div class="verse">Shall we banish pure science for Lutherans vile?</div>
-<div class="verse">Do you think that our God will permit such as these</div>
-<div class="verse">To imperil our bodies and souls at their ease?</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">O Paris, of cities the flower and the pride,</div>
-<div class="verse">Uphold that true faith which these heretics deride;</div>
-<div class="verse">Or else on thy towers storm and tempest shall fall....</div>
-<div class="verse">Take heed by my warning; and let us pray all</div>
-<div class="verse">That the King of all kings will be pleased to confound</div>
-<div class="verse">These dogs so accursed, where'er they be found,</div>
-<div class="verse">That their names, like bones going fast to decay,</div>
-<div class="verse">May from memory's tablets be clean wiped away.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">To the stake! to the stake! the fire is their home!</div>
-<div class="verse">As God hath permitted, let justice be done.</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A crowd equally great assembled before this placard,
-as cruel as it was crafty. The writer appealed
-to the people of Paris; he entitled them 'the flower
-and pride of cities,' knowing that flattery is the
-best means of winning men's minds; and then he
-called for the stake. The 'stake' was the argument
-with which men opposed the Reform. 'Burn those
-who confute us!' This savage invocation was a
-home-thrust. Many of the citizens, kneeling down to
-write, copied out the placard, in order to carry it to
-every house: the press is less rapid, even in our
-days. Others committed the verses to memory, and
-walked along the streets singing the burden:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">To the stake! to the stake! the fire is their home!</div>
-<div class="verse">As God hath permitted, let justice be done.</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">{182}</a></div>
-
-<p>These rude rhymes became the motto of their
-party; this cruel ballad of the sixteenth century erelong
-summoned the champions of the Church in
-various quarters to fatten the earth with the ashes of
-their enemies. Pierre Siderander happened to be in
-the crowd; noticing several papists copying the incendiary
-verses, the Strasburg student did the same,
-and sent copies to his friends. By this means they
-were handed down to our times.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_336" id="Ref_336" href="#Foot_336">[336]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The next day there was a fresh placard. The Sorbonne,
-finding the people beginning to be moved,
-wished to arouse them thoroughly. This ballad was
-not confined to a general appeal to the stake; Roussel
-was mentioned by name as one who deserved to be
-burnt. The fanatical placards of the Sorbonnists
-were not so soon torn down as the satirical couplets
-of their pupils. They could be read for days together,
-such good watch did the sacristans keep over
-them.</p>
-
-<p>But the Sorbonne did not limit themselves to a
-paper war; they worked upon the most eminent
-members of the parliament. Their zeal displayed
-itself on every side. 'Justice! justice!' they exclaimed;
-'let us punish these detestable heretics,
-and pluck up Lutheranism, root and branch.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_337" id="Ref_337" href="#Foot_337">[337]</a></span>
-The whole city was in commotion; the most odious plots
-were concocted; and the <i>matéologues</i>, as the students
-called the defenders of the old abuses, took counsel at
-the Sorbonne every day.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">{183}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=PROGRESS OF THE REFORM.=</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of all this agitation the Reformation
-was advancing quietly but surely. While the Queen
-of Navarre boldly professed her living piety in the
-palace, and preachers proclaimed it from their pulpits
-to the believing crowd, evangelical men, still in obscurity,
-were modestly propagating around them a
-purer and a mightier faith. At this period Calvin
-spent four years in Paris (1529-1533), where he at
-first engaged in literature. It might have been thought
-that he would appear in the world as a man of letters,
-and not as a reformer. But he soon placed profane
-studies in the second rank, and devoted himself to
-the service of God, as we have seen. He would have
-desired not to enter forthwith upon a career of evangelical
-activity. 'During this time,' he said, 'my sole
-object was to live privately, without being known.'
-He felt the necessity of a time of silence and christian
-meditation. He would have liked to imitate Paul,
-who, after his conversion and his first preaching at
-Damascus, passed several quiet years in Arabia and
-Cilicia;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_338" id="Ref_338" href="#Foot_338">[338]</a></span>
-but he had to combat error around him,
-and he soon took a step in advance. While Courault
-and Roussel were preaching in the churches to large
-audiences and dealing tenderly with the papacy,
-Calvin, displaying great activity,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_339" id="Ref_339" href="#Foot_339">[339]</a></span> visited the different
-quarters of Paris where secret assemblies were
-held, and there proclaimed a more scriptural, a more
-complete, and a bolder doctrine. In his discourses
-he made frequent allusions to the dangers to which
-those were exposed who desired to live piously; and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">{184}</a></span>
-he taught them at the same time 'what magnanimity
-believers ought to possess when adversity draws
-them on to despair.'—'When things do not go as we
-wish,' he said, 'sadness comes over the mind and
-makes us forget all our confidence. But the paternal
-love of God is the foundation of an invincible strength
-which overcomes every trial. The divine favour is
-a shelter against all storms, from whatever quarter
-they may come.' And he usually ended his discourses,
-we are told, with these words: '<i>If God be
-for us, who can be against us?</i>'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_340" id="Ref_340" href="#Foot_340">[340]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mere preaching did not satisfy Calvin: he entered
-into communication with all who desired a purer
-religion,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_341" id="Ref_341" href="#Foot_341">[341]</a></span>
-made them frequent visits, and conversed
-seriously with them. He avoided no one, and
-cultivated the friendship of those whom he had
-formerly known. He advanced step by step, but he
-was always busy, and the doctrine of the Gospel
-made some progress every day. All persons rendered
-the strongest testimony to his piety.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_342" id="Ref_342" href="#Foot_342">[342]</a></span>
-The friends of the Word of God gathered round him,
-and among them were many burgesses and common
-people, but there were nobles and college professors
-also.</p>
-
-<p>These christians were full of hope, and even Calvin
-entertained the bold idea of winning the king, the university,
-and indeed France herself, over to the Gospel.
-Paris was in suspense. Every one thought that some
-striking and perhaps sudden change was about to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">{185}</a></span>
-take place in one direction or another. Will Rome
-or will the Reformation have the advantage? There
-were strong reasons for adopting the former opinion,
-and reasons hardly less powerful for adopting the
-latter. Discussions arose upon this point, even
-among friends. Men were on the look-out for anything
-that might help them to divine the future, and
-the more curious resorted to the various places where
-they hoped to pick up news. Public attention was
-particularly turned towards the Sorbonne, when it
-was known that the heads of the Roman party were
-holding council.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=PIERRE SIDERANDER.=</p>
-
-<p>On the 23rd of May, 1533, Pierre Siderander (who
-was naturally inquisitive), instigated by a desire to
-learn what was going to happen, and wishing in
-particular to know what was doing in the theological
-clubs (for from them, he doubted not, would proceed
-the blow that would decide who should be the victors),
-stole into the buildings belonging to the faculty of
-divinity.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_343" id="Ref_343" href="#Foot_343">[343]</a></span>
-He did not dare penetrate farther than
-the great gate: stopping there like any other lounger,
-he began to look at the pictures that were sold at the
-entrance of the building.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_344" id="Ref_344" href="#Foot_344">[344]</a></span>
-But, with all his innocent
-air, his eyes and ears were wide open, trying to pick
-up a word or two that would tell him what was going
-on; for the doctors, as they went in or out talking
-together, must necessarily pass close by him. Pierre
-wasted his time sauntering about before the pictures
-of the saints and of the Virgin (which he looked upon
-as idolatrous). On a sudden he saw the illustrious
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">{186}</a></span>
-Budæus coming out of the Sorbonne.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_345" id="Ref_345" href="#Foot_345">[345]</a></span>
-At that time
-Budæus was playing the same part as the noble Chancellor
-l'Hôpital afterwards did: he was present in every
-place where it was necessary to moderate, enlighten,
-or restrain the hot-headed. He passed Siderander
-without saying a word, and quitted the building; but
-the curious student could not resist; he left his post
-and began to follow the celebrated hellenist, wishing
-to look at him at his ease, and hoping no doubt to
-learn something.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_346" id="Ref_346" href="#Foot_346">[346]</a></span>
-'Am I not,' he said, 'the friend
-of his two sons who like myself attend the course
-of Latomus? Has not the eldest invited me to come
-and see his museum?<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_347" id="Ref_347" href="#Foot_347">[347]</a></span>
-Did not I go there the other
-day, and ought he not to return my visit along with
-his brother?' Siderander, who burnt with desire to
-know what was said in the assembly which the
-founder of the college of France had just left, quickened
-his pace; the words were already on his lips,
-when he suddenly stopped intimidated. Timidity
-was stronger than curiosity, and he soon lost sight
-of the man whom Erasmus called 'the prodigy of
-France.' And yet, had he asked him, he would perhaps
-have learnt what the Roman party was plotting,
-and been able to tell his friends the probable
-issue of the crisis. He had often asked the sons of
-Budæus what their father was planning.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_348" id="Ref_348" href="#Foot_348">[348]</a></span>
-'He is
-much with the bishop,' answered they, 'but he is
-planning nothing.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_349" id="Ref_349" href="#Foot_349">[349]</a></span>
-Thus Siderander did all he could,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">{187}</a></span>
-but to no purpose, to elicit some interesting communication
-and to learn some rare news. He was
-unable to satisfy his extreme curiosity. 'And that is
-not all,' he said to himself, 'for if, instead of losing my
-time under the portico of the Sorbonne, I had been
-elsewhere, I might have learnt something.' He desired
-to be everywhere, and yet was nowhere. 'Ha!' he
-said with vexation as he returned from running after
-Budæus, 'while I throw my hook in at one place, the
-fish goes to another. Things occur in our quarter
-which the inhabitants of the others know nothing
-about, and we know nothing of what takes place elsewhere.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_350" id="Ref_350" href="#Foot_350">[350]</a></span>
-Alas! everything assumes a threatening
-aspect; everything announces a violent storm.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_351" id="Ref_351" href="#Foot_351">[351]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=SIDERANDER'S CURIOSITY.=</p>
-
-<p>The Sorbonne, the religious orders, and all fervent
-catholics, being convinced that the innovators, by
-exalting Jesus Christ and his Word, were humbling
-the Church and the papacy, were determined to wage
-a deadly war against them. They thought that if
-they first struck down the most formidable of their
-adversaries, they could easily disperse the rest of the
-rebel army. But against whom should the first blow
-be aimed? This was the subject of deliberation in
-those councils which the curious Siderander desired
-so much to overhear.</p>
-
-<p>Before we learn what was preparing at the Sorbonne,
-we must enter more illustrious council-chambers, and
-transport ourselves to Bologna.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_307" id="Foot_307" href="#Ref_307">[307]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Rex Navarræ instinctu uxoris et episcopus regem sollicitare ...
-seditionis crimen intendere.'—Sturm to Bucer.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_308" id="Foot_308" href="#Ref_308">[308]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Gerardum removeat a concionibus.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 648.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_309" id="Foot_309" href="#Ref_309">[309]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Placuit regi ut Beda cum suis oratoribus et G. Rufus, quisque in
-suis ædibus, tanquam privata custodia detineretur.'—Sturm to Bucer.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_310" id="Foot_310" href="#Ref_310">[310]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut ne accusatores viderentur, sed opinatores tantum, et inquisitores
-hæreticæ pravitatis.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_311" id="Foot_311" href="#Ref_311">[311]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Tum bonus noster Beda in Monte suo Acuto manere coactus est.'—Siderander
-Bedroto.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_312" id="Foot_312" href="#Ref_312">[312]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In mulo suo equitantem vidi.'—Siderander Bedroto.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_313" id="Foot_313" href="#Ref_313">[313]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Judicium de hæresi sibi reservavit.'—Sturmius Bucero.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_314" id="Foot_314" href="#Ref_314">[314]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Vociferati sunt seditiosissime, regi minantes ipsi.'—Melanchthon to
-Spalatin, <i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 685.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_315" id="Foot_315" href="#Ref_315">[315]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Rex, quoniam esset exacerbatus, irrisit tanquam Arcadicorum
-pecorum.'—Sturm to Bucer.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_316" id="Foot_316" href="#Ref_316">[316]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-H. de Coste, <i>Le parfait Ecclésiastique</i>, p. 73.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_317" id="Foot_317" href="#Ref_317">[317]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Cujus vel permissu vel jussu populum commovissent et læsissent
-regem.'—Sturm to Bucer, ed. Schmidt.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_318" id="Foot_318" href="#Ref_318">[318]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Responderunt ex consensu et placito magistrorum nostrorum.'—Sturm
-to Bucer, ed. Schmidt.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_319" id="Foot_319" href="#Ref_319">[319]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Theologi cum pericula animadverterent, negabant.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_320" id="Foot_320" href="#Ref_320">[320]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nunquam velit Bedam reverti.'—Sturm to Bucer.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_321" id="Foot_321" href="#Ref_321">[321]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Gerardus libere concionatur; et imperatum theologis, si quid
-habeant negotii adversus eum, ut jure agant.'—Melanchthon to Spalatin,
-July 22. <i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 658.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_322" id="Foot_322" href="#Ref_322">[322]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Senex quidem theologus hanc contumeliam theologici ordinis adeo
-ægre tulit, ut delirio vitam amiserit.'—Melanchthon to Spalatin. <i>Corp.
-Ref.</i> ii. p. 658.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_323" id="Foot_323" href="#Ref_323">[323]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<span title="Hoi theologoi">'Ὁι θεολόγοι</span> non die, non nocte, unquam cessant ab opere.'—Siderander,
-Strasburg MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_324" id="Foot_324" href="#Ref_324">[324]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Illi miserantur optimi Bedæ.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_325" id="Foot_325" href="#Ref_325">[325]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hominem tam grandem natu, exilium tam durum pati oportere.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_326" id="Foot_326" href="#Ref_326">[326]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Audias alios qui gaudio exultent.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_327" id="Foot_327" href="#Ref_327">[327]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Vide rerum commutationem ... Praeter senes Priamos et paucos
-alios, nemo est qui faveat istis sacerdotibus Phrygiis.'—Sturm to Bucer.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_328" id="Foot_328" href="#Ref_328">[328]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Juniores theologi jam sapere incipiunt.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_329" id="Foot_329" href="#Ref_329">[329]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Maximam turbam ante collegium Montis Acuti vidi.'—Siderander
-Bedroto.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_330" id="Foot_330" href="#Ref_330">[330]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Beda urbe pulsus cum aliis quibusdam sycophantis.'—Melanchthon
-to Spalatin, <i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 658.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_331" id="Foot_331" href="#Ref_331">[331]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Palam prædicare Christum quidam cœperunt, omnes loqui liberius.'—Bucer
-to Blaarer. Strasburg MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_332" id="Foot_332" href="#Ref_332">[332]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Christus evangelii gloriam augeat.'—Melanchthon to Spalatin.
-<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 658.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_333" id="Foot_333" href="#Ref_333">[333]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In qua pulcherrime suisque coloribus omnes isti theologi depingebantur.'—Siderander
-Bedroto.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_334" id="Foot_334" href="#Ref_334">[334]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Alii auctorem clamabant esse hæreticum.'—Siderander Bedroto.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_335" id="Foot_335" href="#Ref_335">[335]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Tandem nescio quis delator dilaceravit.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_336" id="Foot_336" href="#Ref_336">[336]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quos cum viderem, descripsi et ipse,' and here follow the verses.
-Schmidt, <i>G. Roussel. Pièces Justificatives</i>, p. 205.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_337" id="Foot_337" href="#Ref_337">[337]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut supplicium de detestandis illis hæreticis sumat, eosque extirpet
-funditus.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_338" id="Foot_338" href="#Ref_338">[338]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Galatians i. 17-21.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_339" id="Foot_339" href="#Ref_339">[339]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nec ei mox defuit in quo sese strenue exerceret.'—Bezæ <i>Vita
-Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_340" id="Foot_340" href="#Ref_340">[340]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bezæ <i>Vita Calvini</i>. Herzog, <i>Real Encyclopädie</i>, art. <i>Calvin</i>. Schmidt,
-<i>G. Roussel</i>, p. 94.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_341" id="Foot_341" href="#Ref_341">[341]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Omnibus purioris religionis studiosis innotuit.'—Bezæ <i>Vita Calv.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_342" id="Foot_342" href="#Ref_342">[342]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Non sine insigni pietatis testimonio.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_343" id="Foot_343" href="#Ref_343">[343]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Heri videre volui quidnam in Sorbonna ageretur.'—Siderander
-Bedroto.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_344" id="Foot_344" href="#Ref_344">[344]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Picturas et imagines quæ ibi venduntur.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_345" id="Foot_345" href="#Ref_345">[345]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Budæum egredientem video.'—Siderander Bedroto.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_346" id="Foot_346" href="#Ref_346">[346]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quem relicto instituto secutus sum.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_347" id="Foot_347" href="#Ref_347">[347]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Me rogavit ut musæum suum viderem.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_348" id="Foot_348" href="#Ref_348">[348]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quid novi jam pater moliretur.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_349" id="Foot_349" href="#Ref_349">[349]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Negabat quicquam moliri.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_350" id="Foot_350" href="#Ref_350">[350]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quod nos ignoramus.'—Siderander Bedroto.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_351" id="Foot_351" href="#Ref_351">[351]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nemo est qui possit expiscari omnia ... Omnia tumultum minari
-videntur.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">{188}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CONFERENCE OF BOLOGNA. THE COUNCIL AND CATHERINE DE MEDICI.<br />
- (<span class="smc">Winter 1532-1533.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE emperor, having descended the Italian slopes
-of the Alps and crossed the north of Italy, arrived
-at Bologna on the 5th of December, 1532, somewhat
-annoyed at the escape of Duke Christopher, but not
-suspecting that it would lead to any serious consequences.
-This city, afterwards made famous by Guido,
-Domenichino, the two Caracci, and by Benedict XIV.,
-one of the most distinguished popes of the eighteenth
-century, grew more animated every day. The pope
-had arrived there: princes, nobles, prelates, and courtiers
-filled its splendid palaces; a new world was in
-motion around the churches, the Asinelli, the fountain
-of Neptune, and the other monuments which adorn
-that ancient city. The emperor had desired a conference
-with the pope, with the intention of uniting
-closely with him, and through him with the other
-catholic princes, to act together against their two
-enemies, France and the Reformation. But Charles
-was mistaken if he thought to find himself alone with
-the pope at Bologna. He was to meet with opponents
-who would hold their own against him: a struggle
-was about to begin around Clement VII. between
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">{189}</a></span>
-France and the empire. Francis I., who had just had
-a conference with Henry VIII., did not care, indeed,
-to meet Charles; but his place in Italy was to be
-supplied by men who would do his work better than
-he could do it himself. On the 4th of January, 1533,
-Cardinals de Tournon and de Gramont, sent by Francis
-to Clement to threaten him with a certain 'great
-injury' which he might have cause to regret for ever,
-arrived in this city. Would the presence of the two
-cardinals thwart Charles's plans?</p>
-
-<p class="side">=PLANS OF CHARLES V.=</p>
-
-<p>The first point which the emperor desired to carry
-was the convocation of a general council. A grave
-man and always occupied with business, he possessed
-a soul greedy of dominion. Ferdinand and Isabella
-having founded their power in Spain by restoring that
-country to unity, he desired to do in central Europe
-what they had done in the peninsula, that is, unite
-it under his patronage, if not under his sceptre. And
-lo! Germany is suddenly broken in his hands and
-divided into two parts. Sad humiliation! When he
-had crossed the Alps, after Soliman's retreat, he had
-no longer that unlimited confidence in his genius and
-authority which he had felt two years before, when
-going to the diet of Augsburg. He had come from Spain
-to crush that new sect which thwarted the dreams of
-his ambition; and instead of crushing it, he had been
-forced to recognise it. After the retreat of the Turks,
-Charles found himself at the head of a numerous and
-triumphant army, and men asked one another if he
-would not fall upon the protestants with it; but the
-best soldiers of that army were protestant themselves.
-Other means must be resorted to in order to bring
-the schism to an end. He weighed everything carefully,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">{190}</a></span>
-and brought to this business that nice and calm
-attention which always distinguished him. Knowing
-that the result of an appeal to arms was uncertain,
-and that instead of restoring concord he might stir up
-a hatred that nothing could extinguish, he decided in
-favour of a council to restore unity, and made his
-demand to the pope at Bologna. But Clement VII.
-feared a council as much as Charles desired it. 'They
-would want to redress grievances,' he said to his confidants,
-'and reform abuses, quite as much as to extirpate
-heresy.' Possessing great intelligence and rare
-ability, vain, cunning, false, and with no elevation of
-soul, Clement determined to put off this assembly
-indefinitely, although always promising it. While the
-emperor recognised the inefficiency of temporal arms,
-the pope felt still more keenly the inefficiency of spiritual
-arms. Each of these two personages distrusted
-the power of which he had most experience. The
-humble Gospel of the reformers intimidated both
-Church and Empire. Clement conferred on the subject
-with the Archbishop of Cortona, governor of Bologna,
-with the legate Campeggio, and with the nuncio Gambara:
-all agreed with him, and declared that to desire
-to bring back protestants to the Romish faith otherwise
-than by force was a very perilous enterprise.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CLEMENT AGAINST A COUNCIL.=</p>
-
-<p>As, however, neither the pope nor the emperor
-would give way, they desired a conference, at which
-each would endeavour to convince the other. A
-day, therefore, was appointed, and the two potentates
-met in the palace of Bologna. Charles represented to
-Clement, that 'a great number of catholics desired
-and demanded a council as necessary to destroy the
-heresy of Luther, which was gaining strength every
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">{191}</a></span>
-day, and to suppress the numerous disorders that
-existed in the Church.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_352" id="Ref_352" href="#Foot_352">[352]</a></span>
-But the pope replied: 'If we
-assemble a council, and permit the protestants to be
-present and to question the doctrines sanctioned by
-the Church, they will attack them all, and numberless
-innovations will be the result. If, on the contrary,
-we do not allow them to speak, they will say that they
-are condemned unheard; they will leave the assembly,
-and the world will believe that we are in the wrong.
-As the protestants reject the decisions of past councils,
-how can we hope that they will respect the decisions
-of future councils? Do we not know their obstinacy?
-When we put forward the authority of the Church,
-do they not set the authority of Holy Scripture in its
-place? They will never acknowledge themselves defeated,
-which will be a great scandal. If the council
-decrees that the pope is above the council (which
-is the truth), the heretics will hold another, and
-will elect an anti-pope (Luther, perhaps). Sire, the
-remedy which you propose will give rise to greater
-evils than those which we have now to cure.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_353" id="Ref_353" href="#Foot_353">[353]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The papacy in the sixteenth century had fallen into
-a state of inertia. It was active enough as a political
-power; but as a spiritual power it was nothing. It
-had great pretensions still, as far as appearances went;
-but it was satisfied if certain preferences and a certain
-pomp were conceded to it. It was afraid of
-everything that possessed any vitality, and feared not
-only those it called heretics, but even an assembly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">{192}</a></span>
-consisting of prelates of the Roman Church. And
-while the papacy was thus affected with a general
-weakness as regards spiritual powers, the Reformation
-was full of vigour and of life. It was a young warrior
-attacking a decrepid veteran. Besides these general
-causes, there were private motives which added to
-Clement's inactivity; but these he kept to himself.
-When he was alone in his chamber, he called to mind
-that his birth was not legitimate; that the means he
-had used to obtain the popedom had not been irreproachable;
-and that he had often employed the resources
-of the Church for his own interest ... in
-waging a costly war, for instance. All this might be
-brought against him in a council, and endanger his
-position. But as his position was dearer to him than
-the unity of the Church, he would grant nothing, and
-so reduced Charles to despair by his evasions.</p>
-
-<p>The hatred which the emperor bore to the pope
-was still further increased by the pontiff's resistance.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_354" id="Ref_354" href="#Foot_354">[354]</a></span>
-In his anger he appealed to the cardinals.
-At first he succeeded, having brought powerful
-inducements into play, and a consistory decided in
-favour of the immediate convocation of a council.
-The alarmed Clement set to work to bring back the
-misguided cardinals, and he was successful; for a
-second consistory, held on the 20th of December,
-coincided with the pope. 'We cannot think of assembling
-a council,' said the sacred college, 'before we
-have reconciled all the christian princes.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_355" id="Ref_355" href="#Foot_355">[355]</a></span>
-The emperor openly expressed his dissatisfaction. Wait
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">{193}</a></span>
-until Henry VIII., Francis I., and Charles V. are
-agreed ... as well put it off to the Greek calends!
-Clement endeavoured to pacify him. He would
-assemble it at <i>a suitable time</i>, he said; and then, as he
-feared that the Germans, on hearing of his refusal,
-would hold a <i>national</i> council, he sent off envoys to
-prevent it, at the same time hinting to the emperor
-that they were empowered to prepare that nation
-for a general council.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_356" id="Ref_356" href="#Foot_356">[356]</a></span>
- Was Charles V. the pope's
-dupe? It is a doubtful point. Clement, an enthusiastic
-disciple of his fellow-countryman Machiavelli,
-was, conformably to the instructions of his master,
-supple and false, without conscience and without
-faith. But the emperor knew full well that such
-were the precepts of the illustrious Florentine.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=ITALIAN LEAGUE.=</p>
-
-<p>For some time past Charles had been silently
-meditating another project which, he thought, could
-not fail to render him master of Italy. It was the
-formation of a defensive Italian league against Francis.
-He communicated his plan to the pope with the
-reserve and ability that characterised him, and set
-himself up as the defender of Rome. Clement, however,
-did not believe in his generosity, but on the contrary
-feared that this confederation would give him a
-master; nevertheless he appeared to be charmed with
-it. 'Yes!' he exclaimed, 'Italy must set itself against
-the ambition of France.' At the same time he informed
-the ambassador of Venice that he had said these things,
-not as being his own opinion, but the emperor's.
-'Report this prudently to your lords,' he added.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_357" id="Ref_357" href="#Foot_357">[357]</a></span>
-The pontiff had always two faces and two meanings.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">{194}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In reality, he did not know what course to pursue.
-At one time he was ready to throw himself
-into Charles's arms and run the same chances with
-him; and then, on learning what had taken place at
-Boulogne and Calais, he trembled lest the King of
-France should throw off his obedience. These two
-terrible monarchs made a shuttlecock of the pope,
-and drove him to despair. But he remembered how
-Machiavelli had said, that the world is governed by
-two things—force and cunning; and leaving the former
-to the emperor, he took refuge in the latter. 'Accordingly
-Clement determined to move softly,' says Du
-Bellay, 'temporising, quibbling, waiting, and stopping
-to see what the French cardinals would bring him.'
-They arrived just at this critical moment. It was
-an ill-omened embassy for France, since no event of
-the sixteenth century did more to strengthen the
-dominion of intrigue, cowardice, debauchery, crime,
-and persecution in that country.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE FRENCH ENVOYS AND CLEMENT.=</p>
-
-<p>Cardinal de Tournon, the most influential of the two
-ambassadors, was a skilful priest, devoted to the pope
-and popery, cruel, the accomplice of the Guises in
-after years, and all his life one of the greatest enemies
-of religious liberty. His colleague, Cardinal de Gramont,
-Bishop of Tarbes and afterwards Archbishop of
-Toulouse, was a more pliable diplomatist, and had
-been employed in England at the time of the dissolution
-of Henry's marriage with Catherine of Arragon.
-The first of these two men was the more hierarchical,
-the second the more politic; but both had the interests
-of their master Francis at heart. Their mission was
-difficult, and they had many a consultation about
-what was to be done. Tournon was ready to sacrifice
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">{195}</a></span>
-everything, truth in the first place, in order to
-unite the king with the pope. 'It is to be feared,' he
-said to his colleague, 'that if we let the holy father
-know all the discontent of the two kings, we shall but
-increase his despair; and that the emperor, profiting
-by our threats, will gain him over and do with him
-as he likes, which would lead to the disturbance of
-christendom.' Instead of carrying out the Calais
-resolutions, Tournon and Gramont determined to put
-them aside. They thought that Francis I. was going
-wrong, and desired to be more royalist than the king
-himself. To win the pope from Charles V. and give
-him to Francis I. was the great work they resolved to
-attempt at Bologna. The emperor was there, and he
-was a stout antagonist; but the two priests were not
-deficient in skill. To save catholicism threatened in
-France, and to lay the kingdom at the pope's feet, was
-their aim. 'Let us carry out our instructions,' they
-said, 'by beginning with the last article. Instead of
-employing severity first and mildness last, we will do
-just the contrary.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_358" id="Ref_358" href="#Foot_358">[358]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The two cardinals having been received by the
-pontiff, paid him every mark of respect, and tried
-to make him understand that, for the good of the holy
-see, he ought to preserve the goodwill of the most
-christian king. They therefore proposed an interview
-with Francis, and even with the King of England,
-that prince being eager to put an end to the difficulties
-of the divorce. 'Finally,' they added, laying a
-slight stress upon the word, 'certain proposals, formerly
-put forward in the king's name, might be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">{196}</a></span>
-carried out.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_359" id="Ref_359" href="#Foot_359">[359]</a></span>
-—'These proposals,' says Du Bellay,
-'would lead, it must be understood, to the great
-exaltation of the pope and his family.' The last
-argument was the decisive stroke which gained
-Clement VII.</p>
-
-<p>Francis, even while desiring to throw off the Roman
-tutelage, wished to gain the support of the pope
-in order to humiliate Charles V. He had therefore
-revived a strange idea, which he had once already
-hinted at, without overcoming, however, the excessive
-repugnance which it caused him. But he saw
-that the moment was critical, and that, to ally himself
-with both Henry and Clement, he must make some
-great sacrifice. He had therefore sent a special ambassador
-to Bologna, to carry out a scheme which
-would fill all Europe with surprise: a deplorable
-combination which by uniting the pope, indissolubly
-as it appeared, to the interests of the Valois, was sooner
-or later to separate France from England, change the
-channel that divides them into a deep gulf, infuse
-Florentine blood into the blood of France, introduce
-the vilest Machiavellism into the hearts of her kings
-who boasted of their chivalrous spirit, check the
-spread of learning, turn back on their hinges the gates
-that were beginning to open to the sun, confine the
-people in darkness, and install an era of debauchery,
-persecution, and assassination both private and public.</p>
-
-<p>The special ambassador charged with the execution
-of this scheme was John, Duke of Albany, qualified
-by his illustrious birth for transacting the great
-affair. Alexander Stuart, son of James II., King of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">{197}</a></span>
-Scotland, having been exiled by his eldest brother
-James III., had gone to France in 1485. His son
-John, the last Duke of Albany, attached himself to
-Louis XII., and followed him into Italy. Being
-recalled to Scotland, he was made regent of the kingdom
-in 1516, and again quitted his country to follow
-Francis I. into Lombardy. This royal personage, supported
-by Gramont and Tournon, was commissioned
-by the King of France to propose to the pope the
-marriage of his son Henry, Duke of Orleans, with
-a girl of fourteen, a relative of the popes, and who
-was named Catherine de Medici.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CATHERINE DE MEDICI.=</p>
-
-<p>Catherine was the daughter of Lorenzo II. de
-Medici, nephew of Leo X., and invested by his uncle
-in 1516 with the duchy of Urbino. Lorenzo, who
-had made himself hateful by his despotism, died the
-very year of his daughter's birth (1519). The duchy
-reverted to Leo X., and subsequently to its former
-masters the Della Rovera, and Catherine was left a
-portionless orphan. A marriage with this girl, descended
-from the rich merchants of Florence, was a
-strange alliance for the son of a king, and it was this
-that made Francis hesitate; but the desire of winning
-the pope's favour from his rival helped him at last to
-overcome his haughty disgust. Clement, who held
-(says Du Bellay) his family 'in singular esteem,' was
-transported with delight at the offer. A Medici on
-the throne of France!... He could not contain himself
-for joy. At the same time Francis intended to
-make a good bargain. He asked through the Duke
-of Albany, whose wife was Catherine's maternal aunt,
-that the pope should secure to his son Henry a fine
-Italian state composed of Parma, Florence, Pisa,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">{198}</a></span>
-Leghorn, Modena, Urbino, and Reggio; besides (said
-the secret articles) the duchy of Milan and the lordship
-of Genoa, which, added the French diplomatists,
-'already belong to the future husband.' In order to
-fulfil these engagements the pope was to employ his
-influence, his negotiations, his money, and his soldiers.
-Clement said that the conditions were very reasonable.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_360" id="Ref_360" href="#Foot_360">[360]</a></span>
-He knew perfectly well that he could not give
-these countries to his niece; but that was the least of
-his cares. The preceding year, when he was speaking
-to Charles's ambassador of the claims of Francis upon
-Italy, the Austrian diplomatist had said abruptly:
-'The emperor will never <i>yield</i> either Milan or Genoa
-to the King of France.'—'Impossible, no doubt!'
-answered the pope, 'but could not they be <i>promised</i>
-to him?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_361" id="Ref_361" href="#Foot_361">[361]</a></span>
-... The scion of the Medici brought to
-France neither Genoa nor Milan, nor Parma, nor
-Piacenza, nor Pisa, but in their stead she gave it the
-imbecile Francis II., the sanguinary Charles IX., the
-abominable Henry III., the infamous Duke of Anjou,
-and also that woman, at once so witty and dissolute,
-who became the wife of Henry IV., and in comparison
-with whom Messalina appears almost chaste. Four
-children of the Medici are among the monsters recorded
-in history, and they have been the disgrace and the
-misery of France.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=PROPOSALS OF MARRIAGE.=</p>
-
-<p>The pope stalked proudly and haughtily through the
-halls of his palace, and gave everybody a most gracious
-reception. This good-luck, he thought, had come from
-heaven. Not only did it cover all his family with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">{199}</a></span>
-glory, but secured to him France and her king, whose
-reforming caprices began to make him uneasy; 'and
-then,' adds Du Bellay, 'he was very pleased at finding
-this loophole, to excuse himself to the emperor, who
-was pressing him so strongly to enter into the Italian
-league.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_362" id="Ref_362" href="#Foot_362">[362]</a></span>
-Nevertheless the pope stood in awe of
-Charles V., who seemed eager to set himself up for
-a second Constantine, and he appeared anxious and
-embarrassed.</p>
-
-<p>Charles, whom nothing escaped, immediately remarked
-this, and thought to himself that some new
-wind had blown upon the pontiff. In order to find it
-out, he employed all the sagacity with which he was
-so eminently endowed. 'The emperor knew from the
-language and countenance of the holy father,' says Du
-Bellay, 'that he was less friendly towards him than
-before, and suspected whence the change proceeded.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_363" id="Ref_363" href="#Foot_363">[363]</a></span>
-Charles had heard something about this marriage
-some time before; but the ridiculous story had only
-amused him. The King of France unite himself with
-the merchants of Florence!... And Clement can
-believe this!... 'Hence Charles V., thinking,' as
-Du Bellay tells us, 'that the affair would never be
-carried out, had advised the pope to consent.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_364" id="Ref_364" href="#Foot_364">[364]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=HENRY'S OPINION OF THE MARRIAGE.=</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Francis lost no time. He had commissioned
-Du Bellay, the diplomatist, to communicate
-his intentions to his good brother the King of England,
-who had a claim to this information, as he was godfather
-to the future Henry II.—worthy godfather, and
-worthy godson! The self-conceit of the Tudor was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">{200}</a></span>
-still more hurt than that of the Valois. He said
-to Lord Rochford, whom he despatched to the King
-of France: 'You will tell the Most Christian King,
-our very dear brother, the great pleasure that we
-enjoy every day by calling to mind the pure, earnest,
-and kind friendship he feels for us.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_365" id="Ref_365" href="#Foot_365">[365]</a></span>
-He added:
-'Since our good brother has asked us, we are willing
-to declare, that truly (as we know how he himself
-considers it), having regard to the low estate and
-family from which the pope's niece is sprung, and to
-the most noble and most illustrious blood, ancestry,
-and royal house of France, from which descends our
-very dear and very beloved cousin and godson, the
-Duke of Orleans, the said marriage would be very ill-matched
-and unequal; and for this reason we are by
-no means of opinion that it ought to be concluded.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_366" id="Ref_366" href="#Foot_366">[366]</a></span>
-At the same time, after Henry had given his advice as
-a sovereign, he could not fail to consult his personal
-interests; and Rochford (Anne Boleyn's father) was
-to say to the King of France: 'If, however, by this
-means our brother should receive some great advantage,
-which should redound to the profit and honour
-both of himself and us; if the pope should do or concede
-anything to counterbalance and make up for the
-default of noble birth ... let him be pleased to inform
-us of it; he will find us very prompt to execute whatever
-shall be thought advisable, convenient, and opportune
-by him and us.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_367" id="Ref_367" href="#Foot_367">[367]</a></span>
-Henry, therefore, consented
-that Francis should deal with the pope about his godson:
-he only wished that he might be sold dear. His
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">{201}</a></span>
-full restoration to the favour of the court of Rome
-after his marriage with Anne Boleyn was the price
-that he asked. And then the royal godfather, who
-was at heart the most papistical of kings, would have
-declared himself fully satisfied and the pope's most
-humble servant.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_352" id="Foot_352" href="#Ref_352">[352]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Concilii, desiderati da molti, come necessarii per la eresia di Lutero,
-che ogni di ampliava e per molti discordini che sono nella chiesa.'—Guicciardini,
-<i>Discorsi politici, Opere inedite</i>, i. p. 388.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_353" id="Foot_353" href="#Ref_353">[353]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Al contrario, remedio e piu pericoloso et poi partorire maggiori
-mali.'—<i>Lettere di Principi</i>, ii. p. 197. Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, pp. 183-185.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_354" id="Foot_354" href="#Ref_354">[354]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Il papa con chi forse avea odio.'—Guicciardini, <i>loc. cit.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_355" id="Foot_355" href="#Ref_355">[355]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Despatch of the Bishop of Auxerre, ambassador of France, dated
-December 24, 1532.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_356" id="Foot_356" href="#Ref_356">[356]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Instructions for the nuncio Rangoni. Pallavicini, liv. iii. ch. xiii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_357" id="Foot_357" href="#Ref_357">[357]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Despatch of the Bishop of Auxerre, dated January 1, 1533.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_358" id="Foot_358" href="#Ref_358">[358]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 177.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_359" id="Foot_359" href="#Ref_359">[359]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 178.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_360" id="Foot_360" href="#Ref_360">[360]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The secret articles are in the Bibliothèque Impériale at Paris. MSS.
-Béthune, No. 8541, fol. 36. Ranke, <i>Deutsche Geschichte</i>, iii. p. 439.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_361" id="Foot_361" href="#Ref_361">[361]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bucholz, ix. p. 101. Ranke, <i>Deutsche Geschichte</i>, iii. p. 439.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_362" id="Foot_362" href="#Ref_362">[362]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 178.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_363" id="Foot_363" href="#Ref_363">[363]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. p. 179.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_364" id="Foot_364" href="#Ref_364">[364]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. p. 180.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_365" id="Foot_365" href="#Ref_365">[365]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Henry's instructions are in French. <i>State Papers</i>, vii. p. 423.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_366" id="Foot_366" href="#Ref_366">[366]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. p. 428.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_367" id="Foot_367" href="#Ref_367">[367]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">{202}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXVI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">INTRIGUES OF CHARLES V., FRANCIS I., AND CLEMENT VII.,
- AROUND CATHERINE.<br />
- (<span class="smc">Winter 1532-1533.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHEN the emperor was informed of these matters,
-he began to knit his brows. A flash of light
-revealed to him the ingenious plans of his rival, and
-he took immediate steps to prevent the dangerous
-union. Charles V., Francis I., Henry VIII., and the
-pope were all in commotion at the thought of this
-marriage, and little Catherine was the Briseis around
-whom met and contended the greatest powers of the
-world.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=DOUBTS INSINUATED BY CHARLES.=</p>
-
-<p>At first the emperor endeavoured to instil into the
-pope's mind suspicions of the good faith of the King of
-France. That was no difficult matter. 'Clement
-dared not feel confident,' says Du Bellay, 'that the
-king really wished to do him such great honour.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_368" id="Ref_368" href="#Foot_368">[368]</a></span>
-—'The
-Orleans marriage would certainly be very
-honourable and advantageous,' said Charles V. and
-his ministers; 'but his holiness must not rely upon
-it; the king makes the proposal only with the intention
-of <i>befooling</i> him and using him to his own benefit.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_369" id="Ref_369" href="#Foot_369">[369]</a></span>
-And when the pope repeated the promises of Albany,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">{203}</a></span>
-Gramont, and Tournon, the ministers of Charles kept
-silence, and replied only by a slight smile. The blow
-had told. Clement, who always tried to deceive, was
-naturally inclined to believe that the king was doing
-the same.</p>
-
-<p>When the emperor and the diplomatists saw that
-they had made a breach, they attempted a new assault.
-Charles asked the young lady's hand for Francis Sforza,
-Duke of Milan. This scheme was worthy of that
-exuberant genius which Charles always displayed
-in the invention of means calculated to secure the
-success of his policy. This union would, in fact, have
-the double advantage of wresting Catherine and the
-Milanese from France at one blow. Charles hinted to
-her uncle that he would do much better to accept for
-his young relative a <i>real</i> marriage than to run after a
-shadow. 'It is a great offer, and the match is a good
-one,' said Clement; 'but the other is so grand and
-so honourable for my house, regard being had to dignities,
-that I never could have hoped for such honour ...
-and so much progress has been made, that I cannot
-listen to any other proposal without offending the
-king.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_370" id="Ref_370" href="#Foot_370">[370]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Clement had become hard to please. If the Medici
-were the descendants of a merchant, the Sforzas came
-from a peasant, a leader of free troops, a <i>condottiere</i>.
-Clement looked down upon the Duke of Milan. 'Besides,'
-says Guiccardini, 'he burnt with desire to marry
-his niece to the second son of Francis I.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_371" id="Ref_371" href="#Foot_371">[371]</a></span>
-This is
-what he always came back to. Charles told him that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">{204}</a></span>
-Francis wanted, by this offer, to break up the Italian
-league, and when that was done, the marriage would
-be broken off too.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_372" id="Ref_372" href="#Foot_372">[372]</a></span>
-But Clement maintained that the
-king was sincere in his offer. 'Good!' said the emperor
-to the pope; 'there is a very simple means of satisfying
-yourself on that point. Ask the two cardinals
-to procure immediately from France the powers necessary
-for settling the marriage contract. You
-will soon see whether his proposal is anything better
-than base money which they want to palm off upon
-you.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_373" id="Ref_373" href="#Foot_373">[373]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The emperor's remarks were not without their effect
-upon Clement: he was thoughtful and uneasy. The
-French ambassadors had been lavish of words, but
-there was nothing written: <i>verba volant</i>. The pope
-caught at the idea suggested by Charles. If the full
-powers do not arrive, the king's treachery is unveiled;
-if they arrive, the game is won. Clement asked for
-them. 'Nothing is more easy,' said Tournon and
-Gramont, who wrote to their master without delay.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_374" id="Ref_374" href="#Foot_374">[374]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE KING'S HESITATION.=</p>
-
-<p>Francis I. was startled when he received their
-despatch. His proposal was sincere, for he thought it
-necessary to his policy; but the remarks of Charles V.
-and Henry VIII. about the daughter of the Florentine
-merchant, and the astonishment of Europe,
-which unanimously protested against 'such great disparity
-of degree and condition,'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_375" id="Ref_375" href="#Foot_375">[375]</a></span>
-had sunk into his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">{205}</a></span>
-mind. He, so proud of his blood and of his crown
-... countenance a misalliance! He hesitated; he
-would only proceed slowly ... step by step ...
-and with a long interval after each.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_376" id="Ref_376" href="#Foot_376">[376]</a></span>
-If Charles,
-who was impatient to return to Spain, should
-leave Italy without banding it against France ...
-then ... new facts, new counsel ... he would consider.
-But now he was driven to the wall: the question
-must be answered. Shall Catherine de Medici
-come and sit on the steps of the throne of St. Louis,
-or shall she remain in Italy? Shall she continue to
-receive abominable lessons from her relative Alexander
-de Medici, a detestable prince who exiled and
-imprisoned even the members of his own family, and
-confiscated their property, and was addicted to the
-most scandalous debauchery? ... or shall she come
-to France to put in practice those lessons among the
-people of her adoption? The king must make up his
-mind: the courier was waiting. One thing decided
-him. His old gaoler, the emperor, said that this
-marriage proposal was a trick. If Francis refused
-what the pope asked, Charles would triumph, and
-turn against him both pope and Italy. The king's
-ambition was stronger than his vanity, and coming to
-a desperate resolution, he had the full powers drawn
-up, signed, and sent off.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_377" id="Ref_377" href="#Foot_377">[377]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>They arrived at Bologna about the middle of
-February. Albany, Gramont, and Tournon carried
-them in triumph to the pope, who immediately communicated
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">{206}</a></span>
-them to the emperor. The latter read the
-procuration, which contained 'an express clause for
-settling the marriage of the Duke of Orleans with the
-Duchess of Urbino,' and was greatly surprised.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_378" id="Ref_378" href="#Foot_378">[378]</a></span>
-'You see,' said Clement, 'there is no hole by which he can
-creep out.' Charles could not believe it. 'The king
-has only sent this document for a <i>show</i>,' he said to
-Clement; 'if you press the ambassadors to go on and
-conclude the treaty, they will not listen to you.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_379" id="Ref_379" href="#Foot_379">[379]</a></span>
-A little while ago there had been nothing but words,
-and now there was only a piece of <i>paper</i>.... The new
-propositions were communicated to the duke and the
-two cardinals, who replied: 'We offer to stipulate
-forthwith the clauses, conditions, and settlements that
-are to be included in the contract.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_380" id="Ref_380" href="#Foot_380">[380]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE EMPEROR'S NEW MANŒUVRES.=</p>
-
-<p>Clement breathed again, and believed in the star of
-the Medici. If that star had placed his ancestors the
-Florentine merchants at the head of their people, it
-might well raise Catherine, the niece of two popes, the
-daughter and grand-daughter of dukes, to the throne
-of France. He informed the emperor that everything
-was arranged, and that the terms of the contract were
-being drawn up. Clement's face beamed with joy.
-The emperor began to think the matter serious, 'and
-was astonished and vexed above all,' says Du Bellay,
-'at the frustration of his plan, which was to excite the
-holy father against the king.' Charles saw that the
-impetuosity of Francis had been too much for his
-own slowness; but he knew how to retrace his steps,
-and the fecundity of his genius suggested a last means
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">{207}</a></span>
-of breaking up 'this detestable cabal.'—'Since it is
-so,' he said, 'I require your holiness at least to include
-among the conditions of the contract now drawing up,
-the four articles agreed to between us, the first time
-you spoke to me of this marriage.' Clement appeared
-surprised, and asked what articles they were. 'You
-promised me,' said Charles, 'first that the king should
-bind himself to alter nothing in Italy; second, to confirm
-the treaties of Cambray and Madrid; third, to
-consent to a council; and fourth, to get the King of
-England to promise to make no innovations in his
-country until the matter of his divorce was settled at
-Rome.' The King of France would never agree to
-such conditions; the pope was dismayed. Would he
-be wrecked just as he had reached the harbour?—'I
-made no such promises,' he exclaimed eagerly. 'The
-holy father,' says Du Bellay, 'formally denied ever
-having heard of these matters.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_381" id="Ref_381" href="#Foot_381">[381]</a></span>
-The altercation
-between the two chiefs of christendom threatened to
-be violent. Which of them was the liar? Probably
-the pope had said something of the kind, but only for
-form's sake, in order to pacify Charles, and without
-any intention of keeping his promise. He was the
-first to recover his calmness; he detested the emperor,
-but he humoured him. 'You well know, Sire,' he
-said, 'that the profit and honour accorded by the king
-to my family in accepting my alliance, are so great,
-that it belongs to him and not to me to propose conditions.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_382" id="Ref_382" href="#Foot_382">[382]</a></span>
-He offered, however, to undertake that
-everything should remain in 'complete peace.' The
-emperor, a master in dissimulation, tried to conceal
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">{208}</a></span>
-his vexation, but without success; this unlucky
-marriage baffled all his plans. Francis had been more
-cunning than himself.... Who would have thought
-it? The King of France had sacrificed the honour of
-his house, but he had conquered his rival. Confounded,
-annoyed, and dejected, Charles paced up and
-down with his long gloomy face, when an unexpected
-circumstance revived his hopes of completely embroiling
-the pope and the King of France.</p>
-
-<p>We have witnessed the conferences that took place
-between Clement and Charles on the subject of a
-general council. The emperor had asked for one in
-order 'to bring back the heretics to union with the
-holy faith, and he observed that if it were not called,
-it was to be feared that the heretics would unite with
-the Turks; that they would fancy themselves authorised
-to lay hands upon the property of the Church,
-and would succeed in living in that liberty which
-they called <i>evangelical</i>, but which,' added Charles,
-'is rather <i>Mahometan</i>, and would cause the ruin of
-christendom.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_383" id="Ref_383" href="#Foot_383">[383]</a></span>
-The pope, who thought much more
-of himself and of his family than of the Church,
-had rejected this demand. He had smiled at seeing
-the great potentate's zeal for the religious and evangelical
-question.... Clement never troubled himself
-about the Gospel: Machiavelli was the gospel of the
-Medici. They cherished it, and meditated on it day
-and night; they knew it by heart, and put it into
-admirable practice. Clement and Catherine were its
-most devoted followers and most illustrious heroes.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=A LAY COUNCIL PROPOSED.=</p>
-
-<p>The policy of the King of France was quite as interested,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">{209}</a></span>
-but it was more frank and honest. Even
-while politically uniting with the pope, he did not
-mean to place himself ecclesiastically under his guardianship.
-He had, like Henry VIII., the intention of
-emancipating kings from the pontifical supremacy,
-and desired to make the secular instead of the papal
-element predominate in christian society. For many
-centuries the hierarchical power had held the first
-rank in Europe: it was time that it gave way to the
-political power. Francis, having come to a knowledge
-of the opposite opinions of the pope and the emperor
-touching the council, slipped between the two and
-enunciated a third, which filled the emperor with
-astonishment and the pontiff with alarm. It was one
-of the greatest, most original, and boldest conceptions
-of modern times: we recognise in it the genius of
-Du Bellay and the aspirations of a new era. 'It is
-true, as the holy father affirms,' said the King of
-France, 'that the assembling of a council has its
-dangers. On the other hand, the reasons of the
-emperor for convoking it are most worthy of consideration;
-for the affairs of religion are reduced to
-such a pass that, without a council, they will fall into
-inextricable confusion, and the consequence will be
-great evils and prejudice to the holy father and all
-christian princes. The pope is right, yet the emperor
-is not wrong; but here is a way of gratifying their
-wishes, and at the same time preventing all the
-dangers that threaten us.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_384" id="Ref_384" href="#Foot_384">[384]</a></span>
-Let all the christian
-potentates, whatever be their particular doctrine (the
-King of England and the protestant princes of Germany
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">{210}</a></span>
-and the other evangelical states, were therefore
-included), first communicate with one another on the
-subject, and then let each of them send to Rome as
-soon as possible ambassadors provided with ample
-powers to discuss and draw up by common accord all
-the points to be considered by the council. They
-shall have full liberty to bring forward anything
-that they imagine will be for the unity, welfare, and
-repose of christendom, the service of God, the suppression
-of vice, the extirpation of heresy, and the
-uniformity of our faith. No mention shall be made
-of the remonstrances of our holy father, or of the
-decisions of former councils; which would give many
-sovereigns an opportunity or an excuse for not attending.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_385" id="Ref_385" href="#Foot_385">[385]</a></span>
-When the articles are thus drawn up by
-the representatives of the various states of christendom,
-each ambassador will take a duplicate of them
-to his court, and all will go to the council, at the
-time and place appointed by them, well instructed
-in what they will have to say. If those who have
-separated from the Roman Church agree with the
-others, they will in this way take the path of salvation.
-If they do not agree, at least they will not be
-able to deny that they have been deaf to reason, and
-refused the council which they had called for so
-loudly.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_386" id="Ref_386" href="#Foot_386">[386]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This is one of the most remarkable documents that
-we have met with in relation to the intercourse between
-France and Rome, and it has not attracted sufficient
-attention. In it Francis makes an immense stride.
-Convinced that the new times ought to tread in a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">{211}</a></span>
-new path, he inaugurates a great revolution. He
-emancipates the political power, so far as regards
-religious matters, and desires that it shall take precedence
-of the pontifical power in everything. If
-his idea had been carried out, great ecclesiastical
-questions would no longer have been decided in the
-Vatican, but in the cabinets of princes. This system,
-indeed, is not the true one, and yet a great step
-had been taken in the path of progress. A new
-principle was about to influence the destinies of the
-Church.</p>
-
-<p>Up to this time the clerical element had reigned
-in it alone; but now the lay element claimed its place.
-The new society was unwilling that priests alone
-should govern christians, just as shepherds lead their
-flocks. But this system, we repeat, was not the true
-one. Christian questions ought not to be decided
-either by pope or prince, but by the ministers of the
-Church and its members, as of old in Jerusalem by
-the <i>apostles</i>, <i>elders</i>, and <i>brethren</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_387" id="Ref_387" href="#Foot_387">[387]</a></span>
-For this we have
-the authority of God's Word. That evangelical path
-is forbidden to the Roman-catholic Church; for it is
-afraid of every christian assembly where the opinions
-of believers are taken into account, and finds itself
-miserably condemned to oscillate perpetually between
-the two great powers—the pope and the king.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE LAY COUNCIL REJECTED.=</p>
-
-<p>It was very near the end of February when the emperor
-received at Bologna this singular opinion of
-the French king. Having failed in his attempts to
-prevent the Orleans marriage, he was busy forming
-the Italian league, and preparing to leave for Spain.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">{212}</a></span>
-Charles instinctively felt the encroachment of modern
-times in this project of Du Bellay's. To deprive the
-pope and clergy of their exclusive and absolute
-authority would lead (he thought) to taking it away
-from kings also. It seemed to him that popery rendered
-liberty impossible not only in the Church but
-also among the people. Francis, or rather Du Bellay,
-had imagined that Charles would say (as one of his
-successors said<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_388" id="Ref_388" href="#Foot_388">[388]</a></span>
-): 'My trade is to be a king,' and
-that he would grasp at the institution of a <i>diplomatic</i>
-papacy. But whether Charles wished to profit by
-this opportunity 'to fish up again' the pope who had
-plunged into French waters, or simply yielded to his
-Spanish catholic nature and the desire he felt for unlimited
-power, he rejected Francis's proposal. 'What!'
-he exclaimed, 'shall the ambassadors of christian
-kings and potentates lay down beforehand the points
-to be discussed in the council?... That would be
-depriving it of its authority by a single stroke. Whatever
-is to be discussed in the council ought to depend
-entirely on the inspiration of the Holy Ghost and not
-on the appetites of men.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_389" id="Ref_389" href="#Foot_389">[389]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=SECULARISATION OF THE POPEDOM.=</p>
-
-<p>This answer vexed Francis considerably. His proposition
-failing, it became a weapon in the hands of
-his rival to destroy him. He therefore sought to
-justify himself. 'I cannot help being surprised,' he
-said, 'that, with a view to calumniate me, my opinion
-has been misrepresented to the emperor. Is it not
-more reasonable to have this business managed by ambassadors
-who can arrive speedily in Rome, than to
-wait for a council which at the soonest cannot meet
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">{213}</a></span>
-within a year?... And as for everything depending
-upon the Holy Ghost, assuredly my proposal has been
-wickedly and malignantly interpreted; for as we
-shall send ambassadors guided by a sincere affection
-for the Church, is it not evident that this assembly
-cannot be without the Holy Ghost?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_390" id="Ref_390" href="#Foot_390">[390]</a></span>
-Thus the king,
-in defending himself, took shelter under the <i>inspiration</i>
-of his diplomatists. We may well admit that the
-Holy Ghost was less with the pope than with the king;
-but He was really with neither of them.</p>
-
-<p>Thus for a moment the idea of Francis I. fell to the
-ground; it was premature, and only began to be realised
-in after days by the force of circumstances and in the
-order of time. It was in 1562, when the council
-which had been so much discussed, and which opened
-at Trent in 1545, met for the third time, that this new
-fashion was introduced into Roman catholicism. The
-prelates could not come to an understanding, the
-Italian deputies wishing to maintain everything, while
-the French and German deputies demanded important
-concessions with a view to a reconciliation between the
-princes and their subjects. There were struggles, jests,
-and quarrels: they came to blows in the streets. The
-majority of the council were angry because the Roman
-legates regularly delayed to give their opinions until
-the courier arrived from Rome. 'Their Inspiration,'
-said the French, who were always fond of a joke, 'their
-Inspiration comes to Trent in a portmanteau.' The
-meeting was about to be broken up, when the papacy,
-being obliged to choose between two evils, resolved to
-come to an understanding with the princes. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">{214}</a></span>
-pope agreed that all important questions should be
-previously discussed in the secular courts, and the
-secondary questions be left to the council, provided
-that all proper respect was shown to the papacy.
-Rome triumphed within the walls of Trent, but she
-ceased to be a pure hierarchy. From that hour the political
-element has had the precedence, and the papacy
-has become more and more dependent on the secular
-power. The scheme of Francis I. has been partly
-realised. There remains, however, one step more
-to be taken. Instead of the interested decisions of
-kings, it is the sovereign and unchangeable Word of
-God which ought to be placed on the throne of
-the Church.</p>
-
-<p>Charles V. hoped that the singular opinion of the
-King of France would incline Clement to enter into
-the Italian league; but the pope was not very susceptible
-in religious matters. Still, as the emperor was
-impatient, Clement resolved to give him this trifling
-satisfaction. Why should he refuse to enter into a
-league whose object was to exclude Francis I. from
-Italy? As at that very time he was signing secret
-articles by which he bound himself to give to France
-Parma, Piacenza, Urbino, Reggio, Leghorn, Pisa,
-Modena, and even Milan and Genoa, there was no
-reason why the worthy uncle of Catherine should not
-sign another treaty with Charles which stipulated
-exactly the contrary. Francis would not be alarmed
-at the pontiff's entering the league; he would understand
-that it was simply an honorary proceeding, a
-diplomatic measure. The marriage of the pope's
-niece caused the poor emperor so much annoyance,
-that he deserved at least this consolation. Besides,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">{215}</a></span>
-when the pope gave his signature to Charles V., he
-was doing (as he thought) a very honest thing, for
-he had not the least intention of keeping the solemn
-promises he had made to Francis.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_391" id="Ref_391" href="#Foot_391">[391]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was now the 28th of February, and the imperial
-equipage was ready: horses, mules, carriages, servants,
-officers, noblemen, were all waiting the moment of
-departure. The ships that were to convey the mighty
-Charles and his court to Spain were in the harbour of
-Genoa, ready to weigh anchor. This very day had
-been fixed for signing the act of the Italian league.
-The high and mighty contracting powers met in the
-palace of Bologna. The document was read aloud
-before the delegates of the princes and sovereigns of
-Italy included in it. Every one assented, the signatures
-were affixed, and Clement eagerly added his name,
-promising himself to sign another contract very shortly
-with the King of France.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CARDINALS' HATS ASKED AND GIVEN.=</p>
-
-<p>Everything seemed as if it would pass off in a
-regular way, without Charles allowing his vexation to
-break out. That prince, who knew so well how to
-restrain himself, raised a sensation, however, among
-the great personages around him. Addressing the
-pope, he demanded a cardinal's hat for three of his
-prelates: it was a trifling compliment (he thought)
-which Clement might well concede him; but the pope
-granted one hat only. The ambassador of France
-then came forward, and, on behalf of his master, demanded
-one for John, Bishop of Orleans and uncle of
-the Duke of Longueville, which was granted. Then
-the same ambassador, growing bolder, begged, <i>on</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">{216}</a></span>
-<i>behalf of the King of England</i>, a cardinal's hat for the
-Bishop of Winchester. This was too much for Charles.
-'What! ask a favour for a king who has put away my
-aunt Catherine, who is quarrelling with the pope and
-rushing into schism!'... 'The emperor took this
-request,' says Du Bellay, 'in very bad part.'—'We
-can see clearly,' said Charles to those around him,
-'that the affairs of these two kings are in the same
-scales; that one does not less for the other than for
-himself.' Then, throwing off his usual reserve, he
-openly expressed his disapprobation. 'This request
-of a hat for England,' said he, 'displeases me more
-than if the ambassador of France had asked <i>four</i> for
-his master.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_392" id="Ref_392" href="#Foot_392">[392]</a></span>
-The diplomatists there present could
-not turn away their eyes from that face, usually so
-placid, and now so suddenly animated; they were
-secretly delighted at seeing any feeling whatever,
-especially one of ill-humour, on the features of that
-powerful monarch, all whose words and actions were
-the result of cold reflection and calculated with the
-nicest art. But no one was so rejoiced as Hawkins,
-the English ambassador: 'The emperor departed from
-hence evil-contented,' he wrote to Henry forthwith,
-'and satisfied in nothing that he came for. All he did
-was to renew an old league, lest he should be seen to
-have done nothing.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_393" id="Ref_393" href="#Foot_393">[393]</a></span>
-Charles was eager to leave the
-city where he had been duped by the pope and checkmated
-by the king, and already he repented having
-shown his displeasure. He descended the steps of the
-palace, threw himself into his carriage, and departed
-for Milan, where he had some business to settle before
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">{217}</a></span>
-going to Genoa and Spain. It was, as we have said,
-Friday, the 28th of February.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_394" id="Ref_394" href="#Foot_394">[394]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=MEETING OF FRANCIS AND CLEMENT.=</p>
-
-<p>The pope remained ten days longer at Bologna.
-There was a talk of an interview between him and the
-King of France, to whom he had written with his own
-hand. The papal nuncio had proposed to the king that
-the emperor should be present also. 'Provided the
-King of England be the fourth,' answered Francis.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_395" id="Ref_395" href="#Foot_395">[395]</a></span>
-'We should be unwilling, the King of England and I,'
-added he, 'to be present at the interview except with
-forces equal to those of the emperor, for fear of a surprise....
-Now it might happen that, the escorts of these
-<i>not very friendly</i> princes being together, we should
-begin a war instead of ratifying a peace.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_396" id="Ref_396" href="#Foot_396">[396]</a></span>
-They accordingly
-fell back upon the conference of <i>two</i>, pending
-which the marriage should be completed. Nice was at
-first selected as the place of meeting; but the Duke
-of Savoy, who did not like to see the French at Nice,
-objected. 'Well, then,' said the pope, 'I will go to
-Antibes, to Fréjus, to Toulon, to Marseilles.' To ally
-himself with the family of France, he would have gone
-beyond the columns of Hercules. Francis, on his side,
-desired that the pope, who had waited for the emperor
-in Italy, should come and seek him in his own kingdom.
-The pope thus showed him greater honour than
-he had shown Charles—on which point he was very
-sensitive. Marseilles was agreed upon.</p>
-
-<p>At last all was in proper train. The blood of the
-Valois and of the Medici was about to be united. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">{218}</a></span>
-clauses, conditions, and conventions were all arranged.
-The marriage ceremony was to be magnificently
-celebrated in the city of the Phocæans. The pope
-was at the summit of happiness, and the bride's eyes
-sparkled with delight. The die was cast; Catherine
-de Medici would one day sit on the throne of France;
-the St. Bartholomew was in store for that noble
-country, the blood of martyrs would flow in torrents
-down the streets of Paris, and the rivers would roll
-through the provinces long and speechless trains of
-corpses, whose ghastly silence would cry aloud to
-heaven.</p>
-
-<p>But that epoch was still remote; and just now Paris
-presented a very different spectacle. It is time to
-return thither.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_368" id="Foot_368" href="#Ref_368">[368]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 179.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_369" id="Foot_369" href="#Ref_369">[369]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. p. 180.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_370" id="Foot_370" href="#Ref_370">[370]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 180. Guicciardini, <i>Wars of Italy</i>, ii. bk.
-xvi. pp. 894-897.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_371" id="Foot_371" href="#Ref_371">[371]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Guicciardini, <i>ibid.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_372" id="Foot_372" href="#Ref_372">[372]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Cæsar arbitratus illud conjugium quasi per simulationem a rege
-oblatum.'—Pallavicini, <i>Hist. Concil. Trid.</i> lib. iii. cap. ii. p. 274.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_373" id="Foot_373" href="#Ref_373">[373]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Adulterinam esse monetam qua rex ipsum commercari studebat.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_374" id="Foot_374" href="#Ref_374">[374]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 180. Pallavicini, <i>ibid.</i> Guicciardini, <i>Wars of
-Italy</i>, ii. p. 898.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_375" id="Foot_375" href="#Ref_375">[375]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Guicciardini, ii. p. 898.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_376" id="Foot_376" href="#Ref_376">[376]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quo fortasse magis dubitanter ac pedetentim processisset.'—Pallavicini,
-<i>Hist. Concil. Trid.</i> i. p. 274.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_377" id="Foot_377" href="#Ref_377">[377]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Gallus explorato æmuli consilio, ut ipsum eluderet, eo statim properavit.'—Ibid.
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>. Guicciardini, <i>Wars of Italy</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_378" id="Foot_378" href="#Ref_378">[378]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 182.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_379" id="Foot_379" href="#Ref_379">[379]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_380" id="Foot_380" href="#Ref_380">[380]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. Guicciardini. Pallavicini.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_381" id="Foot_381" href="#Ref_381">[381]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 182.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_382" id="Foot_382" href="#Ref_382">[382]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. pp. 182, 183.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_383" id="Foot_383" href="#Ref_383">[383]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 186.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_384" id="Foot_384" href="#Ref_384">[384]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 185.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_385" id="Foot_385" href="#Ref_385">[385]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The protestant sovereigns.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_386" id="Foot_386" href="#Ref_386">[386]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> pp. 186, 187.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_387" id="Foot_387" href="#Ref_387">[387]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Acts xv. 23.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_388" id="Foot_388" href="#Ref_388">[388]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The Emperor Joseph II.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_389" id="Foot_389" href="#Ref_389">[389]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 189.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_390" id="Foot_390" href="#Ref_390">[390]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 187.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_391" id="Foot_391" href="#Ref_391">[391]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Guicciardini. Du Bellay.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_392" id="Foot_392" href="#Ref_392">[392]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 189.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_393" id="Foot_393" href="#Ref_393">[393]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>State Papers</i>, vii. p. 439.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_394" id="Foot_394" href="#Ref_394">[394]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'The 28th the emperor departed from hens' (<i>State Papers</i>, viii. p.
-438), 'and went to Milan' (p. 447).</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_395" id="Foot_395" href="#Ref_395">[395]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 189.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_396" id="Foot_396" href="#Ref_396">[396]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">{219}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXVII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">STORM AGAINST THE QUEEN OF NAVARRE AND HER 'MIRROR
- OF THE SINFUL SOUL.'<br />
- (<span class="smc">Summer 1533.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=UNEASINESS OF THE ULTRAMONTANES.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE Romish party would not be comforted under
-its defeat. Beda, Le Picard, and Mathurin in
-exile; evangelical sermons freely preached in the great
-churches of the capital; the new doctrines carried
-through Paris from house to house; and the Queen of
-Navarre seated, as it were, upon the throne during
-her brother's absence, protecting and directing this
-Lutheran activity—it was too much! The anxiety
-and alarm of the ultramontanists increased every day:
-they held numerous conferences; and if the young
-Alsatian whom we saw at the gate of the Sorbonne,
-or any other inquisitive person, could have crept into
-these catholic committees, he would have heard the
-most violent addresses. 'It is not only the approach
-of the enemy that alarms us,' they said: 'he is there
-... the revolutionary, immoral, impious, atheistic,
-abominable, execrable monster!' Other epithets were
-added, to be found only in the popish vocabulary.
-'He is making rapid progress; unless we resist him
-vigorously, it is all over! The world will perhaps
-see crumbling under his blows those ancient walls of
-Roman catholicism under which the nations have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">{220}</a></span>
-taken shelter for so many ages.' And hence the
-Sorbonne was of the same opinion with the priests
-and the most hot-headed laymen, that, overlooking
-for the moment secondary persons, it was necessary
-to strike the most dangerous. In their eyes the
-Queen of Navarre was the great enemy of the papacy;
-the monks, in particular, whose disorders she had
-not feared to expose, were full of fury against
-her; their clamours were heard in every quarter.
-'The queen,' they said, 'is the modern Eve by
-whom the new revolt is entering into the world.'—'It
-is the nature of women to be deceived,' said one;
-and to prove it he quoted St. Jerome. 'Woman is the
-gate of the devil,' said another, citing the authority of
-Tertullian. 'The wily serpent,' said the greatest
-doctors, 'remembers that memorable duel fought in
-Paradise. Another fight is beginning, and he is again
-putting in practice the stratagems that succeeded so
-well before. At the beginning of the world and now,
-it is always against woman—that tottering wall, that
-<i>pannel</i> so weak and easy to break down—that he
-draws up his battery. It is the Queen of Navarre
-who supports the disciples of Luther in France; she
-has placed them in schools; she alone watches over
-them with wonderful care, and saves them from all
-danger.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_397" id="Ref_397" href="#Foot_397">[397]</a></span>
-Either the king must punish her, or she
-must publicly recant her errors.' The ultramontanists
-did not restrict themselves to words: they entered into
-a diabolical plot to ruin that pious princess.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=PLOTS AGAINST MARGARET.=</p>
-
-<p>This was not an easy thing to do. The king loved
-her, all good men revered her, and all Europe admired
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">{221}</a></span>
-her. Yet, as Francis was very jealous of his authority,
-the priests hoped to take advantage of his extreme susceptibility
-and set him at variance with a sister who
-dared to have an opinion of her own. Besides, the
-Queen of Navarre, like every other eminent person,
-had powerful enemies at court, 'people of Scythian
-ingratitude,' who, having been received in her household
-and raised by her to honours, secretly did all
-in their power to bring her into discredit with the king
-and with her husband.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_398" id="Ref_398" href="#Foot_398">[398]</a></span>
-The most dangerous enemy
-of all was the grand-master Montmorency, an enterprising,
-brave, and imperious man, skilful in advancing
-his own fortune, though unlucky with that of the kingdom;
-he was besides coarse and uncultivated, despising
-letters, detesting the Reformation, irritated by the
-proselytism of the Queen of Navarre, and full of contempt
-for her books. He had great influence over
-Francis. The Sorbonne thought that if the grand-master
-declared against her, it would be impossible
-for Margaret to retain the king's favour.</p>
-
-<p>An opportunity occurred for beginning the attack,
-and the Sorbonne caught at it. The Queen of Navarre,
-sighing after the time when a pure and spiritual religion
-would displace the barren ceremonial of popery,
-had published, in 1531, a christian poem entitled:
-<i>The Mirror of the Sinful Soul, in which she discovers
-her Faults and Sins, as also the Grace and Blessings
-bestowed on her by Jesus Christ her Spouse</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_399" id="Ref_399" href="#Foot_399">[399]</a></span>
-Many persons had read this poem with interest, and admired
-the queen's genius and piety. Finding that this edition,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">{222}</a></span>
-published in a city which belonged to her, had made
-no noise, aroused no persecution, and had even gained
-her a few congratulations, she felt a desire to issue
-her pious manifesto to a wider circle. Encouraged,
-moreover, by the position which her brother had just
-taken up, she made an arrangement with a bookseller
-rather bolder than the rest, and in 1533 published
-at Paris a new edition of her book, without the
-author's name, and without the authorisation of the
-Sorbonne.</p>
-
-<p>The poem was mild, spiritual, inoffensive, like the
-queen herself; but it was written by the king's sister,
-and accordingly made a great sensation. In her verses
-there were new voices, aspirations towards heaven
-long unknown; many persons heard them, and here
-and there certain manifestations showed themselves
-of a meek and inward piety long since forgotten. The
-alarmed Sorbonne shouted out—'heresy!' There
-was, indeed, in the <i>Mirror</i> something more than aspirations.
-It contained nothing, indeed, against the
-saints or the Virgin, against the mass or popery, and
-not a word of controversy; but the essential doctrine
-of the Reformation was strongly impressed on it,
-namely, salvation by Jesus Christ alone, and the certain
-assurance of that redemption.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=BEDA DISCOVERS HERESY IN THE POEMS.=</p>
-
-<p>At the time of which we are writing, Beda had not
-been banished. At the beginning of 1533 he had
-been intrusted by the Sorbonne with the examination
-of all new books. The fiery syndic discovered the
-<i>Mirror</i>, and with excess of joy he fell upon it to seek
-matter of accusation against the king's sister. He
-devoured it; he had never been so charmed by any
-reading, for at last he had proof that the Queen of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">{223}</a></span>
-Navarre was really a heretic.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_400" id="Ref_400" href="#Foot_400">[400]</a></span>
-'But understand me
-well,' he said; 'they are not dumb proofs nor half
-proofs, but literal, clear, complete proofs.' Beda prepared
-therefore to attack Margaret. What a contrast
-between the formal religion of the Church and that of
-this spiritual poem! St. Thomas and the other chiefs
-of the schools teach that man may at least possess
-merits of <i>congruity</i>; that he may perform supererogatory
-works, that he must confess his sins in the ear of
-the priest, and satisfy the justice of God by acts of
-penance, <i>satisfactio operis</i>. But according to the
-<i>Mirror</i>, religion is a much simpler thing ... all is
-summed up in these two terms: man's sin and God's
-grace. According to the queen, what man needs is to
-have his sins remitted and wholly pardoned in consequence
-of the Saviour's death; and when by faith he
-has found assurance of this pardon, he enjoys peace....
-He must consider all his past life as being no
-longer for him a ground of condemnation before God:
-these are the <i>glad tidings</i>. Now these <i>tidings</i> scandalised
-Beda and his friends exceedingly. 'What!' he
-exclaimed, holding the famous book open before them,
-'what! no more auricular confessions, indulgences,
-penance, and works of charity!... The cause of
-pardon is the reconciliatory work of Christ, and what
-helps us to make it our own is not the Church, but
-faith!' The syndic determined to make the 'frightful'
-book known to all the venerable company.</p>
-
-<p>The Sorbonne assembled, and Beda, holding the
-heretical poem in his hand, read the most flagrant
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">{224}</a></span>
-passages to his colleagues. 'Listen,' he said, and the
-attentive doctors kept their eyes fixed on the syndic.
-Beda read:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Jesus, true fisher thou of souls!</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">My only Saviour, only advocate!</div>
-<div class="verse">Since thou God's righteousness hast satisfied,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">I fear no more to fail at heaven's gate.</div>
-<div class="verse">My Spouse bears all my sins, though great they be,</div>
-<div class="verse">And all his merits places upon me....</div>
-<div class="verse">Come, Saviour, make thy mercies known....</div>
-<div class="verse">Jesus for me was crucified:</div>
-<div class="verse">For me the bitter death endured,</div>
-<div class="verse">For me eternal life procured.<span
- class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_401" id="Ref_401"
- href="#Foot_401">[401]</a></span></div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It has been said that Margaret's poems are theology
-in rhyme. It is true that her verses are not so elegant
-as those of our age, and that their spirit is more
-theological than the poetry of our days; but the
-theology is not that of the schools, it is that of the
-heart. What specially irritated the Sorbonne was the
-peace and assurance that Margaret enjoyed, precious
-privilege of a redeemed soul, which scholasticism had
-condemned beforehand. The queen, leaning upon the
-Saviour, seemed to have no more fear. 'Listen again,'
-said Beda:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Satan, where is now thy tower?</div>
-<div class="verse">Sin, all withered is thy power.</div>
-<div class="verse">Pain or death no more I fear,</div>
-<div class="verse">While Jesus Christ is with me here.</div>
-<div class="verse">Of myself no strength have I,</div>
-<div class="verse">But God, my shield, is ever nigh.<span
- class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_402" id="Ref_402"
- href="#Foot_402">[402]</a></span></div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="side">=ASSURANCE OF SALVATION.=</p>
-
-<p>Thus, argued the doctors of the Sorbonne, the queen
-imagines that sins are remitted gratuitously, no satisfaction
-being required of sinners. 'Observe the foolish
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">{225}</a></span>
-assurance,' said the syndic, 'into which the new
-doctrine may bring souls. This is what we find in
-the <i>Mirror</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse quote1">'Not hell's black depth, nor heaven's vast height,</div>
-<div class="verse">Nor sin with which I wage continual fight,</div>
-<div class="verse">Me for a single day can move,</div>
-<div class="verse">O holy Father, from thy perfect love.'<span
- class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_403" id="Ref_403"
- href="#Foot_403">[403]</a></span></div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This simple faith, supported by the promises of God,
-scandalised the doctors. 'No one,' said they, 'can
-promise himself anything certain as regards his own
-salvation, unless he has learnt it by a special revelation
-from God.' The council of Trent made this declaration
-an article of faith. 'The queen,' continued her accuser,
-'speaks as if she longed for nothing but heaven:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse quote1">'How beautiful is death,</div>
-<div class="verse">That brings to weary me the hour of rest!</div>
-<div class="verse">Oh! hear my cry and hasten, Lord, to me,</div>
-<div class="verse">And put an end to all my misery.'<span
- class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_404" id="Ref_404"
- href="#Foot_404">[404]</a></span></div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Some one having observed that the Queen of Navarre
-had not appended her name to the title of her work,
-her accuser replied: 'Wait until the end, the signature
-is there;' and then he read the last line:</p>
-
- <p class="center">The good that he has done to me, his Margaret.<span
- class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_405" id="Ref_405"
- href="#Foot_405">[405]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In a short time insinuations and accusations against
-the sister of the king were heard from every pulpit.
-Here a monk made his hearers shudder as he described
-Margaret's wicked <i>heresies</i>; and there another tried to
-make them laugh. 'These things,' says Theodore
-Beza, 'irritated the Sorbonne extremely, and especially
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">{226}</a></span>
-Beda and those of his temper, and they could not
-refrain from attacking the Queen of Navarre in their
-sermons.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_406" id="Ref_406" href="#Foot_406">[406]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Other circumstances excited the anger of the monks.
-Margaret did not love them. Monachism was one of
-the institutions which the reformers wished to see disappear
-from the Church, and the Queen of Navarre, in
-spite of her conservative character, did not desire to
-preserve it. The numerous abuses of the monastic
-life, the constraint with which its vows were often accompanied,
-the mechanical vocation of most of the conventuals,
-their idleness and sensuality, their practice
-of mendicancy as a trade, their extravagant pretensions
-to merit eternal life and to atone for their sins by
-their discipline, their proud conviction that they had
-attained a piety which went beyond the exigencies of
-the divine law, the discredit which the monastic institution
-cast upon the institutions appointed by God, on
-marriage, family, labour, and the state politic; finally,
-the bodily observances and macerations set above that
-living charity which proceeds from faith, and above
-the fruits of the Spirit of God in man:—all these
-things were, according to the reformers, entirely
-opposed to the doctrine of the Gospel.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE QUEEN OF NAVARRE'S TALES.=</p>
-
-<p>Margaret went further still. She had not spared the
-monks, but on the contrary had scourged them soundly.
-If Erasmus and Ulrich von Hutten had overwhelmed
-them with ridicule, the Queen of Navarre had in
-several tales depicted their grovelling character and
-dissolute life. She had, indeed, as yet communicated
-these stories to few besides her brother and mother,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">{227}</a></span>
-and never intended publishing them; but, some
-copies having been circulated among the attendants
-of the court, a few leaves had fallen into the hands
-of the monks, and this was the cause of their anger.
-Margaret, like many others of her time, was mistaken—such
-at least is our opinion—as to the manner in
-which the vices of the monasteries ought to be combated.
-Following the example of Menot, the most
-famous preacher of the middle ages, she had described
-faithfully, unaffectedly, and sometimes too broadly
-the avarice, debauchery, pride, and other vices of the
-convents. She had done better than this, however; to
-the silly nonsense and indecent discourses of the grey
-friars she had opposed the simple, severe, and spiritual
-teaching of the Gospel. 'They are moral tales,'
-says a contemporary author (who is not over favourable
-to Margaret); 'they often <i>degenerate</i> into real
-sermons, so that each story is in truth only the <i>preface
-to a homily</i>.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_407" id="Ref_407" href="#Foot_407">[407]</a></span>
-After a narrative in illustration of
-human frailty, Margaret begins her application thus:
-'Know that the first step man takes in confidence in
-himself, by so much he diverges from confidence in
-God.' After describing a false miracle by which an
-incestuous monk had tried to deceive Margaret's
-father, the Count of Angoulême, she added: 'His faith
-was proof against these external miracles. We have
-but one Saviour who, by saying <i>consummatum est</i> (it
-is finished), showed that we must wait for no successor
-to work out our salvation.' No one but the monks
-thought, in the sixteenth century, of being scandalised
-by these tales. There was then a freedom of language
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">{228}</a></span>
-which is impossible in our times; and everybody felt
-that if the queen faithfully painted the disorders of the
-monks and other classes of society, she was equally
-faithful in describing the strict morality of her own
-principles and the living purity of her faith. It was
-her daughter, the austere Jeanne d'Albret, who published
-the first correct edition of these <i>Novels</i>; and
-certainly she would not have done so, if such a publication
-had been likely to injure her mother's memory.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_408" id="Ref_408" href="#Foot_408">[408]</a></span>
-But times have changed; the book, harmless then, is so
-no longer; in our days the tales will be read and the sermons
-passed over: the youth of our generation would
-only derive harm from them. We acquit the author as
-regards her intentions, but we condemn her work. And
-(apologising to the friends of letters who will accuse
-us of barbarism) if we had to decide on the fate of
-this book, we would willingly see it experience a fate
-similar to that which is spoken of in the Bible, where
-we are told that <i>many Corinthians brought their books
-together and burned them</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_409" id="Ref_409" href="#Foot_409">[409]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE MIRROR SEIZED BY THE SORBONNE.=</p>
-
-<p>Let us return to the <i>Mirror</i>, in which the pious soul
-of Margaret is reflected.</p>
-
-<p>The Faculty decided that the first thing to be done
-was to search every bookseller's shop in the city and
-seize all the copies found there.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_410" id="Ref_410" href="#Foot_410">[410]</a></span>
-Here Beda disappeared:
-he no longer played the principal part. It
-is probable that the proceedings against him had
-already begun; but this persecution, by removing its
-leader, helped to increase the anger of the Romish
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">{229}</a></span>
-party, and consequently the efforts of the Sorbonne
-to ruin the Queen of Navarre. As Beda was absent,
-the priest Le Clerq was ordered to make the search.
-Accompanied by the university beadles, he went to
-every bookseller's shop, seized the <i>Mirror of the Sinful
-Soul</i>, wherever the tradesman had not put it out
-of sight, and returned to the Sorbonne laden with his
-spoils. After this the Faculty deliberated upon the
-measures to be taken against the author.</p>
-
-<p>This was no easy matter: they knew that the king, so
-hasty and violent, had much esteem and affection for
-his sister. The most prudent members of the Faculty
-hesitated. Their hesitation exasperated the monks,
-and the rage with which the more fanatical were
-seized extended even to the provinces. A meeting
-of the religious orders was held at Issoudun in Berry
-to discuss what ought to be done. The superior of
-the grey friars, an impetuous, rash, and hardly sane
-person, spoke louder than all the rest. 'Let us have
-less ceremony,' he exclaimed; 'put the Queen of
-Navarre in a sack and throw her into the river.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_411" id="Ref_411" href="#Foot_411">[411]</a></span>
-This speech, which circulated over France, having
-been reported to the Sorbonne doctors, alarmed them,
-and many counselled a less violent persecution, to
-which a Dominican friar answered: 'Do not be
-afraid; we shall not be alone in attacking this heretical
-princess, for the grand-master is her mortal
-enemy.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_412" id="Ref_412" href="#Foot_412">[412]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Montmorency, who next to Francis was now the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">{230}</a></span>
-most important personage in the kingdom, concealed
-under the cloak of religion a cruel heart and peevish
-disposition, and was feared by everybody, even by his
-friends. If he were gained over, the Queen of Navarre,
-attacked simultaneously by the priestly and
-the political party, must necessarily fall.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret supported these insults with admirable
-mildness. At this very time she was carrying on an
-almost daily correspondence with Montmorency, and
-subscribed all her letters: '<i>Your good aunt and friend</i>.'
-Full of confidence in this perfidious man, she called
-on him to defend her. 'Dear nephew,' she wrote, 'I beg
-you to believe that, as I am just now away from the
-king, it is necessary for you to help me in this matter.
-<i>I rely upon you</i>; and in this trust, which I am sure
-can never fail me, confides your good aunt and friend,
-Margaret.' The queen made some allusion to the
-violent language of the monks, but with great good-humour.
-'I have desired the bearer,' she said, 'to
-speak to you about <i>certain nonsense</i> that a Jacobin
-monk has uttered in the faculty of theology.' This
-was all: she did not make use of one bitter word.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_413" id="Ref_413" href="#Foot_413">[413]</a></span>
-Montmorency, that imperious courtier who before
-long persecuted the protestants without mercy, began
-to think himself strong enough to ruin Margaret, and
-we shall soon see what was the result of his perfidious
-insinuations. The Sorbonne deliberated as to what
-was to be done. According to the decrees of Sixtus
-IV. and Alexander VI., no books, treatises, or writings
-whatsoever<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_414" id="Ref_414" href="#Foot_414">[414]</a></span>
-could be printed without an express
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">{231}</a></span>
-authorisation; but the Queen of Navarre had printed
-her book without any such permission. The society,
-without pretending to know the author, declared the
-<i>Mirror of the Sinful Soul</i> prohibited, and put it in the
-<i>Index Librorum Prohibitorum</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE PRIESTS' COMEDY.=</p>
-
-<p>This was not enough. The priests excited the
-students; but while the former were playing a tragedy,
-the latter (or rather their teachers) resorted to
-satire. The scholars of the college of Navarre, who
-passed from the grammar to the logic class, were
-in the habit of giving a dramatic representation on the
-1st of October. The clerical heads of the college,
-wishing to render the queen hateful to the people and
-ridiculous to the court, composed a drama. The
-parts were distributed among the pupils; the rehearsals
-began, and those who were admitted to them
-agreed that the author had so seasoned the plot with
-gall and vinegar, that success was certain.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_415" id="Ref_415" href="#Foot_415">[415]</a></span>
-The report
-spread through the Latin quarter: and even
-Calvin heard of it, for he kept himself well informed
-of all that took place in the schools. While applying
-himself constantly to the work of God, he kept watch
-also upon the work of the adversary. There was so
-much talk about this play, that, when the day of the
-representation arrived, there was a rush for admission,
-and the hall was crammed. The monks and theologians
-took their seats in front, and the curtain rose.</p>
-
-<p>A queen, magnificently dressed and sitting calmly
-on the stage, was spinning, and seemed to be thinking
-of nothing but her wheel. 'It is the king's sister,'
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">{232}</a></span>
-said the spectators; 'and she would do well to keep
-to her distaff.'</p>
-
-<p>Next a strange character appeared: it was a woman
-dressed in white, carrying a torch and looking fiercely
-around her. Everybody recognised the fury Megæra.
-'That is Master Gerard,' they said, 'the almoner of
-the king's sister.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_416" id="Ref_416" href="#Foot_416">[416]</a></span>
-Megæra, advancing cautiously,
-drew near the queen with the intention of withdrawing
-her from her peaceful feminine occupation, and
-making her lay aside her distaff. She did not show
-her enmity openly, but came slily forward, putting on
-a smiling look, as if bringing additional light. She
-walked round and round the queen, and endeavoured
-to divert her attention by placing the torch boldly
-before her eyes.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_417" id="Ref_417" href="#Foot_417">[417]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At first the princess takes no heed, but continues
-spinning; at length, alas! she stops and permits
-herself to be attracted by the false light
-before her; she gives way, she quits her wheel....
-Megæra has conquered, and in exchange for the
-distaff she places the Gospel in the queen's hand.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_418" id="Ref_418" href="#Foot_418">[418]</a></span>
-The effect is magical; in a moment the queen is
-transformed. She was meek, she becomes cruel; she
-forgets her former virtuous habits; she rises, and,
-glaring around with savage eyes, takes up a pen
-to write out her sanguinary orders, and personally
-inflicts cruel tortures on her wretched victims. Scenes
-still more outrageous than these follow. The sensation
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">{233}</a></span>
-was universal! 'Such are the fruits of the Gospel!'
-said some of the spectators. 'It entices men away
-to novelties and folly; it robs the king of the devoted
-affection of his subjects, and devastates both Church
-and State.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_419" id="Ref_419" href="#Foot_419">[419]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=SUCCESS OF THE COMEDY.=</p>
-
-<p>At last the play was ended. The Sorbonne exulted;
-the Queen of Navarre, who had formerly lashed the
-priests and monks, was now scourged by them in
-return.</p>
-
-<p>Shouts of approbation rose from every bench, and
-the theologians clapped the piece with all their might;
-such applause as that of these reverend doctors had
-never been heard before.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_420" id="Ref_420" href="#Foot_420">[420]</a></span>
-There were, however, a few
-reasonable men to whom such a satire written against
-the king's sister appeared unbecoming. 'The authors
-have used neither veil nor figure of speech,' they
-said: 'the queen is openly and disgracefully insulted
-in the play.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_421" id="Ref_421" href="#Foot_421">[421]</a></span>
-The monks, finding they had gone
-too far, wished to hush up the matter; but in a short
-time the whole city was full of it, and a few days
-after a mischievous friend went and spoke of it at
-court, describing the whole play, scene after scene, to
-the queen herself.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_422" id="Ref_422" href="#Foot_422">[422]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Sorbonne, the highest authority in the Church
-after the pope, had struck the first blow; the second
-had been given in the colleges; the third was to be
-aimed at Margaret by the court. By ruining this
-princess in the eyes of her brother, the enemies of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">{234}</a></span>
-the Reformation would cause her the most unutterable
-sorrow, for she almost adored Francis. Afterwards
-they would get her banished to the mountains
-of Béarn. Montmorency lent himself to this intrigue;
-he advanced prudently, speaking to the king about
-heresy, of the dangers it was bringing upon France,
-and of the obligation to free the kingdom from it for
-the salvation of souls. Then, appearing to hesitate,
-he added: 'It is true, Sire, that if you wish to extirpate
-the heretics, you must begin with the Queen of
-Navarre.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_423" id="Ref_423" href="#Foot_423">[423]</a></span>
-... And here he stopped.</p>
-
-<p>Margaret was not informed of this perfidious proceeding
-immediately; but everybody told her that if
-she allowed the impertinence of the monks and the
-condemnation of the Sorbonne to pass unpunished, she
-would encourage their malice. She communicated
-what had taken place to her brother, declared herself
-to be the author of the <i>Mirror</i>, and insisted on the
-fact that it contained nothing but pious sentiments,
-and did not attack the doctrines of the Church:
-'None of us,' she said, 'have been found <i>sacramentarians</i>.'
-Finally, she demanded that the condemnation
-by the theological faculty should be rescinded,
-and the college of Navarre called to account.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CHRISTIANS MADE A SHOW.=</p>
-
-<p>Calvin watched the whole business very closely;
-it might almost be said, after reading his letter, that
-he had been among the spectators. He censured the
-behaviour of both scholars and masters.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_424" id="Ref_424" href="#Foot_424">[424]</a></span>
-'Christians,'
-he said later, 'are made a show of, as when in
-a triumph the poor prisoners are paraded through the
-city before being taken to prison and strangled. But
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">{235}</a></span>
-the spectacle made of believers is no hindrance to
-their happiness, for in the presence of God they
-remain in possession of glory, and the Spirit of God
-gives them a witness who dwells steadfast in their
-hearts.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_425" id="Ref_425" href="#Foot_425">[425]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_397" id="Foot_397" href="#Ref_397">[397]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Flor. Rémond, <i>Hist. de l'Hérésie</i>, pp. 847-849.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_398" id="Foot_398" href="#Ref_398">[398]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Sainte-Marthe, <i>Oraison funèbre de Marguerite</i>, p. 45.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_399" id="Foot_399" href="#Ref_399">[399]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The first edition of the <i>Miroir de l'Ame pécheresse</i>, was published at
-Alençon, by Simon Dubois.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_400" id="Foot_400" href="#Ref_400">[400]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Hist. des Eglises Réformées</i>, i. p. 8. Génin, <i>Notice sur
-Marguerite d'Angoulême</i>, p. iii. Freer, <i>Life of Marguerite d'Angoulême</i>,
-ii. p. 112.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_401" id="Foot_401" href="#Ref_401">[401]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Les Marguerites de la Marguerite</i>, i. p. 60.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_402" id="Foot_402" href="#Ref_402">[402]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. p. 63.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_403" id="Foot_403" href="#Ref_403">[403]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Les Marguerites</i>, i. p. 65.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_404" id="Foot_404" href="#Ref_404">[404]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. pp. 51, 57.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_405" id="Foot_405" href="#Ref_405">[405]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. p. 70.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_406" id="Foot_406" href="#Ref_406">[406]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Hist. des Eglises Réformées</i>, i. pp. 8, 9.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_407" id="Foot_407" href="#Ref_407">[407]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Génin, <i>Notice sur Marguerite d'Angoulême</i>, p. 95, preceding her
-letters.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_408" id="Foot_408" href="#Ref_408">[408]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Marguerite de Valois, Reine de Navarre, étude historique</i>, 1861.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_409" id="Foot_409" href="#Ref_409">[409]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Acts xix. 19.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_410" id="Foot_410" href="#Ref_410">[410]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quum excuterent officinas bibliopolarum.'—Calvini <i>Epp.</i> p. 2;
-Genève, 1617.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_411" id="Foot_411" href="#Ref_411">[411]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de la Reine de Navarre</i>, i. p. 282. Freer, <i>Life of Marguerite</i>,
-ii. p. 118. Castaigne, <i>Notice sur Marguerite</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_412" id="Foot_412" href="#Ref_412">[412]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Lettre de la Reine Marguerite à Montmorency. <i>Lettres de la Reine
-de Navarre</i>, i. p. 282.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_413" id="Foot_413" href="#Ref_413">[413]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de la Reine de Navarre</i>, i. pp. 282, 283.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_414" id="Foot_414" href="#Ref_414">[414]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Libri, tractatus aut scripturæ quæcunque.'—Raynald, <i>Annales
-Eccl.</i> xix. p. 514.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_415" id="Foot_415" href="#Ref_415">[415]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Fabula felle et aceto, ut ait ille, plusquam mordaci conspersa.'—Calvini
-<i>Epp.</i> p. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_416" id="Foot_416" href="#Ref_416">[416]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The word <i>Megæra</i> is made up of the first syllables of <i>Magister
-Gerardus</i>. 'Megæram appellant alludens ad nomen Magistri Gerardi.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_417" id="Foot_417" href="#Ref_417">[417]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Tunc Megæra illi faces admovens, ut acus et colum abjiceret.'—Calvini
-<i>Epp.</i> p. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_418" id="Foot_418" href="#Ref_418">[418]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Evangelia in manus recepit.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_419" id="Foot_419" href="#Ref_419">[419]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Flor. Rémond, <i>Hist. de l'Hérésie</i>, p. 844.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_420" id="Foot_420" href="#Ref_420">[420]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Mirabiliter applaudentibus theologis.'—Sturmius Bucero.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_421" id="Foot_421" href="#Ref_421">[421]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quam non figurate, nec obscure, conviciis suis proscindebant.—Calvini
-<i>Epp.</i> p. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_422" id="Foot_422" href="#Ref_422">[422]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Re ad reginam delata.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_423" id="Foot_423" href="#Ref_423">[423]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de la Reine de Navarre</i>, i. p. 58.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_424" id="Foot_424" href="#Ref_424">[424]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Indigna prorsus ea muliere.'—Calvini <i>Epp.</i> p. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_425" id="Foot_425" href="#Ref_425">[425]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvini <i>Opp.</i> passim.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">{236}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXVIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">TRIUMPH OF THE QUEEN OF NAVARRE.<br />
- (<span class="smc">Autumn 1533.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">FRANCIS was not at Paris when the storm broke
-out against his sister. In the summer of 1533,
-says the chronicle, 'the king visited his states and
-lordships of Languedoc, and made his triumphal
-entry into the city of Toulouse.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_426" id="Ref_426" href="#Foot_426">[426]</a></span>
-It was by letter,
-therefore, that he heard of what was taking place.
-All were asking what he would do. On the one hand,
-he had a great affection for the queen; but, on the
-other, he did not like his tranquillity to be disturbed;
-he protected learning, but he detested the Gospel.
-His better self gained the upper hand; his hatred of
-the absurdities of the monks was aroused; his great
-susceptibility made him take the affronts offered to
-his sister as if they had been offered to himself; and
-one after another he gave Margaret's enemies a forcible
-lesson.</p>
-
-<p>The first whom he taught his place was Montmorency.
-When the latter endeavoured to instil his
-perfidious insinuations into the king's mind, Francis
-silenced him: 'Not a word more about it,' he said:
-'she is too fond of me to take up with any religion that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">{237}</a></span>
-will injure my kingdom.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_427" id="Ref_427" href="#Foot_427">[427]</a></span>
-Margaret was informed
-subsequently of the attempt of the grand-master,
-'whom she never liked more,' adds Brantôme.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE FRANCISCAN FRIAR.=</p>
-
-<p>The second to feel the king's hand was the prior
-of the Franciscans who had proposed to sew Margaret
-in a sack and throw her into the Seine. 'Let
-him suffer the punishment he desired to inflict upon
-the queen,' he exclaimed. On hearing of this sentence
-the monks became irritated, and the populace,
-according to one historian, got up a riot. But the
-queen interceded for the wretch, and his life was
-spared; he was simply deprived of his ecclesiastical
-dignities and sent to the galleys for two years.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_428" id="Ref_428" href="#Foot_428">[428]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The play represented against the queen, as well as
-the priests who had composed it and superintended
-the representation, next engaged the king's attention;
-he resolved not to spare them, and at the least to put
-them in a terrible fright. He issued his orders, and
-immediately the lieutenant of police marched out and
-appeared at the head of a hundred archers before the
-college of Navarre.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_429" id="Ref_429" href="#Foot_429">[429]</a></span>
-'Surround the building,' he
-said, 'so that no one can escape.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_430" id="Ref_430" href="#Foot_430">[430]</a></span>
-The archers did
-as they were ordered. For this narrative we are
-again indebted to Calvin, who continued to take the
-deepest interest in the whole affair. The orders of
-the lieutenant were not executed without noise, and
-some of the professors and pupils, attracted to the
-windows, had watched the movements of the municipal
-officers. The author of the drama, who had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">{238}</a></span>
-expected nothing like this, and who was very vain and
-continually boasting of his pious exploit, happened to
-be in the room of a friend, joking about the queen
-and the famous comedy, when suddenly he heard an
-unusual noise.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_431" id="Ref_431" href="#Foot_431">[431]</a></span>
-He looked out, and, seeing the college
-surrounded by soldiers, became alarmed and
-confused. 'Hide me somewhere,' he exclaimed. He
-was put in a place where it was supposed nobody
-could find him: there are always good hiding-places
-in colleges. 'Stay there,' said his friends, 'until we
-find an opportunity for your escape.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_432" id="Ref_432" href="#Foot_432">[432]</a></span>
-And then
-the door was carefully shut.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=ARRESTS IN THE COLLEGE OF NAVARRE.=</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the lieutenant of police had entered
-with a few of his archers, and demanded the surrender
-of the author of the satire against the Queen of
-Navarre. The head of the college, a man of distinction,
-profound learning, and great influence, whom
-Calvin styles 'the great Master Lauret,' and Sturm
-'the king of the wise,' did not deserve his name. He
-refused everything. Upon this, the sergeants began
-to search the building for the culprit; and professors
-and students were in great anxiety. But every nook
-and corner was explored in vain; they found nothing.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_433" id="Ref_433" href="#Foot_433">[433]</a></span>
-The lieutenant thereupon ordered his archers to lay
-hands upon the actors in default of the author, and
-he himself arrested one of the persons who had taken
-a part in the play. This was the signal for a great
-tumult. Master Lauret, knowing himself to be more
-guilty than those youths, rushed upon the lieutenant
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">{239}</a></span>
-and endeavoured to rescue the scholar;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_434" id="Ref_434" href="#Foot_434">[434]</a></span>
-the students,
-finding themselves supported by their chief, fell upon
-the archers, and kicked and beat them, some even
-pelting them with stones.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_435" id="Ref_435" href="#Foot_435">[435]</a></span>
-There was a regular battle
-in the college of Navarre. But the law prevailed at
-last, and all the beardless actors fell into the hands of
-the police.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant was bent on knowing the nature of
-their offence. 'Now,' said he to the juvenile players,
-'you will repeat before me what you said on the
-stage.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_436" id="Ref_436" href="#Foot_436">[436]</a></span>
-The unlucky youths were forced to obey;
-in great confusion and hanging their heads, they repeated
-all their impertinence. 'I have not done,' resumed
-the lieutenant, turning to the head of the
-college; 'since the author of the crime is concealed
-from me, I must look to those who should have prevented
-such insolence. Master Lauret, you will go
-with me as well as these young scamps. As for you,
-Master Morin (he was the second officer of the college),
-you will keep your room.' He then departed
-with his archers; Lauret was taken to the house of a
-commissary, and the students were sent to prison.</p>
-
-<p>The most important affair still remained—the decision
-come to by the Sorbonne against Margaret's
-poem. The king, wishing to employ gentle means,
-simply ordered the rector to ask the faculty if they
-had really placed the <i>Mirror</i> in the list of condemned
-books,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_437" id="Ref_437" href="#Foot_437">[437]</a></span>
-and in that case to be good enough to point
-out what they saw to blame in it. To the rector,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">{240}</a></span>
-therefore, was confided the management of the affair.
-A new rector had been elected a few days before
-(10th of October); and whether the university perceived
-in what direction the wind was blowing, or
-wished to show its hostility to the enemies of the
-light, or desired to court the king's favour by promoting
-the son of one of his favourites, the chief
-physician to the court, they had elected, in spite of
-the faculty of theology, Nicholas Cop, a particular
-friend of Calvin's. 'Wonderful!' said the friends of
-the Gospel: 'the king and his sister, the rector of
-the university, and even, as some say, the Bishop of
-Paris, lean to the side of the Word of God; how can
-France fail to be reformed?'</p>
-
-<p>The new rector took the affair vigorously in hand.
-Won over to the Gospel by Calvin, he had learnt, in
-conversation with his friend, that sin is the great
-disease, the loss of eternal life the great death, and
-Jesus Christ the great physician. He was impatient
-to meet the enemies of the Reform, and the king
-gave him the desired opportunity.... He had several
-conversations with Calvin on the subject, and convened
-the four faculties on the 24th of October, 1532. The
-Bishop of Senlis, the king's confessor, read his Majesty's
-letter to them; after which the youthful rector, the
-organ of the new times, began to speak, and, full of the
-ardour which a recent conversion gives, he delivered
-(Calvin tells us) a long and severe speech,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_438" id="Ref_438" href="#Foot_438">[438]</a></span>
-a christian
-philippic, confounding the conspirators who were plotting
-against the Word of God. 'Licence is always
-criminal,' he said; 'but what is it when those who
-violate the laws are those whose duty it is to teach
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">{241}</a></span>
-others to observe them?... Now what have they done?
-They have attacked an excellent woman, who is alike
-the patroness of sound learning and mother of every
-virtue.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_439" id="Ref_439" href="#Foot_439">[439]</a></span>
-They penetrate into the sanctuary of the
-family of our kings, and encroach upon the sovereign
-majesty... What presumptuous temerity, what imprudent
-audacity!... The laws of propriety, the laws
-of the realm, the laws of God even, have all been violated
-by these impudent men... They are seditious
-and rebellious subjects.' Then turning to the faculty
-of theology, the rector continued: 'Put an end, Sirs,
-to these foolish and arrogant manners; or else, if
-you have not committed the offence, do not bear the
-responsibility. Do you desire to encourage the malice
-of those who, ever ready to perpetrate the most
-criminal acts, wipe their mouths afterwards and say:
-"It is not I who did it! it is the university!" while
-the university knows nothing about it?<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_440" id="Ref_440" href="#Foot_440">[440]</a></span>
-Do not mix
-yourselves up in a matter so full of danger, or ...
-beware of the terrible anger of the king.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_441" id="Ref_441" href="#Foot_441">[441]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE SORBONNE DISAVOWS ITS ACT.=</p>
-
-<p>This speech, the terror inspired by the king's name,
-and the recollection of Beda's imprisonment, disturbed
-the assembly. The theologians, who were all guilty,
-basely abandoned their colleague, who had only carried
-out a general resolution, and exclaimed unanimously:
-'We must disavow the rash deed.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_442" id="Ref_442" href="#Foot_442">[442]</a></span>
-The four faculties
-declared they had not authorised the act of which the
-king complained, and the whole responsibility fell on
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">{242}</a></span>
-Le Clerq, curé of St. André, who had taken the most
-active part in the matter. He was the Jonah to be
-thrown into the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Le Clerq was very indignant. He had gone up and
-down the city in the sight of everybody, he had ransacked
-the booksellers' shops to lay hold of the heretical
-<i>Mirror</i>; the booksellers, if necessary, could depose
-against him; but when he found himself abandoned by
-those who had urged him on, he was filled with anger
-and contempt. Still, he endeavoured to escape the
-danger that threatened him, and seeing among the
-audience several officers of the court, he said in French,
-so that all might understand him: 'In what words,
-Sirs, can I sufficiently extol the king's justice?<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_443" id="Ref_443" href="#Foot_443">[443]</a></span>
-Who can describe with what unshaken fidelity this great
-prince has on all occasions shown himself the valiant
-defender of the faith?<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_444" id="Ref_444" href="#Foot_444">[444]</a></span>
-I know that misguided men<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_445" id="Ref_445" href="#Foot_445">[445]</a></span>
-are endeavouring to pervert the king's mind, and conspiring
-the ruin of this holy faculty; but I have a firm
-conviction that their manœuvres will fail against his
-majesty's heroic firmness. I am proud of the resistance
-I make them. And yet I have done nothing of
-myself; I was delegated by an order of the university
-for the duty I have fulfilled.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_446" id="Ref_446" href="#Foot_446">[446]</a></span>
-And do you imagine
-that in discharging it, I had any desire to get up a plot
-against an august princess whose morals are so holy,
-whose religion is so pure,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_447" id="Ref_447" href="#Foot_447">[447]</a></span>
-as she proved not long ago
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">{243}</a></span>
-by the respect with which she paid the last honours to
-her illustrious mother? I consider such obscene productions
-as <i>Pantagruel</i> ought to be prohibited; but I
-place the <i>Mirror</i> simply among the suspected books,
-because it was published without the approbation of the
-faculty. If that is a crime, we are all guilty—you,
-gentlemen,' he said, turning towards his colleagues,
-'you as well as myself, although you disavow me.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_448" id="Ref_448" href="#Foot_448">[448]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE UNIVERSITY APOLOGISES.=</p>
-
-<p>This speech, so embarrassing to the doctors of the
-faculty, secured the triumph of the queen. 'Sirs,'
-said the king's confessor, 'I have read the inculpated
-volume, and there is really nothing to blot out of it,
-unless I have forgotten all my theology.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_449" id="Ref_449" href="#Foot_449">[449]</a></span>
-I call,
-therefore, for a decree that shall fully satisfy her
-majesty.' The rector now rose again and said: 'The
-university neither recognises nor approves of the censure
-passed upon this book. We will write to the
-king, and pray him to accept the apology of the
-university.' Thereupon the meeting broke up.</p>
-
-<p>Thus did Margaret, the friend of the reformers,
-come out victorious from this attack of the monks.
-'This matter,' says Beza, 'somewhat cowed the fury
-of our masters (<i>magistri</i>), and greatly strengthened
-the small number of believers.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_450" id="Ref_450" href="#Foot_450">[450]</a></span>
-The clear and striking
-account which Calvin has left us, has enabled us
-to watch the quarrel in all its phases. As we read
-it, we cannot help regretting that the reformer did not
-sometimes employ his noble talents in writing history.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_451" id="Ref_451" href="#Foot_451">[451]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">{244}</a></div>
-
-<p>An astonishing change was taking place in France.
-Calvin and Francis appeared to be almost walking
-together. Calvin watched with an observing eye the
-movements of men's minds, and his lofty understanding
-delighted in tracing out the approaching consequences.
-What did he see in the year 1533? The
-different classes of society are in motion; men of the
-world begin to speak more freely;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_452" id="Ref_452" href="#Foot_452">[452]</a></span>
-students, with the
-impetuosity of youth, are rushing towards the light;
-many young professors perceive that Scripture is
-above the pope; one of his most intimate friends is at
-the head of the university; the fanatical doctors are in
-exile; and the most influential men both in Church and
-State are favourable to the Reform. The Bishop of
-Senlis, confessor to the king; John du Bellay, Bishop
-of Paris, who possesses the king's entire confidence;
-his brother William, one of the greatest men in France,
-seem all to be placing themselves at the service of
-evangelical truth. William du Bellay, in particular,
-excited the greatest hopes among the reformers at this
-time; they entertained, indeed, exaggerated ideas
-about him. As Berquin was no more, and Calvin
-had hardly appeared, it was Du Bellay, in their opinion,
-who would reform France. 'O that the Lord would
-raise up many heroes like him!' said the pious Bucer;
-'then should we see Christ's kingdom appearing with
-the splendour of the sun.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_453" id="Ref_453" href="#Foot_453">[453]</a></span>
-The Sire de Langey
-(William du Bellay) is ready to suffer everything for
-Jesus Christ.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_454" id="Ref_454" href="#Foot_454">[454]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">{245}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=REFORM MOVEMENT IN FRANCE.=</p>
-
-<p>The most earnest men believed in the salutary
-influences which the Reformation would exert. In
-fact, by awakening the conscience and reviving faith,
-it was to be a principle of order and liberty; and
-the religious activity which it called into existence
-could not but be favourable to education and morality,
-and even to agriculture, manufactures, and commerce.
-If Francis I. had turned to the Gospel, the noblest
-minds would have followed him, and France would
-have enjoyed days of peace and marvellous prosperity.</p>
-
-<p>Among the enlightened men of whom we are speaking,
-we must include Philip de Chabot, seignior of
-Brion, admiral of France, a favourite with the king,
-and inclined to the cause of the Reform;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_455" id="Ref_455" href="#Foot_455">[455]</a></span>
-Maure Musée, groom of the chamber, also won over to the
-Gospel; and the pious Dame de Cany, who influenced
-her sister, the Duchess of Etampes, in favour of the
-reformed.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_456" id="Ref_456" href="#Foot_456">[456]</a></span>
-That frivolous woman was far from being
-converted; but if the Reform was reproached with the
-protection she afforded it, the evangelicals called to
-mind that Marcia, mistress to the Emperor Commodus,
-as the duchess was to the king, had protected the
-early christians, and primitive Christianity was none
-the less respected for it.</p>
-
-<p>Calvin did not place his hope in the powers of the
-world: 'Our wall of brass,' he said, 'is to have God
-propitious to us. <i>If God be for us</i>—that is our only
-support. There is no power under heaven or above
-which can withstand his arm, and having him for
-our defender we need fear no evil.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_457" id="Ref_457" href="#Foot_457">[457]</a></span>
-And yet the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">{246}</a></span>
-blows which Francis I. had warded from the head of
-the queen were to fall upon Cop and Calvin himself.
-But before we come to these persecutions, we must
-follow the king, who, quitting Toulouse and Montpellier,
-proceeded to Marseilles to meet the pope.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_426" id="Foot_426" href="#Ref_426">[426]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Chronique du Roi François I.</i> p. 98.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_427" id="Foot_427" href="#Ref_427">[427]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de la Reine de Navarre</i>, i. p. 88.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_428" id="Foot_428" href="#Ref_428">[428]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Castaigne, <i>Notice sur Marguerite</i>. Freer, <i>Life of Marguerite</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_429" id="Foot_429" href="#Ref_429">[429]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Prætor stipatus centum apparitoribus gymnasium adit.'—Calvini
-<i>Epp.</i> p. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_430" id="Foot_430" href="#Ref_430">[430]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Suis jussis domum circumcidere, ne quis elaberetur.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_431" id="Foot_431" href="#Ref_431">[431]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Sed cum forte in amici cubiculo esset, tumultum prius exaudisse.'—Calvini
-<i>Epp.</i> p. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_432" id="Foot_432" href="#Ref_432">[432]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'E quibus per occasionem fugeret.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_433" id="Foot_433" href="#Ref_433">[433]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Autor sceleris deprehendi non poterat.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_434" id="Foot_434" href="#Ref_434">[434]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Dum vult obsistere gymnasiarcha.'—Calvini <i>Epp.</i> p. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_435" id="Foot_435" href="#Ref_435">[435]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Lapides a nonnullis pueris conjecti sunt.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_436" id="Foot_436" href="#Ref_436">[436]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quod pro scena recitassent jussit repetere.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_437" id="Foot_437" href="#Ref_437">[437]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Improbatæ religionis.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_438" id="Foot_438" href="#Ref_438">[438]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Longa et acerba oratione.'—Calvini <i>Epp.</i> p. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_439" id="Foot_439" href="#Ref_439">[439]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In reginam virtutum omnium et bonarum literarum matrem arma
-sumere.'—Calvini <i>Epp.</i> p. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_440" id="Foot_440" href="#Ref_440">[440]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut dicant Academiam fecisse.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_441" id="Foot_441" href="#Ref_441">[441]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ne se immiscerent tanto discrimini, ne regis iram experiri vellent.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_442" id="Foot_442" href="#Ref_442">[442]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Omnium sententia fuit factum abjurandum.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_443" id="Foot_443" href="#Ref_443">[443]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Magnificis verbis regis integritatem.'—Calvini <i>Epp.</i> p. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_444" id="Foot_444" href="#Ref_444">[444]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Fidei animosum protectorem.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_445" id="Foot_445" href="#Ref_445">[445]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Aliquos sinistros homines.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_446" id="Foot_446" href="#Ref_446">[446]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Se quidem fuisse delegatum Academiæ decreto.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_447" id="Foot_447" href="#Ref_447">[447]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Fœminam tam sanctis moribus, tam pura religione præditam.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_448" id="Foot_448" href="#Ref_448">[448]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Omnes esse culpæ affines, si qua esset, quantumvis abnegarent.'—Calvini
-<i>Epp.</i> p. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_449" id="Foot_449" href="#Ref_449">[449]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nisi oblitus esset suæ theologiæ.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_450" id="Foot_450" href="#Ref_450">[450]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théodore de Bèze, <i>Hist. Eccl.</i> p. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_451" id="Foot_451" href="#Ref_451">[451]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-This letter is the first in the collection published by Theodore Beza,
-and will be the tenth in that to be published by Dr. Bonnet.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_452" id="Foot_452" href="#Ref_452">[452]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Omnes cœperunt loqui liberius.'—Bucer to Blaarer. Strasburg
-MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_453" id="Foot_453" href="#Ref_453">[453]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Dominus excitet multos isti heroï similes.'—Bucer to Chelius,
-quoted by Schmidt.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_454" id="Foot_454" href="#Ref_454">[454]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quidvis pati pro Christo.'—Sturm to Bucer. Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_455" id="Foot_455" href="#Ref_455">[455]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Admiralius adest, qui unice nobis favet.'—Sturm to Bucer, quoted
-by Schmidt.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_456" id="Foot_456" href="#Ref_456">[456]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de Jean Calvin</i>, i. p. 335, edit. J. Bonnet.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_457" id="Foot_457" href="#Ref_457">[457]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvini <i>Opp.</i> passim.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">{247}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXIX.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CATHERINE DE MEDICI GIVEN TO FRANCE.<br />
- (<span class="smc">October 1533.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THIS interview of the pope with the king might be
-more injurious to the Gospel than all the attacks
-of the Sorbonne. If Clement united sincerely with
-Francis against Charles; if Catherine de Medici became
-the pledge of union between Rome and France;
-would not the Reformation soon be buried by the
-mournful glare of the pale torches of this fatal marriage?
-Yet men still hoped that the projected interview
-would not take place. In fact, Henry VIII.
-and the emperor did all they could to prevent Francis
-from meeting the pope.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_458" id="Ref_458" href="#Foot_458">[458]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE INTENDED MARRIAGE.=</p>
-
-<p>But Clement VII., more charmed than ever with
-a matrimonial union between the family of the Florentine
-merchants and that of St. Louis, cared naught for
-the emperor or the king of England; and about the
-end of April 1533, he convoked a sacred college at
-Rome, to whom he communicated his plans. They
-already knew something about them: the Roman cardinals
-smiled and congratulated his Holiness, but the
-Spanish cardinals looked very much out of humour.
-The pope tried to persuade them that he only desired
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">{248}</a></span>
-this marriage for the glory of God and of the Church.
-'It is for <i>holy opportunities</i>,' he told them. No one
-dared oppose it openly; but, on leaving the meeting,
-the emperor's cardinals hurried to his ministers and
-informed them of the pontifical communication. The
-latter lost no time; they called upon all their friends,
-managed them with great ability, and, by dint of energy
-and stratagem, succeeded in holding a congregation at
-the beginning of June, at which none of the French
-cardinals were present. Not daring to oppose the
-marriage itself, Charles's prelates displayed extreme
-sensibility for the honour and welfare of the pope.
-They appeared to be suddenly seized with a violent
-affection for Clement. 'What! the pope in France!'
-they exclaimed. 'Truly it must be something more
-than the marriage of a niece to <i>move a pope from his
-seat</i>.' Then, as if Clement's health was very precious
-to them, and the Roman air excellent, the crafty
-Spaniards brought forward sanitary reasons. 'Such
-a journey would be dangerous, <i>considering the extreme
-heat of Provence</i>.'—'Never mind that,' cunningly
-answered the pope; 'I shall not start until after the
-first rains.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=IMPERIAL OBSTACLES.=</p>
-
-<p>Charles then sought other means to prevent the
-conference. He will contrive that the pope shall delay
-his departure from week to week, until the winter sets
-in, and then it is not to be thought of. A very natural
-occasion for these delays presented itself. The marriage
-of Henry VIII. with Anne Boleyn having been made
-public, the emperor haughtily demanded that justice
-should be done to the queen, his aunt. Here, certainly,
-was matter enough to occupy the court of Rome for
-months; but Clement, who had let the English business
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">{249}</a></span>
-drag along for years, being eager to finish the <i>other</i>
-marriage, hastily assembled a consistory, and pronounced
-against Henry VIII. all the censures which
-Charles V. demanded. Then, in his zeal forgetting
-his usual cunning, he made Catherine's marriage the
-peroration of his speech, and having done with England
-and its king, he ended by saying: 'Gentlemen,
-if any of you desire to make the voyage with me, you
-must hold yourselves in readiness for departure.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_459" id="Ref_459" href="#Foot_459">[459]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Immediate preparations were made for fitting up
-the galleys of Rhodes in which the pope was to sail.
-All was bustle in the harbour. Those long low barks
-were supplied with everything necessary for subsistence,
-for sailing, and even for attack and defence.
-The oars were fixed in their places; the yards and
-sails were set; the flags were hoisted.... Then the
-imperialists, trying to outwit the pope, had recourse to
-a new stratagem; they were smitten with a sudden
-fondness for Coron.—'Coron, that city in the south
-of Greece,' they said to the pope, 'a city of such great
-importance to christendom, is attacked by the Turks;
-we require the galleys of Rhodes to defend it; we must
-deliver the Greeks our brothers from slavery, and
-restore the empire of the East.'... The pope understood;
-it was difficult to beat him in cunning. 'Well,
-well,' said he, 'make haste; fly to the help of christendom....
-I will lend you the said galleys, and will add
-my own ... and ... I will make the passage on board
-the galleys of France.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_460" id="Ref_460" href="#Foot_460">[460]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then the emperor turned to the Swiss; the Dukes of
-Savoy and Milan, also, fearing that at the projected interview
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">{250}</a></span>
-something would be <i>brewed</i> to their detriment,
-united with him. These three princes attempted to
-induce the catholic cantons to enter the Italian league.
-If these terrible Helvetic bands pass the Alps, all idea
-of travelling will be abandoned by the pope. How
-could he expose himself to pikes and arquebuses? Clement VII.
-had not the warlike disposition of Julius II.
-'The King of France favours the protestants,' said
-Charles's deputies to the catholic cantons; 'he desires
-to put the evangelical cantons in a condition to avenge
-the defeat at Cappel; but if you join us, you have
-nothing to fear.' At these words the catholics became
-eager<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_461" id="Ref_461" href="#Foot_461">[461]</a></span>
-to enter the league against the king and the
-pope; but Francis sent them money to keep quiet, and
-they did not move.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_462" id="Ref_462" href="#Foot_462">[462]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Were all his manœuvres to fail? Never had a marriage
-been heard of against which so many obstacles
-had been raised; but it was written in the book of
-fate, said many; the arms forged against it could not
-succeed; and the haughty Charles vainly agitated all
-Europe—Swiss, Germans, Greeks, and Turks. His
-ministers now had recourse to another stratagem.
-Everybody knew that the pope was not brave. They
-revived their tender affection for his person; and as
-Switzerland was not to be tempted, they turned to
-Africa. 'Let your Holiness beware,' they said; 'if
-you undertake this voyage, you will certainly fall into
-the hands of the Moors.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_463" id="Ref_463" href="#Foot_463">[463]</a></span>
-... A fleet of pirates, lurking
-behind the islands of Hyères, will suddenly appear,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">{251}</a></span>
-fall on the ship in which you are sailing, and carry
-you off.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_464" id="Ref_464" href="#Foot_464">[464]</a></span>
-This time the pope was staggered. The
-terror inspired by the barbarian ships was at that time
-very great. To be carried away by the Moors! A
-pope captive in Algiers or Tunis! What a dreadful
-thought!</p>
-
-<p>Will he go or will he not? was the question
-Europe set itself. But the matter was violently canvassed
-at Rome, where Guelphs and Ghibelines almost
-came to blows. Arguments for the marriage, and
-consequently for the voyage, were not wanting. 'The
-time has come,' said the papists, 'for a bold stroke to
-prevent France from being lost like Germany and
-England.' There were loud discussions in the convents
-and churches, and even in the public places. A
-Franciscan of the Low Countries, Herbom by name,
-a monk of fiery fanaticism, stirred up the pontifical
-city. 'Luther, Zwingle, and Œcolampadius,' he said,
-'are soldiers of Pilate; they have crucified Jesus
-Christ.... But, alas! alas! this crime is repeated
-in our days ... at Paris. Yes, even at Paris, by
-certain disciples of Erasmus.' It was clearly necessary
-for the pope and his little niece to hasten to France,
-in order to prevent what these blaspheming monks
-dared to call the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE POPE DETERMINES TO GO.=</p>
-
-<p>At last Clement made up his mind. He would
-brave the fury of the waves, and risk the attacks of
-the corsairs, in order to conquer the <i>soldiers of Pilate</i>
-and give a royal husband to his niece. The galleys
-of France, commanded by the Duke of Albany, left
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">{252}</a></span>
-Marseilles in September to fetch the pope, who had
-gone to Pisa, making a boast, wherever he went, of the
-most noble disinterestedness. 'I am going to this
-interview,' he said, 'in order to procure the peace of
-Europe, to prepare an expedition against the infidels,
-to lead back the King of England to the right path,
-and, in a word, solely for the interests of christendom.'
-Then, after thus disguising himself, like the wolf in the
-fable, under a borrowed dress, he showed the tip of
-his ear, and begged the Duke of Albany to escort <i>their
-common relative</i> to Nice, where she would wait for
-further orders. The honour done to his family was
-so great that doubts were continually arising in his
-mind about the trustworthiness of the French king's
-promises. He would not take his niece with him to
-Marseilles, for fear he should have to bring her back.
-He will see Francis alone first; he will speak to him
-and sound him. Clement believed that his piercing
-eye would read the king's heart to the very bottom.
-When all his fears are removed, Catherine shall come
-to France; but until then, she shall only go part of the
-way.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_465" id="Ref_465" href="#Foot_465">[465]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The young lady departed for Nice, and people said,
-pointing to her as they saw her going on board ship:
-'There is the real cause of the strange journey of a
-pope to France! If it were a matter touching the
-safety of the Church, Clement would not do so much;
-but it is to place a Medici beside a throne, and
-perhaps set her upon it.'... The French fleet put to
-sea: the ship, on whose mainmast the standard of
-France had been hoisted, exhibited a sight at once gay
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">{253}</a></span>
-and sad. Beneath the flags and banners, at the side
-of the Duke of Albany, and in the midst of a brilliant
-retinue, might be seen a kind of little fairy, who was
-then making her first appearance in the world. She
-was a young creature, of middle stature, with sparkling
-eyes and bell-like voice, who appeared to possess
-some supernatural power, and singularly fascinated
-every one that came near her. Her enchantments
-and her philtres were the subtle poison on which the
-papacy relied for destroying heresy. This child,
-between thirteen and fourteen years of age, skipped
-with joy about the stately ship. 'I am going to be
-the daughter-in-law of the glorious King of France,'
-she said to herself. Death, with whom this strange
-creature seemed to have made a secret and terrible
-treaty, was in truth erelong to raise her to the summit
-of power. The galleys of Albany, after having conveyed
-<i>the girl</i> to Nice (it is Guicciardini's word),
-returned to Leghorn, the port of Pisa, and on the 4th
-of October the pope, with the cardinals and all his
-household, put to sea.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=PAPAL PLANS, FRENCH HOPES.=</p>
-
-<p>The papal fleet, all fluttering with banners, had a
-smooth passage.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_466" id="Ref_466" href="#Foot_466">[466]</a></span>
-Clement could without interruption
-meditate on a thousand different projects. Marry
-Catherine to the son of the King of France; free himself,
-thanks to the support of this prince, from the
-patronage of the emperor whom he detested; put off
-indefinitely the council which Charles had been so
-bold as to promise to the protestants; and finally
-crush the Reformation, both in France and elsewhere....
-Such were Clement's projects during the voyage.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">{254}</a></span>
-Before leaving Rome, he had drawn up (1st of September)
-a bull against the heretics; he had it on board
-the ship, and he purposed demanding its immediate
-execution from Francis, as a wedding present. The
-winds blew softly in the direction of Marseilles; all
-congratulated themselves on the beauty of the passage;
-but this fleet, in appearance so inoffensive, which
-glided so smoothly over the waters of the Mediterranean,
-carried, like the bark of Ulysses, stores of
-future tempests.</p>
-
-<p>Opinions were much divided in France about the
-pope's voyage. If Clement satisfied Francis, the
-Reform was ruined; if he thwarted the king, France
-would follow the example of England. Everybody
-admitted the hypothesis that pleased him best.
-'Francis and Clement,' said the reformed, 'follow
-such opposite courses, that it is impossible for them
-to coincide.'—'The king and the pope,' said the ultramontanists,
-'are about to be united by indissoluble
-bonds, and popery will be restored in France in all
-its exclusive supremacy.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_467" id="Ref_467" href="#Foot_467">[467]</a></span>
-There were however some
-of the school of Erasmus who remained in doubt. 'As
-for me,' wrote Professor Sturm to Bucer, 'I desire
-much that popery should be overthrown, but ... I
-fear greatly that it will be restored.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_468" id="Ref_468" href="#Foot_468">[468]</a></span>
-Sturm did
-not compromise himself. To which side will Marseilles
-make Francis I. incline? Historians have decided
-that he was won over to Rome; but after hearing
-the historians, we must listen to history.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">{255}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE POPE AT MARSEILLES.=</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of October 1533, the ancient city
-of the Phocæans was in a state of great excitement;
-the King of France and the pope were coming; what
-an honour! It is well known that the inhabitants of
-that city are quick, enthusiastic, and fond of show
-and parade. Watchmen had been placed on the
-highest points to telegraph the approaching fleet. At
-length, on the 4th of October, the castles of If and
-Notre Dame de la Garde suddenly gave the looked-for
-signals. One cry only was heard in the streets of
-Marseilles: 'The flotilla with the pope on board has
-come in sight.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_469" id="Ref_469" href="#Foot_469">[469]</a></span>
-A feverish agitation pervaded the city;
-the sound of trumpets, clarions, and hautboys filled
-the air; the people hurried to the harbour. Nobles
-and prelates went on board the ships that had been
-kept ready; their sails were unfurled, and in a short
-time this extemporised fleet saluted that of the pope
-with deafening acclamations. Many devout catholics
-trembled with joy and admiration; they could hardly
-believe their eyes. 'Behold the real representative
-of Christ,' they said, 'the father of all christians, the
-only man who can at will give new laws to the
-Church;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_470" id="Ref_470" href="#Foot_470">[470]</a></span>
-the man who has never been mistaken and
-never will be; whose name is alone in the world,
-<i>vice-God</i> upon earth.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_471" id="Ref_471" href="#Foot_471">[471]</a></span>
-Clement smiled: in Italy he
-had never heard such exclamations or witnessed such
-enthusiasm. O France! truly art thou the eldest
-daughter of the Church! He did not know that
-vanity, curiosity, love of pomp, and a fondness for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">{256}</a></span>
-noise had much to do with this rapture, and that
-France, like her king Clovis, worships what it has
-cast down, and casts down what it has worshipped.
-The pope had no leisure to indulge in such reflections.
-At the moment his galley entered the harbour, three
-hundred pieces of artillery fired a salute. Notre Dame
-de la Garde, the tower of St. John, the abbey of St.
-Victor, the harbour and its vicinity were all on fire.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_472" id="Ref_472" href="#Foot_472">[472]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Francis was not to be seen among the vast and
-brilliant crowd which filled Marseilles. There were
-princes of the blood, prelates, diplomatists, magistrates,
-courtiers, and warriors; but the king, although
-at the gates of the city, kept himself in the background
-and apart. However, when the night came,
-and everybody had retired to their quarters to rest
-after so fatiguing a day, a man, wrapped up in a
-cloak, entered the city, glided mysteriously along the
-dark streets, and stopped at the gate of the palace
-where the pope was lodging. This man was immediately
-introduced into the apartments where Clement
-was preparing to take his repose: it was the King of
-France.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_473" id="Ref_473" href="#Foot_473">[473]</a></span>
-... What was the object of this nocturnal
-visit? Was it because the king wished to sound the
-pontiff in secret, before receiving him officially? Was
-it the etiquette of the time? However that may be,
-Francis, after a secret and confidential conversation,
-returned with the same mystery, wearing a very
-satisfied look. The pope had promised everything,
-all the rights, all the possessions,—in a word, whatever
-he had made up his mind not to give.</p>
-
-<p>The next day the pope, dressed in his pontifical
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">{257}</a></span>
-robes, and seated in a magnificent chair borne on
-men's shoulders, made his solemn entry, attended by
-his cardinals, also in all the brilliancy of their costume,
-and by a great number of lords and ladies of
-France and Italy.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_474" id="Ref_474" href="#Foot_474">[474]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=LATIN ADDRESS TO THE POPE.=</p>
-
-<p>Early in the morning, and while the streets were
-echoing with cries of joy, the president of the parliament,
-living in one of the handsomest houses of
-Marseilles, was pacing his room with anxious brow, gesticulating
-and carefully repeating some Latin phrases.
-That magistrate had been commissioned, as a great
-orator, to deliver an address to the pope; but as
-unfortunately Latin was not familiar to him, he had
-had his speech written out beforehand, and by dint
-of labour he had so far committed it to memory,
-as to be able to repeat it off-hand—provided there
-was no change made in it.</p>
-
-<p>At the same moment, a messenger from the pope
-appeared at the king's levée with a paper, and requested,
-on behalf of the pontiff, who had a great fear
-of the terrible Charles V., that the said oration should
-be delivered as it was written on the paper he brought
-with him, so as to give the emperor no offence. Francis
-despatched Clement's draft to the president. What
-a disappointment! The new address was precisely
-the contrary of what he had been learning by heart.
-The famous orator became confused: he did not know
-what to do.... Alas! he had but a few minutes to
-spare, and the sonorous words which would have
-offended the great emperor, and which he had counted
-on reciting in his loudest voice, kept recurring to his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">{258}</a></span>
-mind. He fancied himself in the presence of that
-magnificent assembly of proud Roman prelates who
-knew Latin so well.... There could be no doubt
-about it ... he would become embarrassed, he would
-stammer, he would not remember what he had to say,
-and would break down. He was quite in a fever.
-The president, no longer master of himself, hurried
-off to the king, and begged him to give the office
-to some one else. 'Very well, then,' said Francis to
-Bishop du Bellay, 'you must undertake it.' At
-that moment the procession started. It reached
-its destination; the Bishop of Paris, although taken
-unawares, put a bold face upon the matter; and being
-a good Latin scholar and able orator, he executed his
-commission wonderfully well.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_475" id="Ref_475" href="#Foot_475">[475]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The official conferences began shortly after, and
-neither king nor pope spared protestations, stratagems,
-or falsehoods: the pope particularly excelled in
-the latter article. 'He used so much artifice in the
-business,' says Guicciardini,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_476" id="Ref_476" href="#Foot_476">[476]</a></span>
-'that the king confided
-marvellously in him.' What Francis required to compensate
-him for the misalliance was not much: he
-asked for the duchies of Urbino and Milan, Pisa,
-Leghorn, Reggio, Modena, Parma, Piacenza, and
-Genoa. But if the king was inexhaustible in his
-demands, the pope was equally so in his promises,
-being the more liberal as he intended to give nothing.
-Clement, touched by the good-nature of Francis, who
-appeared to believe all that was told him, sent at last
-to Nice for the youthful Catherine.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=BULL AGAINST HERETICS.=</p>
-
-<p>It was not decorous for the pope to appear to have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">{259}</a></span>
-come so far only to give away a young lady. He
-proposed, therefore, in order to conceal his intrigues,
-to issue the bull against the heretics which he had
-brought with him. It was his wedding present, and
-nothing could better inaugurate Catherine's entry into
-France. But the diplomatist, William du Bellay, did
-all in his power to prevent this truly Roman transaction.
-He had several very animated conversations on
-this subject with the cardinals and with the pope himself.
-He represented to him the necessity of satisfying
-the protestants of Germany: 'A free council
-and mutual concessions,' he said; but Clement was
-deaf. Du Bellay would not give way; he struggled
-manfully with the pontiff, and conjured him not to
-attempt to put down the Reformation with violence.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_477" id="Ref_477" href="#Foot_477">[477]</a></span>
-He used similar language to Francis, and laid before
-him some letters which he had recently received from
-Germany; but the king replied that he was taking the
-matter too seriously. The bull of excommunication
-was simply a <i>manner</i>, a papal form ... and nothing
-more. The bull was published, and there was a great
-noise about it. Francis and Clement, each believing
-in the other's good faith, were deceiving one another.
-The only truth in all this Marseilles business was the
-gift the pope made to France of Catherine de Medici.
-That was quite enough certainly.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the pope's niece arrived, preparations
-were made for the marriage. The ministers of the king
-and of the pope took the contract in hand, and the
-latter having spoken of an annuity of one hundred
-thousand crowns: 'It is very little for so noble an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">{260}</a></span>
-alliance,' said the treasurers of Francis I.—'True,'
-replied Strozzi, one of Clement's most able servants;
-'but observe that her grace the Duchess of Urbino
-brings moreover three rings of inestimable value ...
-Genoa, Milan, and Naples.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_478" id="Ref_478" href="#Foot_478">[478]</a></span>
-These diamonds, whose
-brilliancy was to dazzle the king and France, never
-shone on Catherine's fingers or on the crown of
-Henry II.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=MARRIAGE OF CATHERINE AND HENRY.=</p>
-
-<p>The ceremony was conducted with great magnificence.
-The bride advanced, young, brilliant, radiant
-with joy, with smiling lips and sparkling eyes, her
-head adorned with gold, pearls, and flowers; and in
-her train ... Death.... Death, who was always her
-faithful follower, who served her even when she would
-have averted his dart; who, by striking the dauphin,
-was to make her the wife of the heir to the crown; by
-striking her father-in-law, to make her queen; and
-by striking down successively her husband and all
-her sons, to render her supreme controller of the
-destinies of France. In gratitude, therefore, towards
-her mysterious and sinister ally, the Florentine woman
-was forty years later, and in a night of August, to give
-him a magnificent entertainment in the streets of Paris,
-to fill a lake with blood that he might bathe therein,
-and organise the most terrible festival that had ever
-been held in honour of Death. Catherine approached
-the altar, trembling a little, though not agitated. The
-pope officiated, desirous of personally completing the
-grandeur of his house, and tapers without number
-were lighted. The King and Queen of France, with
-a crowd of courtiers dressed in the richest costumes,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">{261}</a></span>
-surrounded the altar. Catherine de Medici placed
-her cold hand in the faithless hand of Henry of Valois,
-which was to deprive the Reform of all liberty, and
-France herself, in the <i>Unhappy Peace</i>, of her glory and
-her conquests. Clement gave his pontifical blessing
-to this tragic pair. The marriage was concluded; the
-<i>girl</i>, as Guicciardini calls her, was a wife; her eyes
-glanced as with fire. Was it a beam of happiness and
-pride? Probably. We might ask also if it was not
-the joy of the hyena scenting from afar the graves
-where it could feast on the bodies of the dead; or of
-the tiger espying from its lair in the African desert
-the groups of travellers upon whom it might spring
-and quench its raging thirst for blood. But although
-the appetites which manifested themselves in the
-St. Bartholomew massacre already existed in the germ
-in this young wife, there is no evidence (it must be
-acknowledged) that she allowed herself to be governed
-at Marseilles by these cruel promptings.</p>
-
-<p>There are creatures accursed of God, who, under
-a dazzling veil and fair outward show, impart to a
-nation an active power of contagion, the venom of
-corruption, an invisible principle of death which, circulating
-through the veins, infects with its morbid
-properties all parts of the body, and strikes the physical
-powers with general prostration. It was thus
-at the commencement of the history of the human
-race that a fallen being deceived man; by him sin
-entered into the world, and <i>death by sin</i>. This first
-scene, which stands alone, has been repeated, however,
-from time to time in the world, though on a smaller
-scale. It happened to France when the daughter of
-the Medici crept into the family of its kings. No
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">{262}</a></span>
-doubt the disease was already among the people, but
-Catherine's arrival was one of those events which bring
-the corruption to a head. This woman, so false and
-dissolute, so vile as to crawl at the feet of her husband's
-mistress and pick up secrets for her; this woman,
-who gave birth to none but enervated, idiotic,
-distempered, and vicious children, not only corrupted
-her own sons, but infected an entire brilliant society
-that might have been noble and just (as Coligny
-showed), and instilled her deadly venom into its
-veins. The niece of the pope poisoned France.</p>
-
-<p>'Clement's joy was incredible,' says Guicciardini.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_479" id="Ref_479" href="#Foot_479">[479]</a></span>
-He had even a feeling of gratitude, and resolved to
-give the king four <i>hats</i> for four French bishops. Did
-he intend that these hats should supply the place of
-Urbino, Genoa, Milan, and Naples? Nobody knows.
-One of the new cardinals was Odet de Chatillon, then
-eleven years old, brother of the immortal Coligny,
-and subsequently one of the supporters of protestantism
-in France. The king, wishing to appear grateful
-for so many favours, wrote to the Bishop of Paris,
-that 'as the crime of heresy increased and multiplied,
-he should proceed to act against the heretics.'—'Do
-not fail,' he added.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_480" id="Ref_480" href="#Foot_480">[480]</a></span>
-But the Bishop of Paris, brother
-of the diplomatist Du Bellay, was the least inclined
-of all the prelates in France to persecution. Francis
-knew this well, and for that very reason, perhaps,
-gave him the order.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE POPE'S HEALTH DECLINES.=</p>
-
-<p>The pope, delighted at having made so good a bargain
-in the city of merchants, embarked on the 20th
-of November to return to Rome. Excess of joy was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">{263}</a></span>
-hurtful to him, as it had been to his cousin Leo X.
-The threats of the emperor, who demanded a council;
-the pressure of Francis I., who claimed Catherine's
-<i>three rings</i>;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_481" id="Ref_481" href="#Foot_481">[481]</a></span>
-the quarrels of his two nephews, who
-were fighting at Florence,—all filled poor Clement
-with uneasiness and sorrow. He told his attendants
-that his end was near; and immediately after
-his return, he had the ring and the garments prepared
-which are used at the burial of the popes.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_482" id="Ref_482" href="#Foot_482">[482]</a></span>
-His only consolation, the approaching destruction of
-the protestants, seemed to fail him in his last days.
-Even during his interview with the pope, Francis
-was secretly intriguing to unite with the most formidable
-of the enemies of Rome. After embracing
-the old papacy with apparent emotion, the chivalrous
-king gallantly held out his hand to the young Reformation.
-In the space of two months he had two
-interviews as opposite as possibly could be. These two
-contradictory conferences point out one of the traits
-that best characterise the versatile and ambitious
-Francis. This modern Janus had a head with two faces.
-We have just seen that which looked backwards into
-the past; we shall soon see that which looked forwards
-into the future. But before we follow the King of
-France in his oscillation towards Germany and the
-protestants, we must return to Calvin. In October
-1533, Francis and Clement had met at Marseilles;
-and on the 1st of November, while those princes were
-still diplomatising, a great evangelical demonstration
-took place at Paris.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_458" id="Foot_458" href="#Ref_458">[458]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Henry VIII. to Norfolk, Aug. 8, 1533. <i>State Papers</i>, vii. p. 493.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_459" id="Foot_459" href="#Ref_459">[459]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 195.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_460" id="Foot_460" href="#Ref_460">[460]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. p. 185.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_461" id="Foot_461" href="#Ref_461">[461]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'En grand branle.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_462" id="Foot_462" href="#Ref_462">[462]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 195.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_463" id="Foot_463" href="#Ref_463">[463]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Non licere ejus Sanctitati sine Maurorum periculo illuc accedere.'—Vanner
-to Cromwell. <i>State Papers</i>, vii. p. 508.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_464" id="Foot_464" href="#Ref_464">[464]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ob insulas de Yeres, ubi piratarum classis posset ad intercipiendum
-pontificem in insidiis latitare.'—Vanner to Cromwell, <i>State Papers</i>,
-vii. p. 508.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_465" id="Foot_465" href="#Ref_465">[465]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Guicciardini, <i>Wars of Italy</i>, ii. bk. xx.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_466" id="Foot_466" href="#Ref_466">[466]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Guicciardini, <i>Wars of Italy</i>, ii. bk. xx. p. 901.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_467" id="Foot_467" href="#Ref_467">[467]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Papam aut subversum, aut restitutum iri in suam et inveteratam
-tyrannidem.'—Sturm to Bucer. Strasburg MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_468" id="Foot_468" href="#Ref_468">[468]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Alterum ego expecto magno cum desiderio, alterum non mediocriter
-extimesco.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_469" id="Foot_469" href="#Ref_469">[469]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 204.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_470" id="Foot_470" href="#Ref_470">[470]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quod illi soli licet pro temporis necessitate novas leges condere.'—<i>Dict.
-Gregorii.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_471" id="Foot_471" href="#Ref_471">[471]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Veri Dei vicem gerit in terris.'—<i>De Translatione Episc.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_472" id="Foot_472" href="#Ref_472">[472]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 205. <i>State Papers</i>, vii. p. 515.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_473" id="Foot_473" href="#Ref_473">[473]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Guicciardini, <i>Wars of Italy</i>, ii. bk. xx. p. 901.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_474" id="Foot_474" href="#Ref_474">[474]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 205.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_475" id="Foot_475" href="#Ref_475">[475]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mém.</i> p. 206.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_476" id="Foot_476" href="#Ref_476">[476]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Wars of Italy</i>, ii. bk. xx. p. 901.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_477" id="Foot_477" href="#Ref_477">[477]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Legatum vehementer contendisse cum romano pontifice Massiliæ,
-ne violenter agat.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 721.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_478" id="Foot_478" href="#Ref_478">[478]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Guicciardini, <i>Hist. des Guerres d'Italie</i>, ii. liv. xx. p. 901.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_479" id="Foot_479" href="#Ref_479">[479]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Guerres d'Italie</i>, ii. liv. xx. p. 901.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_480" id="Foot_480" href="#Ref_480">[480]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettre close à l'évêque de Paris</i>, p. 21.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_481" id="Foot_481" href="#Ref_481">[481]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'S. M. Christᵐᵃ dimando che da sua Santᵃ li fussino osservate le
-promesse.'—Soriano, Ranke, <i>Päpste</i>, i. p. 127.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_482" id="Foot_482" href="#Ref_482">[482]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Guicciardini, <i>Guerres d'Italie</i>, i. liv. xx. p. 902.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">{264}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXX.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">ADDRESS OF THE RECTOR TO THE UNIVERSITY OF PARIS.<br />
- (<span class="smc">November 1533.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CALVIN had not quitted Paris. He was at one
-moment on the boulevards with the merchant De
-la Forge, at another in the university quarter with
-Cop; in the dwellings of the poor, and the mansions
-of the nobles, 'increasing greatly the work of the
-Lord,' says Beza, 'not only by teaching truth, but also
-by opposing the heretics.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_483" id="Ref_483" href="#Foot_483">[483]</a></span>
-He then retired to his
-chamber and meditated. He turned his piercing
-glance upon the future, and fancied he could see, in
-a time more or less remote and through certain
-clouds, the triumph of the Gospel. He knew that
-the cause of God in general advances painfully; that
-there are rocks in the way; that interest, ignorance,
-and servility check it at every moment; that it
-stumbles and falls, and men may think it ruined. But
-Calvin believed that He who is its Head would help
-it to overcome all its enemies. 'Only,' he said, 'those
-who bear its standard must mount to the assault with
-unflinching courage.' Calvin, thinking that the time
-for the assault had come, desired that in the university
-itself, from that pulpit which all Europe
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">{265}</a></span>
-respected, the voice of truth should be heard after
-centuries of silence. A very natural opportunity
-occurred.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE CHRISTIAN PHILOSOPHY.=</p>
-
-<p>During the month of October Cop was much occupied
-with a task that had fallen to him. It was the
-custom of the university for the rector to deliver an
-inaugural address in Latin on All Saints' Day in one
-of the churches of Paris. Calvin thought that it was
-his duty to take advantage of this opportunity to proclaim
-the Gospel boldly in the face of France. The
-rector replied that he was a physician, and that it
-was difficult for him to speak like a divine: 'If, however,
-you will write the address,' he said, 'I will promise
-to deliver it.' The two young men were soon
-agreed; they understood the risk they ran, but were
-ready to incur it, without presumption however, and
-with prudence. They agreed to explain the essence
-of the Gospel before the university, giving it the
-academic name of <i>Christian Philosophy</i>. 'Christ,'
-says Calvin, 'desires us to be like serpents, careful
-to avoid all that may hurt us; and yet like doves,
-who fly without fear and without care, and who offer
-themselves innocently to the fowlers who are laying
-snares for them.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_484" id="Ref_484" href="#Foot_484">[484]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>All Saints' Day, 1533, having arrived, the university
-assembled with great pomp in the Mathurins'
-church; many were impatient to hear Cop, whose
-conduct in the case of the Queen of Navarre had
-made him an object of suspicion to the Sorbonne.
-A great number of monks, and especially of Franciscans,
-took their places and opened their ears. There
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">{266}</a></span>
-were however scattered about the church many steadfast
-friends of the Gospel, who had come to be present
-at the assault and perhaps witness the triumph of their
-faith. Among them, and on a bench apart, sat a young
-man of humble appearance, calm, modest, and attentive
-to all that was said. Nobody suspected that it
-was he (Calvin) who was about to set the university,
-and indeed all France, in commotion. The hour
-having come, all the dignitaries, professors, and students
-fixed their eager eyes upon Cop as he rose
-to speak. He pronounced the opening address 'in a
-very different fashion,' says Theodore Beza, 'from
-what was usual.' There was a simplicity and life
-in his delivery which contrasted strongly with the
-dryness and exaggeration of the old doctors. The
-discourse is of importance in the history of the Reformation;
-we shall give it, therefore, in part, all the more
-because it has lain unknown until this hour among
-the manuscripts of the library of Geneva, and is now
-first presented to the christian public.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_485" id="Ref_485" href="#Foot_485">[485]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=COP'S INAUGURAL DISCOURSE.=</p>
-
-<p>'Christian philosophy is a great thing,' said the
-rector; 'a thing too excellent for any tongue to express
-and even for any mind to conceive its value.
-The gift of God to man by Jesus Christ himself, it
-teaches us to know that true happiness which deceives
-nobody, making us believe and comprehend that we
-are truly the sons of God.... The brightness of the
-splendour of this wisdom of God eclipses all the glimmerings
-of the wisdom of the world. It places its
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">{267}</a></span>
-possessors as far above the common order of men, as
-that order is itself above the brutes.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_486" id="Ref_486" href="#Foot_486">[486]</a></span>
-The mind of
-man, opened and enlarged by the divine hand, then
-understands things infinitely more sublime than all
-those which are learnt from our feeble humanity.
-How admirable, how holy must this divine philosophy
-be, since, in order to bring it to men, God was willing
-to become man, and, to teach it to us, the Immortal
-put on mortality! Could God better manifest his
-love to us than by the gift of his eternal Word?
-What stronger and tenderer bond could God establish
-between himself and us than by becoming a man such
-as we are? Sirs, let us praise the other sciences, I
-approve of it; let us admire logic, natural philosophy,
-and ethics, in consideration of their utility; but who
-would dare compare them with that other philosophy,
-which explains what philosophers have long been
-seeking after and never found ... the will of God?
-And what is the hidden will that is revealed to us
-here? It is this: <i>The grace of God alone remits sins.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_487" id="Ref_487" href="#Foot_487">[487]</a></span>
-...
-The Holy Ghost, which sanctifies all hearts and
-gives eternal life, is promised to all christians.</i><span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_488" id="Ref_488" href="#Foot_488">[488]</a></span>
-If there is any one among you who does not praise this
-science above all other sciences, I would ask him,
-what will he praise? Would you delight the mind of
-man, give him repose of heart, teach him to live holy
-and happily? Christian philosophy abundantly supplies
-him with these admirable blessings; and, at the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">{268}</a></span>
-same time, it subdues, as with a wholesome rein, the
-impetuous movements of the soul.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_489" id="Ref_489" href="#Foot_489">[489]</a></span>
-Sirs, since the
-dignity and glory of this Gospel are so great, how I
-rejoice that the office with which I am invested calls
-upon me to lay it before you to-day!'</p>
-
-<p>This appeared a strange exordium to a great number
-of hearers: What! not a word about the saints
-whom all catholics glorify on this day?... Let us
-wait, however, and see.</p>
-
-<p>The rector then announced that according to
-custom he would explain the Gospel of the day, that
-is, the beatitudes pronounced by Jesus on the mountain.
-'But first of all,' he said, 'unite with me in
-earnest prayer to Christ, who is <i>the true and only
-intercessor with the Father</i>, in order that by his fertilising
-Spirit he may enlighten our understandings,
-and that <i>our discourse may praise him, savour of him,
-be full of him, and reflect his image, so that this divine
-Saviour, penetrating our souls, may water them with the
-dew of his heavenly grace</i>!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_490" id="Ref_490" href="#Foot_490">[490]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then the rector explained the happiness of those
-who are <i>poor in spirit</i>, who <i>mourn</i>, who <i>hunger and
-thirst after righteousness</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE DISCOURSE CAUSES A SENSATION.=</p>
-
-<p>The university had never heard the like. An
-admirable proportion was observed throughout the
-address; it was academical and yet evangelical—a
-thing not often seen. Calvin had discovered that
-tongue of the wise which useth knowledge aright.
-But the enemies of the Gospel were not deceived.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">{269}</a></span>
-Through the thin veil with which he had covered the
-grandeur of divine love, they discovered those heights
-and depths of grace which are a source of joy to the
-true christian, but an object of abhorrence to the
-adversary. There was an indescribable uneasiness
-among the auditory. Certain of the hearers exchanged
-glances, in this way indicating to one another the
-passages which seemed to them the most reprehensible.
-University professors, priests, monks, and
-students—all listened with astonishment to such unusual
-language. Here and there in the congregation
-signs of approbation might be observed, but far more
-numerous signs of anger. Two Franciscans, in particular,
-were so excited that they could scarcely keep
-their seats; and when the assembly broke up they
-were heard expressing their indignation in loud terms:
-'Grace ... God's pardon ... the Holy Ghost ... there
-is abundance of all that in the rector's discourse; but
-of penance, indulgences, and meritorious works ...
-not a word!' It was pointed out to them that the
-rector, according to custom, had ended his exordium
-with the salutation which the angel had addressed to
-Mary; but that, in the opinion of the monks, was a
-mere form. The words being in Scripture, how could
-the rector refuse to pronounce them? Had he not
-besides begun by saying that Christ is the <i>only true</i>
-intercessor, <i>verus et unus apud Patrem intercessor</i>?...
-What is left then to Mary, except that she is the
-mother of the Saviour? The Sorbonne was filled with
-anger and alarm.... To select the day of the festival
-of <i>All Saints</i>, in order to proclaim that there is <i>only
-one</i> intercessor! Such a crime must not remain unpunished.
-If Cop wished to produce a sensation, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">{270}</a></span>
-monks will produce one also! The two Franciscans
-having consulted with their friends, their opinion was
-that the university was not to be trusted. Consequently
-they hastened to the parliament and laid the
-rector's heretical propositions before it.</p>
-
-<p>Cop and Calvin had each retired separately, and
-been visited in their respective apartments by many
-of their friends. Some of them did not approve of
-these great manifestations; they would have wished
-the evangelicals to be content with a few small conventicles
-here and there in retired places. Calvin did
-not agree with them. In his opinion there was one
-single universal christian Church, which had existed
-since the time of the apostles, and would exist always.
-The errors and abuses abounding in christendom, profane
-priests, hypocrites, scandalous sinners, do not
-prevent the Church from existing. True, it is often
-reduced to little more than a small humble flock; but
-the flock exists, and it must, whenever it has the
-opportunity, manifest itself in opposition to a fallen
-catholicism. The reformers themselves, though it
-is frequently forgotten, maintained the doctrine of a
-universal Church; but while Rome counts among the
-number of signs which characterise it 'a certain pomp
-and temporal possessions,'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_491" id="Ref_491" href="#Foot_491">[491]</a></span>
-the evangelical doctors, on
-the contrary, reckon persecution and the cross as a
-mark of the true Church. Cop and Calvin were to
-make the experiment in their own persons.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=DEBATES IN THE UNIVERSITY.=</p>
-
-<p>The rector was not inclined to give way to the
-monks: he resolved to join battle on a question of
-form, which would dispose his colleagues in his favour,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">{271}</a></span>
-and perhaps in favour of truth. It was a maxim
-received in the university, that all its members, and <i>a
-fortiori</i> its head, must be tried first by the corporation,
-and that it was not permissible to pass over any
-degree of jurisdiction.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_492" id="Ref_492" href="#Foot_492">[492]</a></span>
-Accordingly, on the 19th of
-November, the rector convoked the four faculties, and,
-having undertaken the defence of his address, complained
-bitterly that certain persons had dared to
-carry the matter before a foreign body. The privileges
-of the university had thus been attacked. 'It has
-been insulted by this denunciation of its chief to
-the parliament,' said Cop; 'and these impudent informers
-must give satisfaction for the insult.'</p>
-
-<p>These words excited a great commotion in the
-assembly. The theologians, who had hung down
-their heads in the case of the Queen of Navarre,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">... N'osant approfondir</div>
-<div class="verse">De ces hautes puissances</div>
-<div class="verse">Les moins pardonnables offenses,</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nodent">resolved to compensate themselves by falling with their
-whole strength upon a plain doctor, who was besides by
-birth a Swiss. Every one of them raised a cry against
-him. The university was divided into two distinct
-parties, and the meeting reechoed with the most contradictory
-appeals. The theologians shouted loudest:
-'Time presses,' they said; 'the crisis has arrived. If
-we yield, the Romish doctrine, vanquished and expelled
-from the university, will give place to the new
-errors. Heresy is at our gates; we must crush it by a
-single blow!'—'The Gospel, philosophy, and liberty!'
-said one party.—'Popery, tradition, and submission!'
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">{272}</a></span>
-said the other. The noise and disturbance became such
-that nothing could be heard. At last the question
-was put to the vote: two faculties, those of letters and
-medicine, were for Cop's proposition; and two, namely,
-law and divinity, were against it. The rector, to show
-his moderation, refused to vote, being unwilling to
-give the victory to himself.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_493" id="Ref_493" href="#Foot_493">[493]</a></span>
-The meeting broke up
-in the greatest confusion.</p>
-
-<p>The rector's address, and the discussions to which it
-gave rise, made a great noise at court as well as in the
-city; but no one took more interest in it than the
-Queen of Navarre. The question of her poetry had
-been the first act; Calvin's address was the second.
-Margaret knew that he was the real author of the
-discourse. She always granted her special patronage
-to the students trained in any of her schools. She
-watched the young scholars with the most affectionate
-interest, and rejoiced in their successes. There was
-not one of them that could be compared with Calvin,
-who had studied at Bourges, Margaret's university.
-The purity of his doctrine, the boldness of his profession,
-the majesty of his language, astonished everybody,
-and had particularly struck the queen. Calvin
-was one of her students for whom she anticipated the
-highest destinies. That princess was not indeed formed
-for resistance; the mildness of her character inclined
-her to yield; and of this she was well aware. About
-this time, being commissioned by the king to transact
-certain business with one of her relations, a very
-headstrong woman, she wrote to Montmorency, 'Employ
-a head better steeled than mine, or you will not
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">{273}</a></span>
-succeed. She is a Norman woman, and smells of the
-sea; I am an Anjoumoise, sprinkled with the soft
-waters of the Charente.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_494" id="Ref_494" href="#Foot_494">[494]</a></span>
-But, mild as she was,
-she took this matter of Cop and Calvin seriously
-to heart. When the friends of the Gospel placed the
-candle boldly on the candlestick to give light to all
-France, should a violent wind come and extinguish it?</p>
-
-<p class="side">=INTERVIEW OF CALVIN AND MARGARET.=</p>
-
-<p>The Queen of Navarre summoned Calvin to the
-court, Beza informs us.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_495" id="Ref_495" href="#Foot_495">[495]</a></span>
-... The news circulated
-immediately among the evangelical christians, who
-entertained great hopes from it. 'The Queen of
-Navarre,' they said, 'the king's only sister, is favourable
-to true religion. Perhaps the Lord, by the intervention
-of that admirable woman, will disperse the
-impending storm.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_496" id="Ref_496" href="#Foot_496">[496]</a></span>
-Calvin accordingly went to court.
-The ladies-in-waiting having introduced him into the
-queen's apartment, she rose to meet him, and made
-him sit down by her side, 'receiving him with great
-honour,' says Beza, 'and hearing him with much
-pleasure.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_497" id="Ref_497" href="#Foot_497">[497]</a></span>
-The two finest geniuses which France
-then possessed were thus brought face to face—the
-man of the people and the queen, so different in outward
-appearance and even as to the point of view from
-which they regarded the Reform, but yet both animated
-with an ardent desire to see the triumph of the
-Gospel. They communicated their thoughts to each
-other. Calvin, notwithstanding the persecution, was
-full of courage. He knew that the Church of Christ
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">{274}</a></span>
-is exposed to changes and error, like all human things,
-and the state of christendom, in his opinion, showed
-this full clearly; but he believed that it possessed an
-incorruptible power of life, and that, at the very
-moment when it seemed entirely fallen and ruined, it
-had by the Holy Spirit the ability to rise again and be
-renewed. The hour of this renewal had arrived, and
-it was as impossible for men to retard it as to prevent
-the spring-time from budding and covering the earth
-with leaves, blossoms, and fruit. Yet Calvin was
-under no delusion as to the dangers which threatened
-evangelical christianity. 'When the peril is imminent,'
-he said, 'it is not the time to indulge ourselves
-like silly, careless people; the fear of danger, serving
-as an incentive, should lead us to ask for God's help,
-and to put on our armour without trembling.' The
-queen promised to use all her influence to calm the
-storm. Calvin was conducted out of the palace with
-the same attentions that had been paid him when he
-entered it. He afterwards spoke about this interview
-to Theodore Beza, who has handed it down to us.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_498" id="Ref_498" href="#Foot_498">[498]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Still the sky became more threatening. The parliament,
-paying no respect to the privileges of the
-university, had entertained the complaint of the
-monks; the rector, therefore, received a message from
-this sovereign court summoning him to appear before
-it. Calvin knew quite well that a similar process
-would soon reach him; but he never shrank back
-either from before the despotism of an unjust power,
-or from the popular fury. 'We are not in the school
-of a Plato,' he said, 'where, sitting in the shade, we can
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">{275}</a></span>
-indulge in idle discussions. Christ nobly maintained
-his doctrines before Pilate, and can we be so cowardly
-as to forsake him?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_499" id="Ref_499" href="#Foot_499">[499]</a></span>
-Cop, strengthened by his friend,
-determined to appear to the summons of the parliament.
-That body had great power, no doubt; but
-the rector said to himself that the university possessed
-incontestable privileges, and that all learned Europe
-had been for many centuries almost at its feet. He
-resolved to support its rights, to accuse his accusers,
-and to reprimand the parliament for stepping out of
-the lawful course. Cop, therefore, got himself ready
-to appear, as became the head of the first university
-of the christian world. He put on his academical
-robes, and preceded by the beadles and apparitors,
-with their maces and gold-headed staves,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_500" id="Ref_500" href="#Foot_500">[500]</a></span>
-set out
-with great ceremony for the Palace of Justice.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=COP GOES IN STATE TO THE PARLIAMENT.=</p>
-
-<p>He was going to his death. The parliament, as
-well as Calvin, had understood the position, but had
-arrived at very different conclusions. It saw that
-the hour was come to strike the blow that would
-crush the Reformation, and had resolved to arrest
-the rector even in the court. The absence of the
-king was an opportunity of which they must hasten to
-take advantage. A signal vengeance, inflicted in full
-parliament, was to expiate a crime not less signal,
-committed in the presence of the whole university.
-A member of the court, converted to the Gospel, determined
-to save the unfortunate Cop, and sent a
-trusty man to warn him of the impending danger.
-As he quitted the great hall, the messenger caught
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">{276}</a></span>
-sight of the archers who had been sent for to arrest
-the rector: might it not be too late to save him? Cop
-was already on the road and approaching the palace,
-accompanied by a crowd of students, citizens, and
-common people, some full of good wishes, others
-curious to learn the issue of this singular duel between
-the parliament and the university. The man
-sent to forewarn the rector arrived just as the university
-procession was passing through a narrow
-street. Taking advantage of a momentary confusion
-occasioned by the crowd, he approached Cop, and
-whispered in his ear: 'Beware of the enemy;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_501" id="Ref_501" href="#Foot_501">[501]</a></span>
-they intend shutting you up in the Conciergerie; Berquin's
-fate awaits you; I have seen the officers authorised
-to seize you; if you go farther, you are a dead man.'
-... What was to be done?... If it had been Calvin
-instead of Cop, he would perhaps have gone on. I cannot
-tell; for the peril was imminent, and it appeared
-doubtful if anything would be gained by braving it.
-However that may be, Cop was only Calvin's double; it
-was his friend's faith that urged him forward more perhaps
-than his own. To stand firm in the day of tempest,
-man must cling to the rock without human help; Cop,
-overtaken by this news of death at the very moment
-he fancied he was marching to victory, lost his presence
-of mind, stopped the procession, was suddenly
-surrounded by several friends, and, the disorder being
-thus augmented, he escaped and hastily returned
-home.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_502" id="Ref_502" href="#Foot_502">[502]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE RECTOR'S FLIGHT.=</p>
-
-<p>Where shall he go now? There could be no doubt
-that the parliament would seize him wherever he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">{277}</a></span>
-could be found; his friends therefore insisted that he
-should quit France. He was strongly inclined to do
-so: Basle, the asylum of his master Erasmus, was his
-native place, and he was sure of finding a shelter
-there. Cop flung off the academical dress, the cap
-and gown, which would have betrayed him;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_503" id="Ref_503" href="#Foot_503">[503]</a></span>
-caught
-up hurriedly what was necessary for his journey, and
-by mistake, some say, carried away the university
-seal with him.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_504" id="Ref_504" href="#Foot_504">[504]</a></span>
-I rather believe he did so designedly;
-compelled to yield to force, he desired, even when far
-from Paris, to retain the insignia of that illustrious
-body. His friends hurried him; at any moment the
-house might be surrounded; he quitted it stealthily,
-escaped out of Paris, and fled along the road which
-leads to Basle, using every precaution to conceal himself
-from the pursuit of his enemies. When the archers
-went to his house, they searched it in vain: the
-rector had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>The parliament, exasperated at this escape, promised
-a reward of three hundred crowns to any one
-who should bring back the fugitive rector, <i>dead or
-alive</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_505" id="Ref_505" href="#Foot_505">[505]</a></span>
-But Cop in his disguise eluded every eye;
-he succeeded through innumerable dangers in getting
-safely out of the kingdom, and arrived in Switzerland.
-He was saved; but the Reformation was threatened
-with a still more terrible blow.</p>
-
-<p>The Roman party consoled themselves a little for
-this escape by saying that Cop was only a puppet,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">{278}</a></span>
-and that the man who had pulled the strings was still
-in their power. 'It is Calvin,' they said, 'whom we
-must seize. He is a daring adventurer, a rash determined
-man, resolved to make the world talk of him
-like that incendiary of the temple of Diana, of whom
-history speaks. He will keep all Europe in disquietude,
-and will build up a new world. If he is
-permitted to live, he will be the Luther ... the firebrand
-of France.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_506" id="Ref_506" href="#Foot_506">[506]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant-criminal, Jean Morin, had kept his
-eye for some time upon the young doctor. He had
-discovered his activity in increasing the heretical sect,
-and also his secret conferences with Cop. His agents
-were on his track whenever Calvin went by night to
-teach from house to house.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_507" id="Ref_507" href="#Foot_507">[507]</a></span>
-... Cop was the shadow,
-said the monks; if the shadow escapes us, let us
-strike the substance. The parliament ordered the
-lieutenant-criminal to seize the reformer and shut
-him up in the Conciergerie.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=FLIGHT OF CALVIN.=</p>
-
-<p>Calvin, trusting to his obscurity and, under God, to
-the protection of the Queen of Navarre, was sitting
-quietly in his room in the college of Fortret.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_508" id="Ref_508" href="#Foot_508">[508]</a></span>
-He was not however free from emotion; he was thinking
-of what had happened to Cop, but did not believe
-that the persecution would reach him. His friends,
-however, did not share in this rash security. Those
-who had helped Cop to escape, seeing the rector out
-of his enemies' reach, said to themselves that the same
-danger threatened Calvin.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_509" id="Ref_509" href="#Foot_509">[509]</a></span>
-They entered his chamber
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">{279}</a></span>
-at a time when they were least expected. 'Fly!'
-they said to him, 'or you are lost.' He still hesitated.
-Meanwhile the lieutenant-criminal arrived before the
-college with his sergeants. Several students immediately
-hurried to their comrade, told him what was
-going on, and entreated him to flee. But scarcely
-have they spoken, when heavy steps are heard: it is
-no longer time.... The officers are there! It was the
-noise made by them at Calvin's door (says an historian)
-which made him comprehend the danger that
-threatened him. Perhaps the college gate is meant,
-rather than the door of the reformer's own room.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_510" id="Ref_510" href="#Foot_510">[510]</a></span>
-In either case, the moment was critical; but if they
-could manage to gain only a few minutes, the young
-evangelist might escape. His noble, frank, and sympathetic
-soul conciliated the hearts of all who knew
-him. He always possessed devoted friends, and they
-did not fail him now. The window of his room
-opened into the street of the Bernardins. They lost
-not a moment: some of those who came to warn him
-engaged the attention of Morin and his officers for a
-few minutes; others remaining with Calvin twisted
-the bed-clothes into a rope, and fastened them to the
-window. Calvin, leaving his manuscripts scattered
-about, caught hold of the sheets and lowered himself
-down to the ground.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_511" id="Ref_511" href="#Foot_511">[511]</a></span>
-He was not the first
-of Christ's servants who had taken that road to escape
-death. When the Jews of Damascus conspired against
-Paul, 'the disciples took him by night and let him
-down by the wall in a basket.'—'Thus early,' says
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">{280}</a></span>
-Calvin, 'Paul went through his apprenticeship of
-carrying the cross in after years.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_512" id="Ref_512" href="#Foot_512">[512]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He had hardly disappeared when the lieutenant-criminal,
-notorious for his excessive cruelty,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_513" id="Ref_513" href="#Foot_513">[513]</a></span>
-entered the room, and was astonished to find no one there.
-The youthful doctor had escaped like a bird from the
-net of the fowler. Morin ordered some of his sergeants
-to pursue the fugitive, and then proceeded to examine
-carefully all the heretic's papers, hoping to find something
-that might compromise other Lutherans. He
-did lay his hand on certain letters and documents
-which afterwards exposed Calvin's friends to great
-danger, and even to death.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_514" id="Ref_514" href="#Foot_514">[514]</a></span>
-Morin docketed them,
-tied them up carefully in a bundle, and withdrew.
-The cruel hatred which animated him against the
-evangelical christians had been still further increased
-by his failure.</p>
-
-<p>Calvin, having landed in the street of the Bernardins,
-entered that of St. Victor, and then proceeded towards
-the suburb of that name. At the extremity of this
-suburb, not far from the open country (a catholic
-historian informs us), dwelt a vine-dresser, a member
-of the little church of Paris. Calvin went to this
-honest protestant's and told him what had just happened.
-The vine-dresser, who probably had heard
-him explain the Scriptures at their secret meetings,
-moved with a fatherly affection for the young man,
-proposed to change clothes with him. Forthwith, says
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">{281}</a></span>
-the canon to whom we are indebted for the account,
-Calvin took off his own garments and put on the peasant's
-old-fashioned coat. With a hoe on one shoulder,
-and a wallet on the other, in which the vine-dresser
-had placed some provisions, he started again. If Morin
-had sent his officers after him, they might have passed
-by the fugitive reformer under this rustic disguise.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALVIN IS RECOGNISED.=</p>
-
-<p>He was not far beyond the suburbs of Paris, however,
-when he saw a canon whom he knew coming
-towards him. The latter with astonishment fixed a
-curious look on the vine-dresser, and fancying him to
-be very unlike a stout peasant, he drew near, stopped,
-and recognised him. He knew what was the matter,
-for all Paris was full of it. The canon immediately remonstrated
-with him: 'Change your manner of life,'
-he said; 'look to your salvation, and I will promise
-to procure you <i>a good appointment</i>.' But Calvin,
-'who was hot-headed,' replied: 'I shall go through
-with it to the last.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_515" id="Ref_515" href="#Foot_515">[515]</a></span>
-The canon afterwards related
-this incident to the Abbot de Genlis, who told it to
-Desmay.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_516" id="Ref_516" href="#Foot_516">[516]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Is this a story invented in the idle talk of a cloister?
-I think not. Some of the details, particularly the
-language of the canon, render it probable. It was
-also by the promise of a 'good appointment' that
-Francis de Sales endeavoured to win over Theodore
-Beza. Simony is a sin so <i>innocent</i> that three priests,
-a canon, an abbot, and a doctor of the Sorbonne, combine
-to relate this peccadillo. If the language of the
-canon is in conformity with his character, Calvin's
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">{282}</a></span>
-answer, 'I will go through with it to the last,' is also
-in his manner. Although we may have some trouble
-to picture the young reformer disguised as a peasant,
-with his wallet and hoe, we thought it our duty to
-relate an incident transmitted to us by his enemies.
-The circumstance is really not singular. Calvin was
-then beginning an exodus which has gone on unceasingly
-for nearly three centuries. The disciples
-of the Gospel in France, summoned to abjure Christ,
-have fled from their executioners by thousands, and
-under various disguises. And if the gravity of
-history permitted the author to revert to the stories
-that charmed his childhood, he could tell how many
-a time, seated at the feet of his grandmother and
-listening with attentive ear, he has heard her describe
-how her mother, a little girl at the time of the
-Revocation in 1685, escaped from France, concealed
-in a basket which her father, a pious huguenot, disguised
-as a peasant, carried carefully on his back.</p>
-
-<p>Calvin, having escaped his enemies, hurried away
-from the capital, from his cherished studies and his
-brethren, and wandered up and down, avoiding the
-places where he might be recognised. He thought
-over all that had happened, and his meditative mind
-drew wholesome lessons from it. He learnt from his
-own experience by what token to recognise the true
-Church of Christ. 'We should lose our labour,' he
-said in later days, thinking perhaps of this circumstance,
-'if we wished to separate Christ from his cross;
-it is a natural thing for the world to hate Christ, even
-in his members. There will always be wicked men
-to prick us like thorns. If they do not draw the sword,
-they spit out their venom, and either gnash their teeth
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">{283}</a></span>
-or excite some great disturbance.' The sword was
-already 'drawn' against him: acting, therefore, with
-prudence, he followed the least frequented roads,
-sleeping in the cottages or the mansions of his friends.
-It is asserted that being known by the Sieur de Hasseville,
-whose château was situated beyond Versailles, he
-remained there some time in hiding.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_517" id="Ref_517" href="#Foot_517">[517]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The king's first movement, when he heard of Cop's
-business and the flight of Calvin, was one of anger and
-persecution. Duprat, formerly first president of parliament,
-was much exasperated at the affront offered
-to that body. Francis commanded every measure to
-be taken to discover the person who had warned Cop
-of his danger; he would have had him punished
-severely as a favourer of heresy.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_518" id="Ref_518" href="#Foot_518">[518]</a></span>
-At the same time,
-he ordered the prosecution of those persons whom the
-papers seized in Calvin's room pointed out as partisans
-of the new doctrine.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=MANY EVANGELICALS QUIT PARIS.=</p>
-
-<p>There was a general alarm among the evangelicals,
-and many left Paris. A Dominican friar, brother of
-De la Croix, feeling a growing thirst for knowledge,
-deliberated in his convent whether he ought not to
-remove to a country where the Gospel was preached
-freely.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_519" id="Ref_519" href="#Foot_519">[519]</a></span>
-He was one of those compromised by Calvin's
-papers. He therefore made his escape, reached Neufchatel,
-and thence proceeded to Geneva, where we
-shall meet him again.</p>
-
-<p>The greater part of the friends of the Gospel, however,
-remained in France: Margaret exerted all her
-influence with her brother to ward off the impending
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">{284}</a></span>
-blow, and succeeded in appeasing the storm.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_520" id="Ref_520" href="#Foot_520">[520]</a></span>
-Francis
-was always between two contrary currents, one coming
-from Duprat, the other from his sister; and once more
-he followed the better.</p>
-
-<p>The Queen of Navarre, exhausted by all these
-shocks, disgusted with the dissipations of the court,
-distressed by the hatred of which the Gospel was the
-object among all around her, turned her face towards
-the Pyrenees. Paris, St. Germain, Fontainebleau,
-had no more charms for her; besides, her health was
-not strong, and she desired to pass the winter at Pau.
-But, above all, she sighed for solitude, liberty, and
-meditation; she had need of Christ. She therefore
-bade farewell to the brilliant court of France, and
-departed for the quiet Béarn.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Adieu! pomps, pleasures, now adieu!</div>
-<div class="verse">No longer will I sort with you!</div>
-<div class="verse">Other pleasure seek I none</div>
-<div class="verse">Than in my Bridegroom alone!</div>
-<div class="verse">For my honour and my having</div>
-<div class="verse">Is in Jesus: him receiving,</div>
-<div class="verse">I'll not leave him for the fleeting!...</div>
-<div class="verse indent10">Adieu, adieu!<span
- class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_521" id="Ref_521"
- href="#Foot_521">[521]</a></span></div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Margaret arrived in the Pyrenees.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_483" id="Foot_483" href="#Ref_483">[483]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Hist. Eccl.</i> i. p. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_484" id="Foot_484" href="#Ref_484">[484]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvini <i>Opera</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_485" id="Foot_485" href="#Ref_485">[485]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The document is in the library of Geneva (MS. 145). It has on the
-margin: 'Hæc Johannes Calvinus <i>propria manu</i> descripsit, et est <i>auctor</i>.'
-Dr. Bonnet came upon it in the course of his researches for his edition of
-Calvin's Letters, and gave the author a copy.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_486" id="Foot_486" href="#Ref_486">[486]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hac qui excellunt, tantum prope reliquæ hominum multitudini
-præstare mihi videntur, quantum homines belluis antecedunt.'—Geneva
-MSS. 145.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_487" id="Foot_487" href="#Ref_487">[487]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Sola Dei gratia peccata remittit.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_488" id="Foot_488" href="#Ref_488">[488]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Spiritum sanctum, qui corda sanctificat et vitam æternam adfert,
-omnibus christianis pollicetur.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_489" id="Foot_489" href="#Ref_489">[489]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Motus animi turbulentos, quasi habenis quibusdam.'—Geneva MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_490" id="Foot_490" href="#Ref_490">[490]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut tota nostra oratio illum laudet, illum sapiat, illum spiret, illum
-referat. Rogabimus ut in mentes nostras illabatur, nosque gratiæ cœlestis
-succo irrigare dignetur.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_491" id="Foot_491" href="#Ref_491">[491]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bellarmine, <i>De Controversiis</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_492" id="Foot_492" href="#Ref_492">[492]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crévier, <i>Hist. de l'Université</i>, v. p. 275.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_493" id="Foot_493" href="#Ref_493">[493]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crévier, <i>Hist. de l'Université</i>, v. p. 276.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_494" id="Foot_494" href="#Ref_494">[494]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de la Reine de Navarre</i>, i. p. 287.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_495" id="Foot_495" href="#Ref_495">[495]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In aulam.'—Bezæ <i>Vita Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_496" id="Foot_496" href="#Ref_496">[496]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hanc tempestatem Dominus, reginæ Navariensis, piis tunc admodum
-faventis, intercessione, dissipavit.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_497" id="Foot_497" href="#Ref_497">[497]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ibique perhonorifice ab ea accepto et audito Calvino.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_498" id="Foot_498" href="#Ref_498">[498]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Vie de Calvin</i>, p. 14. Calvini <i>Opera</i>, passim.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_499" id="Foot_499" href="#Ref_499">[499]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvini <i>Opera</i>, i. pars iii. pp. 1002, 1003.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_500" id="Foot_500" href="#Ref_500">[500]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Citatus rector sese quidem in viam cum suis apparitoribus dedit.'—Bezæ
-<i>Vita Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_501" id="Foot_501" href="#Ref_501">[501]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut sibi ab adversariis caveret.'—Bezæ <i>Vita Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_502" id="Foot_502" href="#Ref_502">[502]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Domum reversus.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_503" id="Foot_503" href="#Ref_503">[503]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Maimbourg, <i>Hist. du Calvinisme</i>, p. 58.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_504" id="Foot_504" href="#Ref_504">[504]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ablato secum, forte per imprudentiam, signo universitatis.'—Bucer
-to Blaarer, Jan. 18, 1534.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_505" id="Foot_505" href="#Ref_505">[505]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'CCC coronatos ei qui fugitivum rectorem, vivum vel mortuum
-adducat.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_506" id="Foot_506" href="#Ref_506">[506]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Flor. Rémond, <i>Hist. de l'Hérésie</i>, liv. vii. ch. viii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_507" id="Foot_507" href="#Ref_507">[507]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Maimbourg, <i>Hist. du Calvinisme</i>, p. 58.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_508" id="Foot_508" href="#Ref_508">[508]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Gaillard, <i>Hist. de François I.</i> iv. p. 274.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_509" id="Foot_509" href="#Ref_509">[509]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Hist. des Egl. Réf.</i> i. p. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_510" id="Foot_510" href="#Ref_510">[510]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Varillas, <i>Hist. des Revolutions Religieuses</i>, ii. p. 467. This writer is
-not always correct.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_511" id="Foot_511" href="#Ref_511">[511]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Drelincourt, <i>Défense de Calvin</i>, pp. 35, 169.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_512" id="Foot_512" href="#Ref_512">[512]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Acts ix. 25.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_513" id="Foot_513" href="#Ref_513">[513]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Morinus, cujus adhuc nomen ab insigni sævitia celebratur.'—Bezæ
-<i>Vita Calvini</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_514" id="Foot_514" href="#Ref_514">[514]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Deprehensis, inter schedas, multis amicorum litteris, ut plurimi in
-maximum vitæ discrimen incurrerent.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_515" id="Foot_515" href="#Ref_515">[515]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Je poursuivrai tout outre.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_516" id="Foot_516" href="#Ref_516">[516]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Desmay, <i>Jean Calvin Hérésiarque</i>, p. 45. Drelincourt, <i>Défense de
-Calvin</i>, p. 175.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_517" id="Foot_517" href="#Ref_517">[517]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Casan, <i>Statistique de Mantes</i>. <i>France Protestante</i>, i. p. 113.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_518" id="Foot_518" href="#Ref_518">[518]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Parlement.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_519" id="Foot_519" href="#Ref_519">[519]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, fol. 106.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_520" id="Foot_520" href="#Ref_520">[520]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Gaillard, <i>Hist. de François I</i>. iv. p. 275.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_521" id="Foot_521" href="#Ref_521">[521]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Les Marguerites de la Marguerite</i>, i. p. 518.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">{285}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXXI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CONFERENCE AND ALLIANCE BETWEEN FRANCIS I.
- AND PHILIP OF HESSE AT BAR-LE-DUC.<br />
- (<span class="smc">Winter 1533-34.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=PROPOSED GERMAN ALLIANCE.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ALMOST about the same time, Francis bent his
-steps towards the Rhine. The establishment of
-the Reform throughout Europe depended, as many
-thought, on the union of France with protestant Germany.
-This union would emancipate France from the
-papal supremacy, and all christendom would then be
-seen turning to the Gospel. The king was preparing
-to hold a conference with the most decided of the protestant
-princes of Germany. Rarely has an interview
-between two sovereigns been of so much importance.</p>
-
-<p>Francis I. had hardly quitted Marseilles and arrived
-at Avignon, when he assembled his council (25th of
-November, 1533), and communicated to it the desire
-for an alliance which the German protestants had expressed
-to him. A certain shame had prevented him
-from moving in the matter, amid the caresses which
-papacy and royalty were lavishing upon each other at
-Marseilles. But now that Clement was on board his
-galleys, nothing prevented the King of France, who
-had given his right hand to the pontiff, from giving
-his left to the heretics.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_522" id="Ref_522" href="#Foot_522">[522]</a></span>
-There were many reasons
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">{286}</a></span>
-why he should do so. The clergy were not allies
-for whose support he was eager: the best orthodoxy,
-in his eyes, was the iron arm of the lansquenets.
-Besides, the opportunity was unprecedented: in fact,
-he could at one stroke gain the protestants to his cause,
-and inflict an immense injury on Austria—that is to
-say, on Charles V.</p>
-
-<p>It will no doubt be remembered that the young
-Prince of Wurtemberg, whom the emperor was leading
-in his train across the Alps, having escaped with
-his governor, had loudly demanded back the states
-of which Austria had robbed his father. Francis was
-chiefly occupied about him at Avignon. 'At this
-place,' says the historian Martin du Bellay, 'the king
-assembled his council, and deliberated on a request
-made to him not only by young Duke Christopher
-of Wurtemberg and his father, but by his uncles,
-Duke William and Duke Louis of Bavaria. Christopher
-himself had written to Francis I.: "Sire," he
-said, "during the great and long calamity of my
-father and myself, what first made hope spring up in
-our hearts was the thought that you would interpose
-your influence to put an end to our misery.... Your
-compassion for the afflicted is well known. I doubt
-not that, by your assistance, we shall soon be restored
-to our rights."'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_523" id="Ref_523" href="#Foot_523">[523]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Francis, always on the watch to injure his rival,
-was delighted at this proceeding, and did not conceal
-his joy from the privy council. 'I desire much,' he
-said, 'to see the dukes of Wurtemberg restored to their
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">{287}</a></span>
-states, and should like to help them, as much to weaken
-the emperor's power as to acquire new friendships in
-Germany. But,' he added, 'I would do it under so
-<i>colourable a pretext</i>, that I may affirm that I have infringed
-no treaty.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_524" id="Ref_524" href="#Foot_524">[524]</a></span>
-To humble the emperor and to
-exalt the protestants, without appearing to have anything
-to do with it, was what Francis desired.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=DU BELLAY SENT TO GERMANY.=</p>
-
-<p>William du Bellay urged the king to return the
-duke a favourable answer. A friend of independence
-and sound liberty, he was at that time the representative
-of the old French spirit, as Catherine de Medici
-was to become the representative of the new—that is
-to say, of the Romish influence under which France
-has unhappily suffered for nearly three centuries. It
-has been sometimes said that the cause of France is
-the cause of Rome; but the noblest aspirations of the
-French people and its most generous representatives
-condemn this error. Popery is the cause of the pope
-alone; it is not even the cause of Italy; and if the
-contrary opinion still exists in France, it is a remnant
-of the influence of the Medici.</p>
-
-<p>The transition from Marseilles to Avignon was,
-however, a little abrupt. To ally the eldest son of
-the Church with the protestants at the very moment
-he left the pope's arms, in a city which belonged to
-the holy see, and in the ancient palace of the pontiffs,
-seemed strange to the French, whose eyes were still
-fascinated by the pomp of Rome. This was noticed
-by Du Bellay, who, wishing to facilitate the transition,
-explained to the council 'that a diet was about to be
-held at Augsburg, where the reparation of a great
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">{288}</a></span>
-injustice would be discussed; that an innocent person
-implored the king's assistance; that it was the practice
-of France to succour the oppressed everywhere;
-that precious advantages might result from it ...
-besides, there could be no doubt of success, and as
-the cause of Duke Christopher would be conducted
-in the diet according to the rights, usages, immunities,
-and privileges of the German nation, the emperor
-could not prevent justice being done.... Let us send
-an ambassador,' added Du Bellay, 'to support the
-claims of the dukes of Wurtemberg, and Austria
-must either restore these princes to their states, or
-arouse the hostility of all Germany against it.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_525" id="Ref_525" href="#Foot_525">[525]</a></span>
-Francis was already gained. He hoped not only to take
-Wurtemberg from Austria, but also to get up a general
-war in Germany between the protestants and the
-empire, of which he could take advantage to seize
-upon the states which he claimed in Italy. When his
-detested rival had fallen beneath their combined blows,
-the religious question should be settled. The king,
-who had meditated all this in the intervals of his
-conferences with Clement VII., ordered Du Bellay to
-proceed to Augsburg forthwith, and charged him 'to
-do everything in his power, <i>with a sufficiently colourable
-pretext</i>, towards the re-establishment of the
-dukes of Wurtemberg.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_526" id="Ref_526" href="#Foot_526">[526]</a></span>
-Du Bellay was satisfied.
-He wished for more than the king did; he desired
-to emancipate France from the papal supremacy,
-and with that object to draw Francis and protestantism
-closer together. That was difficult; but this
-Wurtemberg affair, which presented itself simply as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">{289}</a></span>
-a political question, would supply him with the means
-of overcoming every difficulty. This was where he
-would have to set the wedge in order to split the tree.
-He thought that he could make use of it to counteract
-the effects of the conference which the king had just
-held with the pope by contriving another between
-the two most anti-papistical princes in Europe. Du
-Bellay departed, taking the road through Switzerland.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=DU BELLAY IN SWITZERLAND.=</p>
-
-<p>He had his reasons for adopting this route. The
-emperor and his brother consented, indeed, that their
-rights should be discussed in the diet, but it was only
-that they might not appear to refuse to do justice:
-everybody knew that Ferdinand had no intention of
-restoring Wurtemberg. The balance was at that time
-pretty even in Germany between Rome and the Gospel,
-and the restitution of Wurtemberg would make it
-incline to the side of the Reformation. If Austria
-would not give way, she would have to be constrained
-by force of arms. Du Bellay desired, therefore, to
-induce the protestant cantons of Switzerland, bordering
-on Wurtemberg, to unite their efforts with those
-of protestant Germany in wresting that duchy from
-the Austrian rule. Francis, who knew how to manage
-such matters, had conceived the design of placing in
-the hands of the Helvetians, probably through Du
-Bellay, a certain sum of money to cover the expenses
-of the campaign. But it seems that the protestant
-cantons did not agree to the arrangement.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_527" id="Ref_527" href="#Foot_527">[527]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When Du Bellay arrived at Augsburg, he met the
-young Duke Christopher. He entered into conversation
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">{290}</a></span>
-with him, and they were henceforth inseparable:
-this prince, so amiable, but at the same time so
-firm, was his man. He is to be the lever which
-the counsellor of Francis I. will use to stir men's
-minds, and to unite Germany and France.... The
-first thing to be done was to restore him to his
-throne. The French ambassador paid a visit to the
-delegates from Austria. 'The king my master,'
-he said, 'is delighted that this innocent young man
-has at last found a harbour in the midst of the
-tempest. His father and he have suffered enough
-by being driven from their home.... It is time to
-restore the son to the father, the father to the son, and
-to both of them the states of their ancestors. If
-entreaties are not sufficient,' added Du Bellay firmly,
-'the king my master will employ all his power.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_528" id="Ref_528" href="#Foot_528">[528]</a></span>
-Thus did France take up her position as the protector
-of the distressed; but there was something else underneath:
-the chief object of the king was to strike a blow
-at the emperor; that of Du Bellay, to strike the pope.</p>
-
-<p>Christopher, who received encouragement from
-every quarter, appeared before the diet on the 10th
-of December, 1533. He was no longer the captive
-prince whom Charles had led in his train. The poor
-young man, who not long ago had been compelled to
-flee, leaving his companion behind him, hidden among
-the reeds of a marsh in the Norican Alps, stood now
-before the German diet, surrounded by a brilliant
-throng of nobles, the representatives of the princes
-who supported his claims, and having as <i>assistants</i>
-(that is, as espousing his quarrel) the delegates of
-Saxony, Prussia, Brunswick, Mecklenburg, Luneburg,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">{291}</a></span>
-Hesse, Cleves, Munster, and Juliers. The
-King of Hungary pleaded his cause in person:
-'Most noble seigniors,' he began, 'when we see the
-young Duke Christopher of Wurtemberg deprived of
-his duchy without having done anything to deserve
-such punishment, disappointed by the Austrians in all
-the hopes they had given him, unworthily treated at
-the imperial court,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_529" id="Ref_529" href="#Foot_529">[529]</a></span>
-compelled to make his escape by
-flight, imploring at this moment by earnest supplications
-your compassion and your help—we are profoundly
-agitated. What! because his father has done
-wrong, shall this young man be reduced to a hard and
-humiliating life? Has not the voice of God himself
-declared that the son shall not bear the iniquities of
-the father?'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=UNION TO ASSIST WURTEMBERG.=</p>
-
-<p>The Austrian commissioners, finding their position
-rather embarrassing, began to temporise, and proposed
-that Christopher should accept as compensation some
-town of small importance. He refused, saying: 'I
-will never cease to claim simply and firmly the country
-of my fathers.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_530" id="Ref_530" href="#Foot_530">[530]</a></span>
-But Austria, fearing the preponderance
-of protestantism in Germany, closed her ears to
-his just request. At this point France intervened
-strongly in favour of the two protestant princes. Du
-Bellay, after reminding the diet that Ulrich had confessed
-his faults, and that he was much altered by
-age, long exile, and great trials, continued thus:
-'Must the duke see his only son, a young and innocent
-prince, who ought to be the support of his declining
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">{292}</a></span>
-years, for ever bearing the weight of his misfortunes?
-Will you take into consideration neither the calamitous
-old age of the one, nor the unhappy youth of the
-other? Will you avenge the sins of the father upon
-the child who was then in the cradle? The dukes of
-Wurtemberg are of high descent. Their punishment
-has been permitted, but not their destruction. Help
-this innocent youth (Christopher), receive this penitent
-(Ulrich), and reestablish them both in their
-former dignity.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_531" id="Ref_531" href="#Foot_531">[531]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Austrians, who were annoyed at seeing the
-ambassador of the King of France intermeddling in
-their affairs, held firm. The deputies of Saxony,
-Hesse, Prussia, Mecklenburg, and the other states,
-now made up their minds to oppose Austria; they
-told the young duke that they were ready to cast
-their swords in the balance, and Christopher himself
-requested Du Bellay 'to change his congratulatory
-oration into a comminatory one.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_532" id="Ref_532" href="#Foot_532">[532]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=DU BELLAY PLEADS AND MENACES.=</p>
-
-<p>When the French envoy was admitted again before
-the diet, he assumed a higher tone: 'My lords,' he
-said, 'will you lend your hands to the ruin of an
-innocent person?... If you do so ... I tell you that
-you will bring a stain upon your reputation that all
-the water in the sea will not be able to wash out.
-This prince, in heart so proud, in origin so illustrious,
-will not endure to live miserably in the country whose
-sovereign he is by birth; he will go into a foreign land.
-And in what part soever of the world he may be,
-what will he carry with him?... The shame of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">{293}</a></span>
-emperor, the shame of King Ferdinand, the shame of
-all of you. Every man, pointing to him, will say:
-That is he who formerly.... That is he who now....
-That is he who through no fault of his own.... That
-is he who, being compelled to leave Germany.... You
-understand, my lords, what is omitted in these sentences;
-I willingly excuse myself from completing
-them ... you will do it yourselves. No! you will
-not be insensible to such great misery.... I see your
-hearts are touched already.... I see by your gestures
-and your looks that you feel the truth of my
-words.'</p>
-
-<p>Then, making a direct attack upon the emperor and
-his brother, he said: 'There are people who, very
-erroneously in my opinion, consult only their wicked
-ambition and unbridled covetousness, and who think
-that, by oppressing now one and now another, they
-will subdue all Germany.'</p>
-
-<p>Turning next to the young Prince of Wurtemberg,
-the representative of Francis I. continued: 'Duke
-Christopher, rely upon it the Most Christian King will
-do all that he can in your behalf, without injury to
-his faith, his honour, and the duties of blood. The
-court of France has always been the most liberal
-of all—ever open to receive exiled and suffering
-princes. With greater reason, then, it will not be
-closed against you who are its ally ... you who,
-by the justice of your cause and by your innocence,
-appear even to your enemies worthy of pity and
-compassion.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_533" id="Ref_533" href="#Foot_533">[533]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The members of the diet had listened attentively to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">{294}</a></span>
-this speech, and their countenances showed that they
-were convinced.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_534" id="Ref_534" href="#Foot_534">[534]</a></span>
-The cause was won: the Swabian
-league, the creature of Austria and the enemy of the
-Reformation, was not to be renewed. Du Bellay left
-Augsburg, continued his journey through Germany,
-and endeavoured to form a new confederation there<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_535" id="Ref_535" href="#Foot_535">[535]</a></span>
-against Austria, which Francis I. and Henry VIII.
-could join. 'If any one should think of invading
-England,' the latter was told, 'we would send you
-soldiers <i>by the Baltic sea</i>.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_536" id="Ref_536" href="#Foot_536">[536]</a></span>
-It is to be feared that
-this succour by way of the Baltic would have arrived
-rather late in the waters of the Thames. But the
-main thing in Du Bellay's eyes was action, not
-diplomatic negotiations. His idea was to unite
-Francis I. and the protestants of Germany in a common
-movement which would lead France to throw off
-the ultramontane yoke; but there were only two men
-of sufficient energy to undertake it. The first was
-the king his master, to whom we now return.</p>
-
-<p>Francis, after leaving Avignon, had gone into Dauphiny,
-thence to Lyons and other cities in the east
-of France. In January 1534, he reached Bar-le-Duc,
-thus gradually drawing nearer to the German frontier.
-The winter this year was exceedingly severe, but for
-that the king did not care: he thought only of uniting
-France and the protestants by means of Wurtemberg,
-as the marriage of Catherine had just united France
-and the pope.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">{295}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=THE LANDGRAVE'S PROJECT.=</p>
-
-<p>The second of the princes from whom an energetic
-course might be expected was the Landgrave of Hesse.
-Of all the protestant leaders of Germany he was the
-one whose heart had been least changed by the Gospel.
-Without equalling Francis I. in sensuality, he was yet
-far from being a pattern of chastity. But, on the
-other hand, none of the princes attached to the Reformation
-equalled him in talent, strength, and activity.
-By his character he was the most important man of
-the evangelical league, and more than once he exercised
-a decisive influence on the progress of the protestant
-work. Philip, cousin of the Duke of Wurtemberg,
-often had him at his court; Ulrich had
-even taken part in the famous conference of Marburg.
-Moved by the misfortunes of this prince, delighted
-at the trick Christopher had played the emperor,
-touched by the loyalty of the Wurtembergers, who
-claimed their dukes and their nationality, impatient to
-win this part of Germany to the evangelical faith, he
-desired to take it away from Austria. To find the
-men to do it was easy, if only he had the money ...
-but money he had none.</p>
-
-<p>Du Bellay saw that there lay the knot of the affair,
-and he made haste to cut it. The clergy of France
-had just given the king a considerable sum: could a
-better use be made of it than this? The French envoy
-let Philip know that he might obtain from his master
-the subsidies he needed. But more must be done: he
-must take advantage of the opportunity to bring together
-the two most enterprising princes of the epoch.
-If they saw and heard one another, they would like
-each other and bind themselves in such a manner that
-the union of France and protestant Germany would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">{296}</a></span>
-be effected at last. Philip of Hesse received all these
-overtures with delight.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=LUTHER OPPOSES THE WAR.=</p>
-
-<p>But fresh obstacles now intervened. The theologians
-of the Reformation detested these foreign alliances
-and wars, which, in their opinion, defiled the
-holiest of causes. Luther and Melanchthon waited
-upon the elector, conjuring him to oppose the landgrave's
-rash enterprise; and Du Bellay found the two
-reformers employing as much zeal to prevent the
-union of Francis and Philip as he to accomplish it.
-'Go,' said the elector to Luther and Melanchthon,
-'and prevail upon the landgrave to change his
-mind.'</p>
-
-<p>The two doctors, on their way from Wittemberg to
-Weimar, where they would meet Philip, conversed
-about their mission and the landgrave: 'He is an intelligent
-prince,' said Luther, 'all animation and impulse,
-and of a joyous heart. He has been able to
-maintain order in his country, so that Hesse, which is
-full of forests and mountains where robbers might
-find shelter, sees its inhabitants travelling and roaming
-about, buying and selling without fear.... If one
-of them is attacked and robbed, forthwith the landgrave
-falls upon the bandits and punishes them. He
-is a true man of war—an Arminius. His star never
-deceives him, and he is much dreaded by all his adversaries.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_537" id="Ref_537" href="#Foot_537">[537]</a></span>
-'And I too,' said Melanchthon, 'love the
-<i>Macedonian</i>' (for so he called Philip of Hesse, because,
-in his opinion, that prince had all the shrewdness
-and courage of his namesake of Macedon); 'for that
-reason,' he added, 'I am unwilling that, being so high,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">{297}</a></span>
-he should risk so great a fall.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_538" id="Ref_538" href="#Foot_538">[538]</a></span>
-The two theologians
-had no doubt that a war undertaken against the
-powerful house of Austria would end in a frightful
-catastrophe to the protestants.</p>
-
-<p>When they reached Weimar the two reformers saw
-the landgrave, and employed 'their best rhetoric,' says
-Luther, to dissuade him.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_539" id="Ref_539" href="#Foot_539">[539]</a></span>
-The doctor held very
-decided opinions on this subject. An alliance with
-the King of France, what a disgrace! A war against
-the emperor, what madness! 'The devil,' he said,
-'desires to govern the nation by making everybody
-draw the sword. With what eloquence he strives to
-convince us that it is lawful and even necessary!
-Somebody is injuring these people, he says; let us
-make haste to strike and save them! Madman! God
-sleeps not, and is no fool; he knows very well how to
-govern the world.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_540" id="Ref_540" href="#Foot_540">[540]</a></span>
-We have to contend with an
-enemy against whom no human strength or wisdom
-can prevail. If we arm ourselves with iron and steel,
-with swords and guns, he has only to breathe upon
-them, and nothing remains but dust and ashes.... But
-if we take upon us the armour of God, the helmet, the
-shield, and the sword of the Spirit, then God, if necessary,
-will hurl the emperor from his throne,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_541" id="Ref_541" href="#Foot_541">[541]</a></span>
-and will keep for us all he has given us—his Gospel, his
-kingdom.' Luther and Melanchthon persevered in
-their representations to the landgrave, in order to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">{298}</a></span>
-thwart Du Bellay's plans. 'This war,' they said,
-'will ruin the cause of the Gospel, and fix on it an
-indelible stain. Pray do not disturb the peace.' At
-these words the prince's face grew red; he did not like
-opposition, and gave the two divines an angry answer.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_542" id="Ref_542" href="#Foot_542">[542]</a></span>
-'They are people who do not understand the affairs of
-this world,' he said; and, returning to Hesse, he pursued
-his plans with vigour.</p>
-
-<p>He had not long to wait for success. The King of
-France invited the landgrave to cross into Lorraine to
-come to an understanding with him: he added, 'without
-forgetting to bring Melanchthon.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_543" id="Ref_543" href="#Foot_543">[543]</a></span>
-Then Philip
-held back no longer: a conference with the mighty
-King of France seemed to him of the utmost importance.
-He started on his journey, reached Deux-Ponts
-on the 18th of January, 1534; and shortly
-afterwards that daring prince, who, by quitting Augsburg
-in 1530, had thrown the diet into confusion, and
-alarmed the cabinet of the emperor,—the most warlike
-chief of the evangelical party, the most brilliant
-enemy of popery, Philip of Hesse, arrived at Bar-le-Duc,
-where Francis received him with the smile
-which had not left his lips since his meeting with
-Clement.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_544" id="Ref_544" href="#Foot_544">[544]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=CONFERENCE OF PHILIP AND FRANCIS.=</p>
-
-<p>The two princes first began to scrutinise each other.
-The landgrave was thirty years old, and Francis forty.
-Philip was short, his eyes large and bold, and his whole
-countenance indicated resolution of character. Politics
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">{299}</a></span>
-and religion immediately occupied their attention.
-The king expressed himself strongly in favour of the
-ancient liberties of the Germanic empire, which Austria
-threatened, and pronounced distinctly for the restoration
-of the dukes of Wurtemberg. Coming then to
-the grand question, he said, 'Pray explain to me the
-state of religious affairs in Germany; I do not quite
-understand them.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_545" id="Ref_545" href="#Foot_545">[545]</a></span>
-The landgrave explained to
-the king, as well as he could, the causes and true
-nature of the Reformation, and the struggles to
-which it gave rise. Francis I. consented to hear from
-the mouth of a prince a statement of those evangelical
-principles to which he closed his ears when explained
-to him by Zwingle or by Calvin. It is true that Philip
-presented them rather in a political light. Francis
-showed himself favourable to the protestant princes.
-'I refused my consent to a council in Italy,' he
-said; 'I desire a neutral city, and instead of an assembly
-in which the pope can do what he pleases, I
-demand a free council.' 'These are the king's very
-words,' wrote the landgrave to the elector.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_546" id="Ref_546" href="#Foot_546">[546]</a></span>
-Philip
-of Hesse was delighted. Assuredly, if Germany,
-France, England, and other states should combine
-against the emperor and the pope, all Europe would
-be transformed. 'That is not all,' added the landgrave;
-'the king told me certain things ... which I am sure
-will please your highness.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_547" id="Ref_547" href="#Foot_547">[547]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The secret conference being ended: 'Now,' said
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">{300}</a></span>
-Francis to the landgrave, 'pray present Melanchthon
-to me.' He had begged the German prince, as we
-have seen, to bring this celebrated doctor with him;
-the King of France wished for something more than
-a diplomatic conference, he desired a religious one.
-But the landgrave had not forgotten the interview at
-Weimar; and far from inviting Melanchthon, he had
-carefully concealed from the Elector of Saxony the
-resolution he had formed, notwithstanding his representations,
-to unite with the King of France in hostilities
-against Austria. Philip having answered that
-Melanchthon was not with him: 'Impossible!' exclaimed
-the king, and all the French nobles echoed the
-word. 'Impossible! you will not make us believe that
-Melanchthon is not with you!'—'Everybody wished
-to convince us that we had Philip with us,' said the
-landgrave.—'Show him to us,' they exclaimed, 'almost
-using violence towards us.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_548" id="Ref_548" href="#Foot_548">[548]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was indeed a great disappointment. Melanchthon
-was the most esteemed representative of the Reformation.
-Some of those who accompanied the king had
-reckoned upon him for a detailed explanation of the
-evangelical principles; there were some even who
-desired to consult him on the best means of insuring
-their success in France. In their eyes Melanchthon was
-as necessary as Philip. 'As he is not here,' said they,
-'you must send for him.'—'Really,' said the landgrave,
-smiling, 'these Frenchmen desire so much to
-see Melanchthon, that, if we could show him to them,
-they would give us as much money as Tetzel and all
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">{301}</a></span>
-the indulgence vendors ever gained with their sanctimonious
-paper rubbish.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_549" id="Ref_549" href="#Foot_549">[549]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE TREATY SIGNED.=</p>
-
-<p>They consoled themselves for this disappointment
-by holding a new conference on the mode of delivering
-Wurtemberg. The king said that he could not
-furnish troops, as that would be contrary to the
-treaty of Cambray. 'I do not require soldiers,' answered
-the landgrave, 'but I want a subsidy.' But
-to supply funds for a war against Charles V. was
-equally opposed to the treaty. An expedient was
-sought and soon found. Duke Ulrich shall sell Montbéliard
-to France for 125,000 crowns; but it shall be
-stipulated, in a secret article, that if the duke repays
-this sum within three years (as he did) Francis will
-give back Montbéliard. It would appear that England
-also had something to do with the subsidy.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_550" id="Ref_550" href="#Foot_550">[550]</a></span>
-The treaty was signed on the 27th of January, 1534. It
-is worthy of notice that the French historians, even
-those free from ultramontane prejudices, do not speak
-of this conference.</p>
-
-<p>Several other interviews took place. The landgrave
-was not the best type of the true Reformation,
-but he had with him some good evangelicals, who, in
-their pious zeal, could show the King of France, as
-Luther would have done, the way of salvation. Solemn
-opportunities are thus given men of leaving the
-low grounds in which they live, and rising to the
-heights where they will see God. Francis I. closed
-his eyes. That prince possessed certain excellent
-gifts, but his religion 'was nothing but vanity and
-empty show.' At Bar-le-Duc he took the mailed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">{302}</a></span>
-hand of the landgrave, but had no desire for the hand
-of Jesus Christ.</p>
-
-<p>The landgrave went back into Germany, and the
-King of France to the interior of his states. Returning
-from the two interviews, he congratulated himself
-on having embraced the pope at Marseilles and
-the protestants at Bar-le-Duc. In proportion as the
-conference with Clement had been public, that with
-Philip had been secret; but, on the other hand, it had
-been more confidential and more real. These two
-meetings, these two facts in appearance so different,
-had been produced by the action of the same law.
-That law, which Francis wore in his heart, was hatred
-and ruin to Charles V. Were not the pope and the
-landgrave two of the princes of Europe who detested
-the emperor most? It was therefore quite logical
-and in harmony with the science of Machiavelli for
-the king to give one hand to Clement and the other
-to Philip. Internal contradictions could not fail to
-show themselves erelong. In fact, the Landgrave of
-Hesse, supported by France, was about to attack
-Austria, and establish protestantism in Wurtemberg
-in the place of popery.... What would Clement say?
-But before we follow the landgrave upon this perilous
-enterprise, let us return into France with the
-king.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_522" id="Foot_522" href="#Ref_522">[522]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 206.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_523" id="Foot_523" href="#Ref_523">[523]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Martin du Bellay gives Duke Christopher's letter. <i>Mémoires</i>,
-pp. 207, 208.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_524" id="Foot_524" href="#Ref_524">[524]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 208.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_525" id="Foot_525" href="#Ref_525">[525]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 209.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_526" id="Foot_526" href="#Ref_526">[526]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. p. 210.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_527" id="Foot_527" href="#Ref_527">[527]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Regem Franciæ deposuisse certam pecuniæ summam in bellum
-pro restitutione junioris ducis Wurtembergensis apud Helvetios.'—<i>State
-Papers</i>, vii. p. 539.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_528" id="Foot_528" href="#Ref_528">[528]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 211.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_529" id="Foot_529" href="#Ref_529">[529]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Coactus qui fuerit ex ea curia in qua tam indigne tractabatur, sese
-subducere.'—Johannes rex Hungariæ, manu propria, <i>State Papers</i>, vii.
-p. 538.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_530" id="Foot_530" href="#Ref_530">[530]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ranke, after Gabelkofer and Pfister, iii. p. 453.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_531" id="Foot_531" href="#Ref_531">[531]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, pp. 213-219. He gives his brother's speech
-at full length.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_532" id="Foot_532" href="#Ref_532">[532]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Changer son oraison gratulatoire en oraison comminatoire.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_533" id="Foot_533" href="#Ref_533">[533]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, pp. 220-232.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_534" id="Foot_534" href="#Ref_534">[534]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 232.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_535" id="Foot_535" href="#Ref_535">[535]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Eum (Du Bellay) laborare inter certos Germaniæ principes, ut
-fœdus novum inter se creent.'—Mont to Henry VIII., <i>State Papers</i>, vii.
-p. 539.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_536" id="Foot_536" href="#Ref_536">[536]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ipsi vero militem per mare Balticum nobis mitterent, si quis
-Majestatem Vestram invadere vellet.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_537" id="Foot_537" href="#Ref_537">[537]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Der Landgraf ist ein Kriegsmann, ein Arminius.'—Lutheri <i>Opp.</i>
-xxii. p. 1842.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_538" id="Foot_538" href="#Ref_538">[538]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ego certe <span title="ton Makedona">τὸν Μακεδόνα</span> non possum non amare et nolim cadere.'—<i>Corp.
-Ref.</i> ii. p. 727.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_539" id="Foot_539" href="#Ref_539">[539]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Und brauchten dazu unsere beste Rhetorica.'—Lutheri <i>Opp.</i> xxii.
-p. 1843.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_540" id="Foot_540" href="#Ref_540">[540]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Gott schläfet nicht, ist auch kein Narr: Er weiss sehr wohl wie
-man regieren soll.'—Ibid. x. p. 254.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_541" id="Foot_541" href="#Ref_541">[541]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Den Kayser von seinem Stuhl stürzen.'—Ibid. xi. p. 434.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_542" id="Foot_542" href="#Ref_542">[542]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Da ward S. F. G. gar roth und erzumte sich drüber.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_543" id="Foot_543" href="#Ref_543">[543]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Der König von Frankreich an uns beghert hat, das wir zu Ihm
-kommen wolten.'—The Landgrave to the Elector, Rommel's <i>Urkundenbuch</i>,
-p. 53.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_544" id="Foot_544" href="#Ref_544">[544]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Sleidan, i. liv. ix. p. 358.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_545" id="Foot_545" href="#Ref_545">[545]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Wie doch die Saclien und Zwiespalten der Religion standen.'—The
-Landgrave to the Elector, Rommel's <i>Urkundenbuch</i>, p. 53.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_546" id="Foot_546" href="#Ref_546">[546]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Und sind das eben die Worte des Konigs.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_547" id="Foot_547" href="#Ref_547">[547]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Es haben sich zwischen dem Könige und uns Reden zugetragen
-... daran E. L. gut gefallen haben werden.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_548" id="Foot_548" href="#Ref_548">[548]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Der König und die grossen Herrn und jedermann wolten uns <i>mit
-Gewald uberreden</i>, wir hätten Philippum bey uns.'—The Landgrave to
-the Elector, Rommel's <i>Urkundenbuch</i>, p. 53.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_549" id="Foot_549" href="#Ref_549">[549]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Rommel's <i>Urkundenbuch</i>, p. 53.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_550" id="Foot_550" href="#Ref_550">[550]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>State Papers</i>, vii. p. 568.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">{303}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXXII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">TRIUMPH AND MARTYRDOM.<br />
- (<span class="smc">Winter 1533-34.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=THE GOSPEL IN THE PARIS CHURCHES.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE consequences of the meeting at Marseilles were
-to be felt at Paris. After Calvin's flight, the
-Queen of Navarre, as we have seen, had succeeded in
-calming the storm; and yet the evangelical cause had
-never been nearer a violent persecution. The prisons
-were soon to be filled; the fires of martyrdom were soon
-to be kindled. During the year 1533 <i>Lutheran</i> discourses
-had greatly multiplied in the churches. 'Many
-notable persons,' says the chronicler, 'were at that
-time preaching in the city of Paris.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_551" id="Ref_551" href="#Foot_551">[551]</a></span>
-The simplicity,
-wisdom, and animation of their language had moved
-all who heard them. The churches were filled, not
-with formal auditors, but with men who received the
-glad-tidings with great joy. 'Drunkards had become
-sober; libertines had become chaste; the fruits which
-proceeded from the preaching of the Gospel had astonished
-the enemies of light and truth.'</p>
-
-<p>The doctors of the Sorbonne did not wait for the
-king's orders to attack the evangelicals; his interview
-with the pope, and the news of the bull brought from
-Rome, had filled the catholic camp with joy. 'What!'
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">{304}</a></span>
-they exclaimed, 'the king is uniting with the pope at
-Marseilles, and in Paris the churches are opened to
-heresy! ... let us make haste and close them.'</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile Du Bellay, the Bishop of Paris, who
-had made such a fine Latin speech to Clement VII., and
-who went at heart half-way with his brother, arrived
-in the capital. The leaders of the Roman party immediately
-surrounded him, urged him, and demanded
-the realisation of all the hopes which they had entertained
-from the interview at Marseilles. The bishop
-was embarrassed, for he knew that his brother and the
-king were just then occupied with a very different
-matter. Yet it was the desire of Francis that, for
-the moment, they should act in conformity with his
-apparent and not with his real action. The bishop
-gave way. The pious Roussel, the energetic Courault,
-the temporising Berthaud, and others besides, were
-forbidden to preach, and one morning the worshippers
-found the church doors shut.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_552" id="Ref_552" href="#Foot_552">[552]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=PRIVATE MEETINGS.=</p>
-
-<p>Great was their sorrow and agitation. Many went
-to Roussel and Courault, and loudly expressed their
-regret and their wishes. The ministers took courage,
-and 'turned their preaching into private lectures.'
-Little meetings were formed in various houses in the
-city. At first none but members of the family were
-present; but it seemed that Christ, according to his
-promise, was in the midst of them, and erelong
-friends and neighbours were admitted. The ministers
-set forth the promises of Holy Scripture, and the
-worshippers exclaimed: 'We receive more blessings
-now than before.'</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">{305}</a></div>
-
-<p>There were others besides Parisian faces which
-Courault, Roussel, and their friends saw on the humble
-benches around their little table: there were persons
-from many provinces of France, and even from the
-neighbouring countries. Among them was Master
-Pointet, a native of Menton, near Annecy, in Savoy,
-'who practised the art of surgery in the city of Paris.'
-He had been brought to a knowledge of the Gospel in
-a singular way. 'Monks and priests,' says the chronicler,
-'used to come to him to be cured of the diseases
-peculiar to those who substitute an impure celibacy
-for the holy institution of marriage.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_553" id="Ref_553" href="#Foot_553">[553]</a></span>
-Pointet, observing
-that godliness was not to be found among the
-priests, sought for it in the Scriptures; and, having discovered
-it there, began to remonstrate seriously with
-those unhappy men. 'These punishments,' he told
-them, 'proceed from your accursed celibacy: they are
-your wages, and you would do much better to take a
-wife.' Pointet, while reading these severe lessons, loved
-to go and learn in the lowly assemblies held by the
-humble ministers of the Word of God, and no one listened
-with more attention to the preaching of Roussel
-and Courault.</p>
-
-<p>The Sorbonnists, having heard of these conventicles,
-declared 'that they disliked <i>these lectures</i> still more
-than the sermons.' In fact, if the preaching in the
-churches had been a loud appeal, the Divine Word in
-these small meetings spoke nearer to men's hearts, enlightening
-them and making them fast in Jesus Christ;
-and accordingly the conversions increased in number.
-The lieutenant-criminal once more took the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">{306}</a></span>
-field: he posted his agents at the corners of the
-more suspected streets, with orders to watch the
-Lutherans and ferret them out. These spies discovered
-that on certain days and hours many suspicious-looking
-persons, most of them poor, were in the
-habit of frequenting certain houses. Morin and his
-officers set to work immediately: they made the
-round of these conventicles, seizing the pastors and
-dispersing the flocks. 'We are deprived of everything,'
-said the worshippers; 'we remain without
-teaching and exhortation. Alas! poor sheep without
-shepherds, shall we not go astray and be lost?' Then
-with a sudden impulse they exclaimed: 'Since our
-guides are taken away from us here, let us seek them
-elsewhere!' Many French evangelicals fled into
-foreign countries.</p>
-
-<p>While the poor reformed<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_554" id="Ref_554" href="#Foot_554">[554]</a></span>
-who remained in Paris
-were thus forsaken and sorrowful, the Sorbonne loudly
-demanded the return of Beda and the other exiles.
-The theologians canvassed the most influential members
-of the parliament, and besieged Cardinal Duprat.
-The king and the pope had just met solemnly at
-Marseilles; one of the Medici had just entered the
-family of the Valois; a royal letter, despatched from
-Lyons, ordered proceedings to be taken against the
-heretics: could they leave the champions of the papacy
-in disgrace? The demand was granted, and the impetuous
-Beda returned in triumph to the capital with
-his friends. That wicked little fairy Catherine had,
-unconsciously, and by her mere presence, restored him
-to liberty.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">{307}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=FRESH EFFORTS OF THE SORBONNE.=</p>
-
-<p>The wrath and fanaticism of Beda, excited by exile,
-knew no bounds. The repression of obscure <i>preachers</i>
-did not satisfy him; he determined to renew the attack
-he had formerly made upon the learned. 'I accuse the
-king's readers in the university of Paris,' he said to
-the parliament. These were the celebrated professors
-Danès, Paul Paradis, Guidacieri, and Vatable, learned
-philologists, esteemed by Francis and honoured over
-all literary Europe. 'Their interpretations of the
-text of Scripture,' continued Beda, 'throw discredit
-on the Vulgate, and propagate the errors of Luther.
-I demand that they be forbidden to comment on
-the Holy Scriptures.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_555" id="Ref_555" href="#Foot_555">[555]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Beda did not stand alone. Le Picard had returned
-from exile with his master, and the Sorbonne, wishing
-to give him a striking mark of their esteem, had conferred
-on him the degree of doctor of divinity. Beda
-and Le Picard took counsel together with some other
-priests. War was resolved upon, the legions were
-mustered, the plan of the campaign drawn up, and the
-various battle-fields allotted among the combatants.
-They took possession of the pulpits from which the
-preachers of the Reform had been expelled, and loud
-voices were heard everywhere giving utterance to
-violent harangues against 'the Lutherans.' Beda, Le
-Picard, and their followers denounced the heretics as
-enemies of the altar and the throne. In the Gospel,
-the germ of every liberty, they saw the cause of every
-disorder. 'It is not enough to put the Lutheran evangelists
-in prison,' said these forerunners of the preachers
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">{308}</a></span>
-of the League; 'we must go a step further, and burn
-them.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_556" id="Ref_556" href="#Foot_556">[556]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The arrests were begun immediately; but early in
-the year 1534 the burning pile was declared to be the
-best answer to heresy. The parliament of Paris
-published an edict, according to which whoever was
-convicted of Lutheranism on the testimony of two
-witnesses, should be burnt forthwith.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_557" id="Ref_557" href="#Foot_557">[557]</a></span>
-That was
-the surest way: the dead never return. Beda immediately
-demanded that the decree should be
-applied to the four evangelists: Courault, Berthaud,
-Roussel, and one of their friends. Notwithstanding
-his moderation and his concessions, Roussel
-particularly excited the syndic's anger. Was he not
-Margaret's chaplain? The terror began to spread.
-Whilst Francis at Bar-le-Duc was endeavouring to
-please the most decided of the protestants, the evangelicals
-of Paris, alarmed by the inquiries of the
-police, shut themselves up in their humble dwellings.
-'Really,' they said, 'this is not much unlike the
-Spanish inquisition.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_558" id="Ref_558" href="#Foot_558">[558]</a></span>
- The Sorbonne dared not,
-however, burn Roussel and his friends without the
-consent of the king.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THREE HUNDRED EVANGELICAL PRISONERS.=</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile the ultramontane party formed
-the design of catching all the Lutherans in Paris in
-one cast of the net. Morin set to work: he urged on
-his hounds; his sergeants entered the houses, went
-down into the cellars and up into the garrets, taking
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">{309}</a></span>
-away, here the husband from the wife; there, the
-father from the children; and in another place, the son
-from the mother. Some of these poor creatures hid
-themselves, others escaped by the roofs; but the chase
-was successful upon the whole. The alguazils of the
-Sorbonne lodged about <i>three hundred prisoners</i> in the
-Conciergerie.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_559" id="Ref_559" href="#Foot_559">[559]</a></span>
-When this news spread, with its concomitants
-of terror and distress, the flight recommenced
-on a larger scale: some were stopped on the road, but
-many succeeded in crossing the frontier. Among
-their number was a christian courtier, Maurus Musæus,
-a gentleman of the king's chamber, who took refuge at
-Basle, whence he wrote describing his numerous perplexities
-to Bucer.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_560" id="Ref_560" href="#Foot_560">[560]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>All this was done by the Sorbonne and parliament,
-as the king had not yet spoken out. At last he
-returned to the capital, and everybody thought he
-would be eager to fulfil the promises he had made the
-pope; but, on the contrary, he hesitated and affected
-to be scrupulous. The evil spirit that he had received
-from Clement VII. under the form of a Medici, was
-too young to have any influence over him. Besides,
-he was thinking much more just then of his alliance
-with the protestants of Germany than of his union
-with the pope, and the attacks made against his professors
-in the university annoyed him.</p>
-
-<p>Beda was not discouraged: he got some persons, who
-had access to the king, to beg that Roussel and his
-friends might be burnt. But how could that prince
-send the Lutherans of France to the stake at the very
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">{310}</a></span>
-time he was seeking an alliance with the Lutherans of
-Germany? 'Nobody is condemned in France,' he said,
-'without being tried. Beda wishes to have Roussel and
-his friends burnt; very well! let him first go to the
-Conciergerie and reduce them to silence.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_561" id="Ref_561" href="#Foot_561">[561]</a></span>
-This was not what Beda wanted: he knew that it was
-easier to burn the chaplain than to refute him. But
-the king compelled him to go to the prison; and there
-the impetuous Beda and the meek Roussel stood face
-to face. The disputation began in the presence of
-witnesses. The prisoner brought forward, with much
-simplicity, the Scriptures of God; the syndic of the
-Sorbonne replied with scholastic quibbles and ridiculous
-trifling.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_562" id="Ref_562" href="#Foot_562">[562]</a></span>
- His own friends were embarrassed;
-everybody saw his ignorance; Beda left the prison
-overwhelmed with shame, and Roussel was not burnt.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_563" id="Ref_563" href="#Foot_563">[563]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE KING'S IRRITATION.=</p>
-
-<p>While Beda and Roussel were disputing in the Conciergerie,
-a different scene was passing at the Louvre.
-A friend of letters, belonging to the royal household,
-knowing the king's susceptibility, placed a little book
-elegantly bound on a table near which the king was
-accustomed to sit. Francis approached, took up the
-book heedlessly, and looked at it. He was greatly surprised
-on reading the title: <i>Remonstrance addressed to
-the King of France by the three doctors of Paris, banished
-and relegated, praying to be recalled from their exile</i>.
-It was a work published by Beda before his return
-to Paris, and had been carefully concealed from the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">{311}</a></span>
-monarch. 'Ho! ho!' said he, 'this book is addressed
-to me!' He opened and read, and great was his anger
-on seeing how he was insulted and slandered....
-'Francis I. regards neither pope nor Medici: in his
-eyes, the chief infallibility is always his own.' 'Send
-those wretches to prison,' he exclaimed; and immediately
-Beda, Le Picard, and Le Clerq were shut up
-in the bishop's prison on a charge of high treason.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_564" id="Ref_564" href="#Foot_564">[564]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And now the chiefs of both causes were in confinement:
-Gerard Roussel, Courault, and Berthaud on
-one side; Beda, Le Picard, and Le Clerq on the other.
-Would any one dare affirm that the King of France
-did not hold the balance even between the two schools?
-Who shall be released? who shall remain a prisoner?
-was now the question. It would have been better to
-set them all at large; but neither Francis nor his
-age had attained to religious liberty. Contrary winds
-agitated that prince, and drove him by turns towards
-Rome and towards Wittemberg. One or other of
-them, however, must prevail. Margaret, believing
-the time to be critical, displayed indefatigable activity.
-She pleaded the cause of her friends to the king and
-to his ministers. Still mistaken, or seeming to be
-mistaken, as regards Montmorency, she begged this
-treacherous friend to save the very persons whose destruction
-he had sworn. 'Dear nephew,' she wrote to
-him, 'they are just now completing the proceedings
-against Master Gerard, and I hope the king will find him
-worthy of something better than the stake, and that he
-has never held any opinion deserving such punishment,
-or savouring of heresy. I have known him these five
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">{312}</a></span>
-years, and, believe me, if I had seen anything doubtful
-in him, I should not so long have put up with
-such a pagan.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_565" id="Ref_565" href="#Foot_565">[565]</a></span>
-The king could not resist his sister's
-earnest solicitations and the desire of making friends
-among the protestants of Germany. In the month of
-March 1534 he published an ordinance vindicating
-the evangelical preachers from the calumnies of the
-theologians, and setting them at liberty.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_566" id="Ref_566" href="#Foot_566">[566]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Surprising thing! Roussel, Courault, and Berthaud
-at liberty; Beda, Le Picard, and Le Clerq in prison!
-The champions of heresy triumph, and the champions
-of the Church are in chains! And this, too, after the
-king's return from Marseilles (the interview at Bar-le-Duc
-was not known at Paris), and four months after
-the marriage of Henry of France with the pope's
-niece!... Where are the promises made to Clement VII.?
-Both the city and the Sorbonne were
-deeply excited by this measure.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_567" id="Ref_567" href="#Foot_567">[567]</a></span>
-The greater the
-hopes aroused by the union with the papacy, the greater
-the fears caused by the king's conduct towards its
-most intrepid defenders. Would Francis I. become a
-Henry VIII.? Would Roman catholicism be ruined
-in France? The priests were afraid—many of them
-even despaired.</p>
-
-<p>The evangelicals, on the contrary, were delighted.
-The Word of God was about to triumph, they thought,
-not only in Paris, but also throughout France. Surprising
-news indeed came from Lyons, where an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">{313}</a></span>
-invisible preacher kept the whole population in
-suspense.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=ALEXANDER AT GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p>The friar De la Croix, whom we have already
-mentioned, having abandoned Paris, his convent, his
-cowl, and his monkish title, had reached Geneva under
-the name of Alexander. Cordially welcomed by Farel
-and Froment, he had been instructed by their care in
-the knowledge of the truth. His transformation had
-been complete. Christ had become to him 'the sun
-of righteousness; he had a burning zeal to know him,
-and great boldness in confessing him. Incontinent,
-he showed himself resolute, and resisted all gainsayers.'
-Accordingly the Genevan magistracy, which was under
-the influence of the priests, had condemned him to
-death as a heretic; the sentence had, however, been
-commuted, 'for fear of the King of France,' who would
-not suffer a Frenchman, even if heretical, to be maltreated,
-and Alexander was simply turned out of the
-city. When on the high-road beyond the gates, and
-near the Mint, he stopped and preached to the people
-who had followed him. Such was the power of his
-language that it inspired respect in all around him.
-'Nobody could stop him,' says Froment, 'so strongly
-did his zeal impel him to win people to the Lord.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_568" id="Ref_568" href="#Foot_568">[568]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Alexander first went to Berne with Froment, and
-then, retracing his steps, seriously reflected whether he
-ought not to return into France. He did not deceive
-himself: persecution, imprisonment, death, awaited him
-there. Then ought he not rather, like so many others,
-to preach the Gospel in Switzerland? But France
-had so much need of the light and grace of God....
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">{314}</a></span>
-should he abandon her? To preach Christ to his countrymen,
-Alexander was ready to bear all manner of
-evil, and even death. One single passion swallowed
-up all others. 'O my Saviour! thou hast given thy
-life for me; I desire to give mine for thee!' He crossed
-the frontier; and, learning that Bresse and Maconnais
-(Saône-et-Loire), where Michael d'Aranda had preached
-Christ in 1524, were without evangelists, he began to
-proclaim the forgiveness of the Gospel to the simple and
-warm-hearted people of that district, among whom fanaticism
-had so many adherents. He did not mind this:
-wandering along the banks of the Bienne, the Ain, the
-Seille, and the Saône, he entered the cottages of the
-poor peasants, and courageously scattered the seed of
-the Gospel.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_569" id="Ref_569" href="#Foot_569">[569]</a></span>
-A rumour of his doings reached Lyons,
-where certain pious goldsmiths, always ready to make
-sacrifices for their faith, invited Alexander to come
-and preach in their city.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=HIS WORK AT LYONS.=</p>
-
-<p>It was a wider field than the plains of Bresse.
-Alexander departed, arrived at Lyons, and entered the
-goldsmiths' shops. He conversed with them, and
-made the acquaintance of several <i>poor men of Lyons</i>,
-who were rich in faith; they edified one another, but
-this did not satisfy him. The living faith by which he
-was animated gave him an indefatigable activity. He
-was prompt in his decisions, full of spirit in his addresses,
-ingenious in his plans. He began to preach
-from house to house; next 'he got a number of people
-together here and there, and preached before them, to
-the great advancement of the Word.' Opposition soon
-began to show itself, and Alexander exclaimed: 'Oh
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">{315}</a></span>
-that Lyons were a free city like Geneva!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_570" id="Ref_570" href="#Foot_570">[570]</a></span>
-Those who
-desired to hear the Word grew more thirsty every
-day; they went to Alexander, and conversed with him;
-they dragged him to their houses, but the evangelist
-could not supply all their wants. He wrote to Farel,
-asking for help from Geneva, but none came; the persecution
-was believed to be so fierce at Lyons, that nobody
-dared expose himself to it. Alexander continued,
-therefore, to preach alone, sometimes in by-streets,
-and sometimes in an upper chamber. The priests
-and their creatures, always on the watch, endeavoured
-to seize him, but the evangelist had hardly finished
-his sermon when the faithful, who loved him devotedly,
-surrounded him, carried him away, and
-conducted him to some hiding-place. But Alexander
-did not remain there long: wistfully putting out
-his head, and looking round the house, to see that
-there was no one on the watch, he came forth to go
-and preach at the other extremity of the city. He
-had hardly finished when he was carried away again,
-and the believers took him to some new retreat, 'hiding
-him from one house to another,' says the chronicler,
-'so that he could not be found.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_571" id="Ref_571" href="#Foot_571">[571]</a></span>
-The evangelist
-was everywhere and nowhere. When the priests were
-looking after him in some suburb in the south, he was
-preaching in the north, on the heights which overlook
-the city. He put himself boldly in the van, he proclaimed
-the Gospel loudly, and yet he was invisible.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander did more than this: he even visited the
-prisons. He heard one day that two men, well known
-in Geneva, who had come to Lyons on business, had
-been thrown into the bishop's dungeons on the information
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">{316}</a></span>
-of the Genevan priests: they were the energetic
-Baudichon de la Maison-Neuve, and his friend
-Cologny.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_572" id="Ref_572" href="#Foot_572">[572]</a></span>
-The gates opened for Alexander: he entered,
-and that mysterious evangelist, who baffled the
-police of Lyons, was inside the episcopal prison. If one
-of the agents who are in search of him should recognise
-him, the gates will never open again for him. But
-Alexander felt no uneasiness; he spoke to the two
-Genevans, and exhorted them; he even went and
-consoled other brethren imprisoned for the Gospel,
-and then left the dungeons, no man laying a hand
-on him. The priests and their agents, bursting with
-vexation at seeing the futility of all their efforts,
-met and lamented with one another. 'There is a
-Lutheran,' they said, 'who preaches and disturbs the
-people, collecting assemblies here and there in the city,
-whom we must catch, for he will spoil all the world, as
-everybody is running after him; and yet we cannot
-find him, or know who he is.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_573" id="Ref_573" href="#Foot_573">[573]</a></span>
-They increased their
-exertions, but all was useless. Never had preacher
-in so extraordinary a manner escaped so many snares.
-At last they began to say that the unknown preacher
-must be possessed of satanic powers, by means of
-which he passed invisible through the police, and no
-one suspected his presence.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=MARGARET AND ROUSSEL.=</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Gospel was proclaimed in the first and in
-the second city of France. The Sorbonne and the
-catholic party had been intimidated by the king, and
-the Easter festival of 1534, which was approaching,
-might give the evangelicals of Paris a striking opportunity
-of proclaiming their faith. This was what the
-Queen of Navarre desired. She had passed some
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">{317}</a></span>
-time at Alençon, and also at Argentan, not far from
-Caen, with her sister-in-law, Catherine d'Albret, abbess
-of the convent of the Holy Trinity; at length
-she had returned to Paris. The priests dared not name
-her, but they made certain allusions to her in their
-sermons which their hearers very well understood.
-These things were reported to Margaret, who cared
-neither to pacify nor to punish her accusers, and
-answered them only by endeavouring still more to
-advance the cause of piety in France. The little
-conventicles only half pleased her: she wanted the
-evangelical doctrine to enter the kingdom by the
-churches, and not by the 'upper chambers.' She
-would have desired for France a reformation similar
-to that of England, which, while giving it the Word
-of God, preserved its archbishops and bishops, its
-cathedrals, its liturgy, and its grandeur. Queen of
-France, she would have been its Elizabeth; but
-doubtless with more grace. Her ambition was to
-install the Gospel at Notre Dame. She paid a visit
-to the king; she spoke to the bishop ... Roussel
-shall preach there. He was not a Farel in boldness,
-but Margaret encouraged him; besides, the idea of
-preaching the Gospel to the people of Paris in that
-old cathedral was pleasing to him. He determined,
-therefore, to comply with the queen's wishes.</p>
-
-<p>The report of Margaret's intentions had hardly
-become known, when the canons were in commotion.
-How scandalous! What! shall these evangelicals, of
-whom they wished to purge France, assemble in
-the cathedral?... A disciple of Luther ... in the
-temple ennobled by so many holy bishops!...
-Finding themselves betrayed by the king, the priests
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">{318}</a></span>
-resolved to turn to the people. These fanatics did not
-scruple to become mob-leaders; they traversed the city
-and the suburbs, entered the shops, distributed little
-handbills, and stuck up placards: under the excitement
-of this mission the oldest Sorbonnists regained all
-the activity of youth. 'We must resist these scandalous
-meetings at any cost,' they said. 'Let the people
-crowd before the gates of Notre Dame, and hinder the
-evangelicals from entering; or, if they do not succeed,
-let them fill the cathedral, and prevent Roussel from
-ascending the pulpit, and drown his heretical voice by
-the shouts of the believers.' When the day came, a
-great movement took place among the citizens of Paris.
-An immense crowd hastened from all the neighbouring
-quarters, who surrounded Notre Dame and filled the
-interior of the church. The Lutherans could not get
-in, and Roussel was forced to give up his sermon.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_574" id="Ref_574" href="#Foot_574">[574]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A favourable wind seemed generally to be breathing
-over the Reformation: its enemies were still in
-prison and its friends at liberty; Francis appeared
-to be more than ever in harmony with his sister and
-with the protestants of Germany; and an evangelical
-orator was authorised to preach at Notre Dame: a
-violent hurricane, however, suddenly burst upon the
-metropolis. A pious and active christian was there
-to lose his life, and Paris was to witness at the same
-time—a triumph and a martyrdom.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=ALEXANDER AT LYONS.=</p>
-
-<p>One day, a few weeks after Easter, a man loaded
-with chains entered the capital: he was escorted by
-archers, all of whom showed him much respect. They
-took him to the Conciergerie. It was Alexander
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">{319}</a></span>
-Canus, known among the Dominicans by the name
-of Father Laurent de la Croix. At Lyons, as at
-Paris, Easter had been the time appointed by the
-evangelicals for boldly raising their banner. The
-goldsmiths, who were to Alexander what the Queen
-of Navarre was to Roussel, were no longer satisfied
-with preachings in secret. Every preparation was
-made for a great assembly; the locality was settled;
-pious christians went through the streets from house
-to house and gave notice of the time and place. Many
-were attracted by the desire of hearing a doctrine that
-was so much talked about, and on Easter-day the ex-dominican
-preached before a large audience.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_575" id="Ref_575" href="#Foot_575">[575]</a></span>
-Was it in a church, in some hall, or in the open air? The
-chronicler does not say. Alexander moved his hearers
-deeply, and it might have been said that Christ rose
-again that Easter morn in Lyons, where he had so long
-lain in the sepulchre. All were not, however, equally
-friendly; some cast sinister glances. Alexander was
-no longer invisible: the spies in the assembly saw him,
-heard him, studied his physiognomy, took note of his
-<i>blasphemies</i>, and hurried off to report them to their
-superiors.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_576" id="Ref_576" href="#Foot_576">[576]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>While the police were listening to the reports and
-taking their measures, there were voices of joy and
-deliverance in many a humble dwelling. A divine
-call had been heard, and many were resolved to obey
-it. Alexander, who had belonged to the order of
-<i>Preachers</i>, combined the gift of eloquence with the
-sincerest piety. Accordingly, his hearers requested
-him to preach again the second day of Easter. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">{320}</a></span>
-meeting took place on Monday, and was more numerous
-than the day before. All eyes were fixed on
-the evangelist, all ears were attentive, all faces were
-beaming with joy; here and there, however, a few
-countenances of evil omen might be seen: they were
-the agents charged to seize the mysterious preacher.
-The assembly heard a most touching discourse; but
-just when Alexander's friends desired, as usual, to
-surround him and get him away, the officers of justice,
-more expeditious this time, came forward, laid their
-hands upon him, and took him to prison. He was
-brought before the tribunal and condemned to death.
-This cruel sentence distressed all the evangelicals,
-who urged him to appeal; he did appeal, which had
-the effect of causing him to be transferred to Paris.
-'That was not done without great mystery,' says
-Froment, 'and without the great providence of God.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_577" id="Ref_577" href="#Foot_577">[577]</a></span>
-People said to one another that Paul, having appealed
-to the emperor, won over a great nation at Rome; and
-they asked whether Alexander might not do the same
-at Paris. The evangelist departed under the escort
-of a captain and his company.</p>
-
-<p>The captain was a worthy man: he rode beside
-Alexander, and they soon entered into conversation.
-The officer questioned him, and the ex-dominican
-explained to him the cause of his arrest. The soldier
-listened with astonishment; he took an interest in the
-story, and by degrees the words of the pious prisoner
-entered into his heart. He heard God's call and awoke;
-he experienced a few moments of struggle and doubt,
-but erelong the assurance of faith prevailed. 'The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">{321}</a></span>
-captain was converted,' says Froment, 'while taking
-him to Paris.' Alexander did not stop at this; he
-spoke to each of the guards, and some of them also
-were won over to the Gospel. The first evening they
-halted at an inn, and the prisoner found means to
-address a few good words to the servants and the
-heads of the household. This was repeated every day.
-People came to see the strange captive, they entered
-into conversation with him, and he answered every
-question. He employed in the service of the Gospel
-all the skill that he possessed in discussion. 'He was
-learned in the doctrine of the sophists,' says a contemporary,
-'having profited well and studied long at
-Paris with his companions (the Dominicans).' Now
-and then the people went and fetched the priest or
-orator of the village to dispute with him; but they
-were easily reduced to silence. Many of the hearers
-were enlightened and touched, and some were converted.
-They said, as they left the inn: 'Really we
-have never seen a man answer and confound his adversaries
-better by Holy Scripture.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_578" id="Ref_578" href="#Foot_578">[578]</a></span>
-The crowd increased
-from town to town. At last Alexander arrived
-in Paris: 'Wonderful thing!' remarks the chronicler,
-'he was more useful at the inns and on the road than
-he had ever been before.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_579" id="Ref_579" href="#Foot_579">[579]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=A PRISONER IN PARIS.=</p>
-
-<p>This remarkable prisoner was soon talked of in many
-quarters of Paris. The case was a very serious
-one. 'A friar, a Dominican, an inquisitor,' said the
-people, 'has gone over to the Lutherans, and is striving
-to make heretics everywhere.' The monks of his
-own convent made the most noise. The king, who
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">{322}</a></span>
-detained Beda in prison, desired to preserve the
-balance by giving some satisfaction to the catholics.
-He was not uneasy about the German protestants; he
-had observed closely the landgrave's ardour, and had
-no fear that the fiery Philip would break off the
-alliance for a Dominican monk. Francis, therefore,
-allowed matters to take their course, and Alexander
-appeared before a court of parliament. 'Name your
-accomplices,' said the judges; and as he refused to
-name the accomplices, who did not exist, the president
-added: 'Give him the boot.' The executioners brought
-forward the boards and the wedges, with which they
-tightly compressed the legs of the evangelist. His
-sufferings soon became so severe that, hoping they
-had converted him, they stopped the torture, and the
-president once more called upon him to name all who,
-like himself, had separated from the Church of Rome;
-but he was not to be shaken, and the punishment
-began again. 'He was severely tortured several
-times,' say the <i>Actes</i>, 'to great extremity of cruelty.'
-The executioners drove the wedges so tightly between
-the boards in which his limbs were confined, that
-his left leg was crushed. Alexander groaned aloud:
-'O God!' he exclaimed, 'there is neither pity nor
-mercy in these men! ... oh that I may find both in
-thee!'—'Keep on,' said the head executioner. The
-unhappy man, who had observed Budæus among the
-assessors, turned on him a mild look of supplication,
-and said: 'Is there no Gamaliel here to moderate the
-cruelty they are practising on me?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_580" id="Ref_580" href="#Foot_580">[580]</a></span>
-The illustrious
-scholar, an honest and just man, although irresolute in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">{323}</a></span>
-his proceedings, kept his eyes fixed on the martyr,
-astonished at his patience. 'It is enough,' he said:
-'he has been tortured too much; you ought to be
-satisfied.' Budæus was a person of great authority;
-his words took effect, and the <i>extraordinary gehenna</i>
-ceased. 'The executioners lifted up the martyr, and
-carried him to his dungeon a cripple.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_581" id="Ref_581" href="#Foot_581">[581]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=ALEXANDER TORTURED.=</p>
-
-<p>It was the custom to deliver sentence in the absence
-of the accused, and to inform him of it in the Conciergerie
-through a clerk of the criminal office. The idea
-occurred of pronouncing it in Alexander's presence;
-perhaps in his terror he might ask for some alleviation,
-and by this means they might extort a confession.
-But all was useless. The court made a great display,
-and a crowd of spectators increased the solemnity,
-to no purpose: Alexander Canus, of Evreux, in Normandy,
-was condemned to be burnt alive. A flash
-of joy suddenly lit up his face. 'Truly,' said the
-spectators, 'is he more joyful than he was before!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_582" id="Ref_582" href="#Foot_582">[582]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The priests now came forward to perform the sacerdotal
-degradation. 'If you utter a word,' they told
-him, 'you will have your tongue cut out.'—'The
-practice of cutting off the tongue,' adds the historian,
-'began that year.' The priests took off his sacerdotal
-dress, shaved his head, and went through all the <i>usual
-mysteries</i>. During this ceremony Alexander uttered
-not a word; only at one of the absurdities of the priests
-he let a smile escape him. They dressed him in the
-<i>robe de fol</i>—a garment of coarse cloth, such as was
-worn by the poorer peasantry. When the pious
-martyr caught sight of it, he exclaimed, 'O God, is
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">{324}</a></span>
-there any greater honour than to receive this day
-the livery which thy Son received in the house of
-Herod?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_583" id="Ref_583" href="#Foot_583">[583]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A cart, generally used to carry mud or dust, was
-brought to the front of the building. Some Dominicans,
-his former brethren, got into it along with the humble
-christian, and all proceeded towards the Place Maubert.
-As the cart moved but slowly, Alexander, standing up,
-leant over towards the people, and 'scattered the seed
-of the Gospel with both hands.' Many persons, moved
-even to tears, exclaimed that they were putting him
-to death wrongfully; but the Dominicans pulled him
-by his gown, and annoyed him in every way. At
-first he paid no attention to this; but when one of the
-monks said to him coarsely: 'Either recant, or hold
-your tongue,' Alexander turned round and said to
-him with firmness: 'I will not renounce Jesus Christ....
-Depart from me, ye deceivers of the people!'</p>
-
-<p>At last they reached the front of the scaffold.
-While the executioners were making the final preparations,
-Alexander, observing some lords and ladies in
-the crowd, with common people, monks, and several of
-his friends, asked permission to address a few words
-to them. An ecclesiastical dignitary, a chanter of the
-Sainte Chapelle, carrying a long staff, presided over
-the clerical part of the ceremony, and he gave his
-consent. Then, seized with a holy enthusiasm, Alexander
-confessed, 'with great vehemence and vivacity
-of mind,'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_584" id="Ref_584" href="#Foot_584">[584]</a></span>
-the Saviour whom he loved so much, and
-for whom he was condemned to die. 'Yes,' he exclaimed,
-'Jesus, our only Redeemer, suffered death to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">{325}</a></span>
-ransom us to God his Father. I have said it, and
-I say it again, O ye christians who stand around me,
-pray to God that, as his son Jesus Christ died for me,
-he will give me grace to die now for him.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=ALEXANDER'S TRIUMPHANT DEATH.=</p>
-
-<p>Having thus spoken, he said to the executioner:
-'Proceed.' The officers of justice approached, they
-bound him to the pile and set it on fire. The wood
-crackled, the flames rose, and Alexander, his eyes upraised
-to heaven, exclaimed: 'O Jesus Christ, have
-pity on me! O Saviour, receive my soul!' He saw
-the glory of God; by faith he discerned Jesus in
-heaven, who received him into his kingdom. 'My
-Redeemer!' he repeated, 'O my Redeemer!' At last
-his voice was silent. The people wept; the executioners
-said to one another: 'What a strange criminal!'
-and even the monks asked: 'If this man is not
-saved, who will be?' Many beat their breasts, and
-said: 'A great wrong has been done to that man!'
-And as the spectators separated, they went away
-thinking: 'It is wonderful how these people suffer
-themselves to be burnt in defence of their faith.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_585" id="Ref_585" href="#Foot_585">[585]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Romish party having obtained this satisfaction,
-the political party thought only of overthrowing popery
-in one of the states of Germany, and of paving the
-way for its decline in the kingdom of St. Louis.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_551" id="Foot_551" href="#Ref_551">[551]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, fol. 111.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_552" id="Foot_552" href="#Ref_552">[552]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Théod. de Bèze, <i>Hist. Eccl.</i> i. p. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_553" id="Foot_553" href="#Ref_553">[553]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, fol. 107 verso.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_554" id="Foot_554" href="#Ref_554">[554]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The words <i>reform</i> and <i>reformed</i> apply especially to the religious
-movement in France.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_555" id="Foot_555" href="#Ref_555">[555]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crévier, <i>Hist. de l'Université de Paris</i> v. p. 278.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_556" id="Foot_556" href="#Ref_556">[556]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hos Beda vellet incendio tradere.'—Myconius to Bullinger, <i>Ep.
-Helvet. Ref.</i> p. 121, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_557" id="Foot_557" href="#Ref_557">[557]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Edictum, omnem qui duobus testibus convinceretur lutheranus,
-statim exurendum esse.'—Bucer to Blaarer, Strasburg MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_558" id="Foot_558" href="#Ref_558">[558]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Res erit non absimilis inquisitioni Hispaniæ.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_559" id="Foot_559" href="#Ref_559">[559]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nunc circa trecentos Parisiis jam captos.'—Bucer to Blaarer,
-Strasburg MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_560" id="Foot_560" href="#Ref_560">[560]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-His letters are preserved in the Seminary at Strasburg.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_561" id="Foot_561" href="#Ref_561">[561]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Tum <i>coegit</i> Bedam ut privatim cum eis congredi oporteret.'—Letter
-of Oswald Myconius, <i>Ep. Helvet. Ref.</i> p. 121.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_562" id="Foot_562" href="#Ref_562">[562]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Pessime enim nugas suas ad scripturas Dei adhibuit.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_563" id="Foot_563" href="#Ref_563">[563]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Inscitiam suam ostendere, quod et ei cessit in magnam ignominiam.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_564" id="Foot_564" href="#Ref_564">[564]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Beda conjectus est in carcerem, accusatus criminis læsæ majestatis.'—Cop
-to Bucer, Strasb. MSS. See also H. de Coste, p. 77. Schmidt, p. 106.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_565" id="Foot_565" href="#Ref_565">[565]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Lettres de la Reine de Navarre</i>, i. p. 299.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_566" id="Foot_566" href="#Ref_566">[566]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Prorsus liberatus est theologorum calumniis, ac decreto regis
-absolutus.'—Cop to Bucer, Strasburg MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_567" id="Foot_567" href="#Ref_567">[567]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quo multi commoti sunt et perturbati.'—Cop to Bucer, Strasburg
-MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_568" id="Foot_568" href="#Ref_568">[568]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Froment, <i>Actes et Gestes de Genève</i>, p. 76.—The Mint was near the
-present railway station.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_569" id="Foot_569" href="#Ref_569">[569]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, fol. 106.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_570" id="Foot_570" href="#Ref_570">[570]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Froment, <i>Actes et Gestes</i>, p. 74.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_571" id="Foot_571" href="#Ref_571">[571]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_572" id="Foot_572" href="#Ref_572">[572]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Froment, <i>Actes et Gestes</i>, p. 75.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_573" id="Foot_573" href="#Ref_573">[573]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. p. 74.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_574" id="Foot_574" href="#Ref_574">[574]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Coste, <i>Hist. de Le Picard</i>, p. 46; Schmidt, <i>Mémoires de Roussel</i>,
-p. 107.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_575" id="Foot_575" href="#Ref_575">[575]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, fol. 106.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_576" id="Foot_576" href="#Ref_576">[576]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Froment, <i>Actes et Gestes</i>, p. 75.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_577" id="Foot_577" href="#Ref_577">[577]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Actes et Gestes</i>, p. 75.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_578" id="Foot_578" href="#Ref_578">[578]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Froment, <i>Actes et Gestes</i>, p. 75.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_579" id="Foot_579" href="#Ref_579">[579]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_580" id="Foot_580" href="#Ref_580">[580]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, fol. 107.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_581" id="Foot_581" href="#Ref_581">[581]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, fol. 107.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_582" id="Foot_582" href="#Ref_582">[582]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_583" id="Foot_583" href="#Ref_583">[583]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, fol. 107. Froment, <i>Actes et Gestes</i>, p. 76.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_584" id="Foot_584" href="#Ref_584">[584]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_585" id="Foot_585" href="#Ref_585">[585]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Crespin, <i>Martyrologue</i>, fol. 107 verso. Froment, <i>Actes et Gestes</i>,
-p. 78.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">{326}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXXIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">WURTEMBERG GIVEN TO PROTESTANTISM BY THE KING OF FRANCE.<br />
- (<span class="smc">Spring 1534.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE idea of correcting the errors of the Church
-without changing its government was not new
-in France. By the Pragmatic Sanction in 1269,
-St. Louis had founded the liberties of the Gallican
-Church; and the great idea of reform had been widely
-spread since the time of the council of Constance
-(1414), of Clemengis, and of Gerson. The two Du
-Bellays, with many priests, scholars, and noblemen,
-thought it was the only means of calming down the
-agitations of christendom, and Margaret of Valois had
-made it the great business of her life.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=INTERVIEW OF DU BELLAY AND BUCER.=</p>
-
-<p>William du Bellay, on his way back from Augsburg,
-where he had delivered such noble speeches
-in favour of the protestant dukes of Wurtemberg,
-had stopped at Strasburg, and had several meetings
-with the pacific Bucer. His success in Germany, his
-conversations with the evangelical princes and doctors,
-who took him for as sound a protestant as themselves,
-had filled him with hope. In no place could those
-who desired to take a middle course meet with
-more sympathy than at Strasburg; there was quite a
-system of compromises there with the Swiss and with
-Luther; why not with Rome also? 'Since Luther
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">{327}</a></span>
-will not give way in anything,' Bucer had said, 'I will
-accommodate myself to his terminology; only I will
-avoid every expression that may indicate a too local
-and too gross presence of the body of Christ in the
-bread.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_586" id="Ref_586" href="#Foot_586">[586]</a></span>
-Accordingly Bucer, with his pious and
-moderate friends Capito, Hedio, and Zell, received
-the diplomatic mediator with great pleasure. They
-retired to the reformer's library, where Du Bellay
-explained his great project with all the seriousness of
-a man convinced. 'It is a greater work,' he said to
-Bucer, 'than this union of Zwinglians and Lutherans
-which has hitherto been your sole and constant occupation.
-We wish to effect a fusion between catholicism
-and the Reformation. We shall maintain the <i>unity</i> of
-the former; we shall uphold the <i>truth</i> of the latter.'
-Du Bellay's plan was at bottom, we see, the same as
-Leibnitz endeavoured to get Bossuet and Louis XIV.
-to accept. Bucer was in ecstasies: it was what he had
-sought so long; the diplomatist appeared to him as if
-surrounded with a halo of glory. And hence he often
-said: 'If the Lord would raise up many men like this
-<i>hero</i>, the kingdom of Christ would soon come out of
-the pit.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_587" id="Ref_587" href="#Foot_587">[587]</a></span>
-According to Bucer, Du Bellay was meditating
-a very perilous but still a great enterprise: it was
-a labour worthy of Hercules.... The counsellor of the
-King of France was satisfied to find the great pacificator
-agreeing with him, and hastened to Paris, flattering
-himself that he would gain a victory more striking
-than that of Francis I. at Marignan, or of Charles V.
-at Pavia.</p>
-
-<p>Everything seemed favourable: Francis, delighted
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">{328}</a></span>
-at his conference with the landgrave, had never been
-better disposed for conciliation. Du Bellay endeavoured
-to convince him that Germany was quite ready for
-the <i>great fusion</i>. Melanchthon, whom all Germany
-venerated, was (in his opinion) the man of the hour,
-by whose agency the two contrary currents would
-mingle their waters and form but one stream bearing
-life to every part. Was it not he who said: 'Preserve
-all the old ceremonies that you can: every innovation
-is injurious to the people?' Had he not declared at
-Augsburg that no doctrine separated him from the
-Roman Church; that he respected the universal
-authority of the pope, and desired to remain faithful
-to Christ and the Church of Rome? Margaret
-of Navarre also spoke to her brother of this great and
-good man: 'Melanchthon's mildness,' she said, 'contrasts
-with the violent temper of Zwingle and Luther.'
-Other persons observed to the king that what distinguished
-France from all catholic nations was its attachment
-to those liberties of the Church, which were
-on that account denominated <i>Gallican</i>. 'It would
-thus be a thoroughly French enterprise,' they said, 'to
-strip the pope of his usurped privileges.'</p>
-
-<p>Francis listened. To be king both in Church and
-State, to imitate his dear brother of England, who at
-heart was more catholic than himself,—this was his
-desire. Du Bellay, noticing this disposition, laboured
-vehemently (to use his own expression)<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_588" id="Ref_588" href="#Foot_588">[588]</a></span>
-to introduce
-the Melanchthonian ideas into France. He spoke of
-them at court and in the city, sometimes even to the
-clergy, and met everywhere with almost universal
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">{329}</a></span>
-approbation.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_589" id="Ref_589" href="#Foot_589">[589]</a></span>
-'Only make a forward movement,' he
-was told. The king resumed the reading of the Bible,
-which he had laid aside after the first days of the
-Reformation. It was not that he relished the Word of
-God, but the Bible was a weapon that would help him
-to gain the victory over the emperor. When conversing
-with the persons around him, he would quote
-some phrase of Scripture. He particularly liked the
-passages where St. Paul speaks of <i>breastplates</i>, <i>shields</i>,
-<i>helmets</i>, and <i>swords</i>. He found the apostle, indeed, a
-little too spiritual and mystical; and in his heart he
-preferred the helmet of a soldier to the <i>helmet of
-salvation</i>; but he appeared every day better disposed
-towards the Holy Scriptures.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_590" id="Ref_590" href="#Foot_590">[590]</a></span>
-Margaret was
-transported with joy. 'I agree with the German
-protestants,' said the king to Du Bellay. 'Yes, I
-agree with them in <i>all</i> points ... except <i>one</i>!' Du
-Bellay wrote immediately to Bucer, and added: 'You
-know what that means.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_591" id="Ref_591" href="#Foot_591">[591]</a></span>
-Francis desired to remain
-in union with Rome for form's sake, if it were only
-by a thread. But Rome is not contented with a
-thread.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=FRANCIS COOPERATES WITH THEM.=</p>
-
-<p>An approaching event seemed destined to decide
-whether or not a semi-reformation would be established
-in France. The king and his minister kept
-their eyes fixed on Germany, and waited impatiently
-to learn if the enterprise decided upon at Bar-le-Duc
-for the restoration of the protestant princes to the
-throne of Wurtemberg would be crowned with success.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">{330}</a></span>
-In their eyes Wurtemberg was the field of battle where
-the cause of the papacy would triumph or be crushed.
-Francis hoped that, if the protestants were victorious,
-they would enter upon a war that would become
-general. If the empire and the papacy fell beneath
-the blows of their enemies, new times would begin.
-Europe would be emancipated from both pope and
-emperor, and Francis would profit largely, both for
-himself and France, by this glorious emancipation.</p>
-
-<p>The landgrave prepared everything for the great
-blow he was about to strike. At once prudent and
-active, he did not write a word that could compromise
-him, but sent his confidential counsellors in every
-direction. He went in person to the Elector of
-Trèves and the elector-palatine, and promised them
-that if Wurtemberg was restored to its lawful princes,
-Charles's brother should be compensated by being
-recognised King of the Romans. These measures
-succeeded with Philip, who immediately made known
-this happy commencement to Francis I.</p>
-
-<p>On Easter Monday (1534) the Louvre displayed all
-its magnificence; many officers of the court were on
-foot, for Francis was to give audience to the agent of
-the Waywode (hospodar) of Wallachia, who had been
-dispossessed by Austria, like the Duke of Wurtemberg.
-The king's eyes sparkled with delight: 'The
-Swabian league is dissolved,' he told the envoy. 'I
-am sending money into Germany.... I have many
-friends there.... My allies are already in arms.... We
-are on the point of carrying our plan into execution.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_592" id="Ref_592" href="#Foot_592">[592]</a></span>
-Francis was so happy that he could not keep
-his secret.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">{331}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=FEARS IN GERMANY.=</p>
-
-<p>All was not, however, so near as he imagined. An
-old obstacle came up again, and seemed as if it would
-check the landgrave. The other evangelical princes
-and doctors did all they could to thwart an enterprise
-which would, in Philip's opinion, secure their triumph.
-'The restoration of the Duke of Wurtemberg,' said
-the wise Melanchthon, 'will engender great troubles.
-Even the Church will be endangered by them. You
-know my forebodings.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_593" id="Ref_593" href="#Foot_593">[593]</a></span>
-All the kings of Europe
-will be mixed up in this war. It is a matter full of
-peril, not only to ourselves, but to the whole world.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_594" id="Ref_594" href="#Foot_594">[594]</a></span>
-Astrology interfered in the matter, and spread terror
-among the people. Lichtenberg, a famous astrologer,
-published some predictions, to which he added certain
-'monstrous pictures,'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_595" id="Ref_595" href="#Foot_595">[595]</a></span>
- and said: 'The Frenchman
-(Francis) will again fall into the emperor's hands;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_596" id="Ref_596" href="#Foot_596">[596]</a></span>
-and all who unite with him in making war will be
-destroyed. The lion will want help, and will be
-deceived by the lily.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_597" id="Ref_597" href="#Foot_597">[597]</a></span>
-In such terms the German
-prophecy declared that France (the lily) would deceive
-Hesse (whose device is a lion): this shows how
-little confidence Germany had in the French monarch.</p>
-
-<p>Ferdinand of Austria distrusted the prophecy, and
-thought the landgrave's attack close at hand. Sensible
-of his own weakness, he turned to the pope and said
-to him through his envoy Sanchez: 'The landgrave's
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">{332}</a></span>
-expedition is a danger which threatens the Church
-and Italy ... the spirituality and the temporality.'
-The pope promised everything, but (as was his
-custom) with the determination to do nothing. A
-war that might weaken Charles was gratifying to him,
-even though protestantism should profit by it. Clement,
-however, convoked the consistory; described
-to them in very expressive language the danger of the
-empire and the Church; but of helping them, not a
-word.... Ferdinand, still more alarmed, became more
-importunate, and the matter was brought before a
-congregation: 'Alas!' said Clement to the cardinals,
-'it is impossible to conceal from you the dangers that
-threaten King Ferdinand and the Austrian power.
-They are attacked by so severe a disease that a simple
-medicine would be insufficient to effect a cure.... It
-requires an energetic remedy ... but where can it be
-found?' The cardinals agreed with their chief; they
-thought that, as the danger threatened Austria alone,
-it was for Austria to get out of it as she could. The
-recollection of the sack of Rome by the imperialists
-in 1527 was not yet effaced from the hearts of these
-Roman priests, and they were not sorry to see the
-emperor punished by an heretical scourge. They
-resolved that as Rome could not give a subsidy sufficiently
-large, they would give none at all. 'This
-expedition,' said Clement VII. to Ferdinand's envoy,
-with a certain frankness, 'is only a private matter....
-But if the landgrave touches the Church, you may
-reckon then upon my help.' Sanchez, seeing the
-pontiff's lukewarmness, and moved by sorrow and
-indignation,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_598" id="Ref_598" href="#Foot_598">[598]</a></span>
-forcibly replied: 'Be not deceived,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">{333}</a></span>
-holy father.... This matter is not so small as you
-suppose.... It will cost the Church of Rome dear ...
-and not the Church only, but the city and all
-Italy.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE POPE AND AUSTRIA.=</p>
-
-<p>Sanchez thought, like Francis and the politicians,
-that the protestants, victorious in Wurtemberg, would
-not stop in so glorious a career; that they would raise
-a large army; and that, aided by France, they would
-cross the Alps and go to Rome to dethrone the successor
-of St. Peter, and put an end to what they
-regarded as the power of antichrist. This suggestion
-exasperated Clement: he felt the tiara shaking on his
-head, and angrily exclaimed: 'And where is the
-emperor? What is he doing? Why does he not
-watch over his brother's states and the peace of
-Germany?' Charles V., quite unconcerned about
-a project which might, however, insure his rival's
-triumph, was calmly enjoying his repose beneath the
-smiling sky of Spain, reclining on the banks of its
-beautiful rivers, under the shade of its orange and
-citron trees and of its gigantic laurels. The pope took
-courage from his example to do the same. If he did
-nothing to stop the protestant army, the papacy might
-suffer; but if he did anything, he might turn aside
-from the house of Austria the terrible blow about to
-fall on it, and save from a reverse that imperial
-power which he detested. The pontiff sank back
-into his apostolic chair, and prepared for a luxurious
-slumber, thinking it would be time enough to wake
-up ... when danger was at his own door. 'Alas!'
-said sincere catholics, 'why are the successors of
-St. Peter, the fisherman and apostle, <i>clothed in soft
-raiment</i>, which is for those who are <i>in kings' houses</i>?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">{334}</a></span>
-Why do they covet these courtly pomps and effeminacies?
-Why do they imitate <i>the princes of the Gentiles
-who exercise dominion over them</i>? Christ bore the
-cross.' The political passions of Clement VII. extinguished
-his ecclesiastical zeal. The temporal power
-of the popes has never been other than a clog upon
-their spiritual power, preventing it from working
-freely. The judgments of God were about to be
-executed.</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of May everything was astir
-in Hesse, Pomerania, Mecklenburg, Brunswick, Westphalia,
-and on the banks of the Rhine; the landgrave
-was preparing to march against Austria. Omens
-threatened, indeed, to detain him. At Cassel, the
-chief town of Hesse, a monster was seen walking
-mysteriously and silently upon the water during the
-night.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_599" id="Ref_599" href="#Foot_599">[599]</a></span>
-'It is a sure warning,' said the old crones and
-a few citizens, 'that the prince ought to stop.' But
-Philip replied coldly: 'These visions are not worthy
-of belief.' Without heeding the monster, Philip,
-mounted on horseback and carrying a lance in his
-hand, reviewed his army on Wednesday, the 6th of
-May, after midnight, and then gave the order to march.
-Almost all the officers and a great many of the soldiers
-belonged to the evangelical confession. It was, alas!
-the first politico-religious army of the sixteenth century,
-and this campaign was the first Germanico-European
-opposition to the house of Austria.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_600" id="Ref_600" href="#Foot_600">[600]</a></span>
-History
-shrouds herself beneath a veil of mourning as she points
-to this epoch; for the employment of human force in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">{335}</a></span>
-the interests of religion, the armed struggle between
-the new and the old times, began then.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=PHILIP DEFEATS THE AUSTRIAN.=</p>
-
-<p>The Austrian government, deserted by the pope,
-saw that it must help itself, and had made great exertions
-on its part. All the convents, chapters, and
-towns of Wurtemberg had been forced to contribute
-large sums of money, and the most experienced
-generals of the Italian wars had been placed at the
-head of the imperial army. The soldiers of Austria
-marched to Laufen on the Neckar, and there waited
-for the enemy. The landgrave's army, full of hope
-and courage, uttered loud shouts of joy when they
-heard of it.</p>
-
-<p>It was not so at Wittemberg. Melanchthon was
-more grieved than ever, and many persons sympathised
-with him. On the one hand, the theologians of the
-Reformation detested war; but on the other, they said
-to themselves at certain moments: 'Still ... if Philip
-takes up arms it is to restore legitimate princes to the
-throne of their fathers, and secure a free course to the
-Word of God!'—'Oh, what cruelties in the Roman
-Church,' added Melanchthon, 'what idolatries, and
-what obstinacy in defending them! Who knows but
-God desires to punish their defenders, if not utterly to
-destroy such notorious evils for ever?<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_601" id="Ref_601" href="#Foot_601">[601]</a></span>
-Oh that the
-issue of this war may be beneficial to the Church of
-Christ!' Some time after, when Melanchthon was
-told of the advance of the army of Philip of Hesse,
-that peaceful christian gave way once more to his
-anguish: 'These movements are quite against our
-advice,' he said, and then shutting himself up in his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">{336}</a></span>
-closet, he exclaimed: 'In the midst of the dangers and
-sorrows to which God exposes us, we have nothing else
-to do but to call upon Christ and to feel his presence.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_602" id="Ref_602" href="#Foot_602">[602]</a></span>
-He then fell upon his knees before God; and God, who
-saw him in secret, rewarded him openly. But while
-the christians were weeping and praying, the politicians
-were rejoicing and acting. Du Bellay, in particular,
-did not doubt that an early victory would cement the
-union of France with German protestantism; and perceiving
-the consequences that would follow from the
-enfranchisement of his country, he gave utterance to
-his joy.</p>
-
-<p>The impetuous landgrave, taking a spring, cleared,
-as at one bound, the country which separated him from
-the Neckar, arrived unexpectedly on the banks of that
-river near Laufen, where the imperial army was posted,
-and attacked it with spirit. At first the Austrians
-courageously sustained the fight; but the count palatine,
-their commander, having been wounded by a
-cannon-shot, they retired precipitately. Early the
-next morning, the landgrave, putting himself at the
-head of his cavalry and artillery, fell upon them as
-they were beginning to retreat, and drove part of them
-into the Neckar.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_603" id="Ref_603" href="#Foot_603">[603]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Wurtemberg was gained, and Duke Ulrich, accompanied
-by Prince Christopher, reappeared in the
-country of his fathers. The people, excited at the
-thought of seeing their national princes once more
-after so many years, assembled in the open country
-near Stuttgard, and received them with immense
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">{337}</a></span>
-acclamation. The landgrave, not allowing himself to
-be retarded by the warm reception of the people whom
-he had restored to independence, followed up his plan,
-and on the 18th of June reached the Austrian frontier.
-Everybody thought that he would march on Vienna,
-and overthrow that insolent dynasty which desired to
-be the master of the world.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=ALARM AT THE VATICAN.=</p>
-
-<p>Great was the consternation in all the catholic
-world, but particularly in the Vatican. On the 10th
-of June, 1534, Clement, who was sick, went sorrowful,
-downcast, and tottering, to the college of cardinals,
-and laid before them the pitiful letters he had received
-from King Ferdinand.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_604" id="Ref_604" href="#Foot_604">[604]</a></span>
-The cardinals, as they read
-them, were struck with terror. Would Vienna, that
-had resisted the Turks, fall under the assault of the
-protestants? Would a victorious army, crossing the
-Alps, come and perpetrate a second sack of Rome
-which, as the work of heretics, might not be more
-compassionate than that of the catholic Charles V.?
-The cardinals saw no other remedy than that to which
-Rome had recourse when her ducats and arquebuses
-were gone. 'A general council,' they exclaimed, 'is
-the only remedy that can save us from heresy and all
-the calamities by which christendom is distressed.'</p>
-
-<p>While there was mourning at Rome, there were great
-rejoicings at the Louvre. It was a long time since
-the emperor had received such a check. About the
-end of June a courier from Germany brought Francis
-the despatches announcing the arrival of Philip of
-Hesse on the Austrian frontier. He could not repress
-the outburst of his joy. He spoke to himself, to his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">{338}</a></span>
-councillors, to his courtiers.... 'My friends,' he exclaimed,
-'my friends have conquered Wurtemberg.'
-Then, as if the landgrave and his victorious army
-were before him, he exclaimed in a tone of command:
-'Forward! forward!' His dream was about to be
-realised; the war would become general; he already
-saw the landgrave at Vienna; and, what was better
-still, he saw himself at Genoa, Urbino, Montferrat, and
-Milan. All his life through he forgot France for Italy,
-which he never possessed. But he was mistaken as to
-the landgrave's intentions. Much as Francis desired to
-see the war become general, Philip of Hesse laboured
-to keep it local. Satisfied with having restored Wurtemberg
-to its princes, he meant to respect the empire.
-The kings of France and England were seriously
-vexed: 'The Duke of Wurtemberg, restored by my
-help and yours,' said Henry VIII. to Francis I., 'is
-only seeking how to make peace with the emperor.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_605" id="Ref_605" href="#Foot_605">[605]</a></span>
-It would appear by the evidence derived from the
-<i>State Papers</i>, that the gold of England as well as of
-France had contributed to despoil Austria of Wurtemberg.
-Henry, more perhaps than Francis I., had
-hoped that the blow struck upon the banks of the
-Neckar would be, to emperor as well as to pope, the
-commencement of sorrows; but they were both mistaken.
-The temptation, no doubt, was great for a prince
-of thirty, full of decision and energy, who believed
-that nothing would make the triumph of protestantism
-so secure as the humiliation of Austria; but Philip's
-loyalty resisted the temptation.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=WURTEMBERG RESTORED.=</p>
-
-<p>On the 27th of June the peace of Cadan put an end
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">{339}</a></span>
-to all differences, and restored Wurtemberg to its national
-princes, with a voice in the council of the empire.
-If there had never been a war more energetically conducted,
-there had never been a peace so promptly
-concluded. The landgrave had displayed a spirit and
-talents which, men thought, might in future prove
-troublesome to the puissant Charles.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_606" id="Ref_606" href="#Foot_606">[606]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The emperor having received his lesson, the pope's
-turn came next. As the state of Wurtemberg had
-been wrested from the hands of Austria, the Church
-was to be saved from the clutches of the papacy. At
-the diet of Augsburg, in 1530, Duke Christopher had
-seen the landgrave, his relation and friend, come forward
-as the most intrepid champion of the Reformation.
-His generous heart had been won to a cause
-which included such a noble defender, and his desire
-was to see it triumph in Wurtemberg. On the other
-hand, King Ferdinand, when renouncing his authority
-over the duchy, desired at least to maintain that of
-the pope; and he therefore proposed to insert in the
-treaty of peace an article forbidding any change in
-religious matters. But the dukes, the landgrave, and
-the Elector of Saxony unanimously declared that the
-Gospel ought to have free course in the duchy, and
-the electoral chancellor wrote this word on the margin,
-by the side of the article proposed by the King of the
-Romans: <i>Rejected</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_607" id="Ref_607" href="#Foot_607">[607]</a></span>
-'You are in no respect bound as
-to the faith,' said the evangelical princes to Ulrich;
-while the papal nuncio Vergerio entreated King Ferdinand
-not to give way to the Lutherans. All the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">{340}</a></span>
-efforts of the Romish party were useless. The important
-victory of the landgrave (and of Francis I.)
-was about to open the gates of Wurtemberg to the
-Reformation, and consequently those of other Roman-catholic
-countries.</p>
-
-<p>Ulrich and Christopher, being quite as desirous of
-bringing souls to the knowledge of the Word of God
-as of replacing their subjects under the sceptre of the
-ancient house of Emeric,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_608" id="Ref_608" href="#Foot_608">[608]</a></span>
- set to work immediately.
-They invited to their states Ambrose Blaarer, the
-friend of Zwingle and Bucer, and Ehrard Schnepf, the
-friend of Luther, converted by his means at Heidelberg
-at the beginning of the Reformation.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_609" id="Ref_609" href="#Foot_609">[609]</a></span>
-Their labours
-and those of other servants of God spread the evangelical
-light over the country.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_610" id="Ref_610" href="#Foot_610">[610]</a></span>
-Nor was that all: if
-the defeat at Cappel had restored many cities to the
-Romish creed,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_611" id="Ref_611" href="#Foot_611">[611]</a></span>
-the victory of Laufen allowed many
-to come to the evangelical faith. Baden, Hanau,
-Augsburg, Pomerania, Mecklenburg, and other places
-began, advanced, or completed their reformation about
-this time. French money had never before returned
-such good interest.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=A KINGLY PROJECT.=</p>
-
-<p>France was now about to undertake a still greater
-task. We have seen that there were at that time two
-systems of reform: Margaret's system and Calvin's.
-It was in the order of things that the one which remained
-nearest to catholicism should be tried first. If
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">{341}</a></span>
-the most eminent persons of the age, who sought in
-this middle course the last and supreme resource of
-christendom, did not see their efforts crowned with
-success, it would be necessary to undertake, or rather
-to continue spiritedly, a more simple, more scriptural,
-more practical, and more radical reform. When Margaret
-failed, there remained Calvin. The realisation
-of this specious but illusory system, recommended in
-after years to Louis XIV. by a great protestant philosopher
-of Germany, was about to be tried by Francis I.
-The narrative of this experiment ought to occupy a
-remarkable place in the religious history of the sixteenth
-century.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_586" id="Foot_586" href="#Ref_586">[586]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Rœhrich, <i>Reform in Elsass</i>, ii. p. 274.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_587" id="Foot_587" href="#Ref_587">[587]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Dominus excitet multos isti heroï similes.'—Bucer to Chelius.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_588" id="Foot_588" href="#Ref_588">[588]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Adhuc vehementer laboratur.'—Du Bellay to Bucer.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_589" id="Foot_589" href="#Ref_589">[589]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Omnes enim bene sperare jubent.'—Du Bellay to Bucer.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_590" id="Foot_590" href="#Ref_590">[590]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Etiam rex ipse, cujus animus <i>erga meliores litteras</i> magis ac magis
-augetur.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_591" id="Foot_591" href="#Ref_591">[591]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Una tamen in re vehementer a Germanis abhorret.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_592" id="Foot_592" href="#Ref_592">[592]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Béthune MSS. 8493. Ranke, iii. p. 456.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_593" id="Foot_593" href="#Ref_593">[593]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Restitutio ducis Wurtembergensis brevi magnos motus pariet.
-Divinationes meas nosti.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 706.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_594" id="Foot_594" href="#Ref_594">[594]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Magna et periculosa res universo orbi terrarum ac præcipue nobis.'—Ibid.
-p. 728.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_595" id="Foot_595" href="#Ref_595">[595]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Mit monstrosen Figuren.'—Seckendorf, p. 833.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_596" id="Foot_596" href="#Ref_596">[596]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Gallum iterum venturum in potestatem imperatoris Caroli.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_597" id="Foot_597" href="#Ref_597">[597]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Leo carebit auxilio et decipietur a lolio.'—Ibid. The correct reading
-is evidently <i>lilium</i> (lily) and not <i>lolium</i> (tares). The preposition <i>a</i>
-indicates that the word is taken in a symbolical sense.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_598" id="Foot_598" href="#Ref_598">[598]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Dolore et indignatione accensus replicui.'—Sanchez' report to
-Ferdinand: Bucholz. Ranke.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_599" id="Foot_599" href="#Ref_599">[599]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Cassellæ nescio quid memorant noctu, super aquis monstri visum
-esse.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 729.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_600" id="Foot_600" href="#Ref_600">[600]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ranke, <i>Deutsche Geschichte</i>, iii. p. 459.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_601" id="Foot_601" href="#Ref_601">[601]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quid si Deus illa publica vitia tum punire, tum aliqua ex parte
-tollere decrevit?'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 729.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_602" id="Foot_602" href="#Ref_602">[602]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut Christum invocare et præsentiam ejus experiri discamus.'—<i>Corp.
-Ref.</i> ii. p. 730.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_603" id="Foot_603" href="#Ref_603">[603]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Sleidan, i. liv. ix p. 365. Ranke, iii. p. 461. Rommel, ii. p. 319.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_604" id="Foot_604" href="#Ref_604">[604]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In senatum pontifex venit, lectæque ibi sunt litteræ fratris Caroli.'—Pallavicini,
-<i>Conc. Trid.</i> i. p. 294.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_605" id="Foot_605" href="#Ref_605">[605]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'The Duke of Wyttemberg lately restored by his and his good
-brother's meanes.'—<i>State Papers</i>, vii. p. 568.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_606" id="Foot_606" href="#Ref_606">[606]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Sleidan, i. pp. 366-368. Ranke, iii. pp. 465-468.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_607" id="Foot_607" href="#Ref_607">[607]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Soll aussen bleiben.'—Sattler, iii. p. 129. Sleidan, iii. p. 369.
-Ranke, iii. p. 481.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_608" id="Foot_608" href="#Ref_608">[608]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The house of Wurtemberg boasts its descent from Emeric, mayor of
-the palace under Clovis.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_609" id="Foot_609" href="#Ref_609">[609]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Hist. of the Ref. of the Sixteenth Century</i>, vol. i. bk. iii. ch. ii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_610" id="Foot_610" href="#Ref_610">[610]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Snepfius Stuttgardiæ pastor ecclesias in illo ducatu reformavit.'—Melch.
-Adami <i>Vitæ Germanorum Theologorum</i>, p. 322.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_611" id="Foot_611" href="#Ref_611">[611]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Hist. of the Ref. of the Sixteenth Century</i>, vol. iv. bk. xvi. ch. x.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">{342}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXXIV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">CONFERENCE AT THE LOUVRE FOR THE UNION OF TRUTH AND
- CATHOLICITY IN THE CHURCH.<br />
- (1534.)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE Wurtemberg affair being ended, Du Bellay
-thought of nothing but his great plan; that is, a
-Reformation according to the ideas of the Queen of
-Navarre—the combination of catholicism and truth
-by the union of France and Germany. They were
-not the only persons who entertained such thoughts:
-Roussel, Bucer, and many other evangelical christians
-asked themselves whether the great success obtained
-in Germany would not decide the reformation of
-France. Intercourse was much increased between the
-two countries. Frenchmen and Germans were continually
-crossing and recrossing the Rhine.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=A WITTEMBERG STUDENT.=</p>
-
-<p>In the month of July 1534, the Queen of Navarre
-was in one of the chambers of her palace: before her
-stood a bashful timid young man, and she had a letter
-in her hand which she appeared to be reading with the
-liveliest interest. The young man was a native of
-Nîmes, Claude Baduel by name. He had just come
-from Wittemberg, where he had found, at the feet of
-Melanchthon and Luther, the knowledge of the Saviour.
-He was not an ordinary student. Of reserved manners,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_612" id="Ref_612" href="#Foot_612">[612]</a></span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">{343}</a></span>
-generous heart, rare disinterestedness, and great
-firmness in the faith, he had at the same time a highly
-cultivated mind. He spoke Latin not only with
-purity, but with great elegance, and his discourses
-were as full of matter as of harmony.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_613" id="Ref_613" href="#Foot_613">[613]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Like many other young scholars, Baduel was very
-poor, not having the means of studying and scarcely
-of living. Often during his residence at Wittemberg,
-he found himself in his little room reduced to the last
-extremity. He had uttered many a groan, and had
-prayed to that heavenly Father who feedeth the birds
-of the air. As the moment of his departure approached,
-his distress had increased. How could he
-perform the journey? What would become of him
-in France? He had asked himself with sorrow
-whether he ought not to abandon letters and devote
-himself to some manual labour. On a sudden, he
-conceived the idea of applying to the Queen of
-Navarre; and going to Melanchthon, he said to him:
-'Ill fortune compels me to forsake the liberal arts
-for vulgar occupations, which my nature and my
-will abhor with equal energy.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_614" id="Ref_614" href="#Foot_614">[614]</a></span>
-In vain have I zealously
-devoted myself to the study of Holy Scripture
-and of eloquence; in vain have I ardently desired to
-make further progress; a cruel enemy—poverty—lays
-its barbarous hands upon me, and compels me to
-renounce a vocation which transported me with joy.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_615" id="Ref_615" href="#Foot_615">[615]</a></span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">{344}</a></span>
-Yet I am determined to make a last and supreme
-attempt. The Queen of Navarre is a sort of providence,
-almost a divinity for the friends of letters and of the
-arts.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_616" id="Ref_616" href="#Foot_616">[616]</a></span>
-... Pray, dear master, give me a letter to her.'</p>
-
-<p>Melanchthon, grieved at the destitute condition of a
-young man whose fine understanding he appreciated,
-did not hesitate to accede to his request. In those
-days there was less etiquette and formality and more
-familiarity between princes and the friends of letters
-than there has been since. On the 13th of June, 1534,
-a month after the battle of Laufen, the master of
-Germany wrote to the sister of Francis, to introduce
-the scholar to her. It was this letter which Baduel
-had delivered to the queen, and which she, delighted
-at entering into direct communication with Melanchthon,
-was reading with the greatest interest.</p>
-
-<p>'It is certainly a great boldness,' wrote the illustrious
-reformer, 'for a man like me, of low condition
-and unknown to your highness,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_617" id="Ref_617" href="#Foot_617">[617]</a></span>
-to dare recommend
-a friend to you; but the reputation of your eminent
-piety, spread through all the world,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_618" id="Ref_618" href="#Foot_618">[618]</a></span>
-does not permit
-me to refuse an upright and learned man the service
-he begs of me. The liberal arts can never be supported
-except by the generosity of princes.' Melanchthon
-ended by saying: 'Never will alms more royal
-or more useful have been bestowed. The Church,
-scattered over the world, has long counted your highness
-among the number of those queens whom the
-prophet Isaiah calls the <i>nursing mothers</i> of the people
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">{345}</a></span>
-of God, and will take care to hand down the remembrance
-of your kindnesses to the most distant generations.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_619" id="Ref_619" href="#Foot_619">[619]</a></span>
-But the student, that living message of the
-reformers, interested Margaret no less than the letter
-itself. Baduel had seen and heard them, in their
-homes, in the street, and in the pulpit. 'Talk to me,'
-she said with that amiable grace which distinguished
-her, 'talk to me about Melanchthon and Luther; tell
-me how they teach and how they live, what are their
-relations with their pupils, and what they think of
-France.' Margaret desired to know everything. She
-questioned him on several points, a knowledge of which
-might be useful for the projects she had conceived in
-conjunction with Du Bellay.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=MARGARET'S PATRONAGE.=</p>
-
-<p>The queen did not forget the young man himself:
-observing the beauty of his mind, the liveliness of his
-faith, and the elevation of his soul, she thought that to
-protect Baduel was to prepare a chosen instrument to
-propagate evangelical principles in France. Thanks
-to her care, the young man, recommended by Melanchthon,
-became erelong a professor at Paris. Subsequently,
-when a college of arts was founded at Nîmes,
-the youthful doctor resolved to sacrifice the advantageous
-post he held in the capital to devote his
-services to the city of his birth. The queen recommended
-him to the consuls of that city for rector of
-their new institution. 'I provided for his studies,' she
-told them. But persecution did not allow Baduel to
-serve France unto the end; he was obliged to take
-refuge at Geneva, where he became professor in the
-academy founded by Calvin.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_620" id="Ref_620" href="#Foot_620">[620]</a></span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">{346}</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE MISSION OF CHELIUS=</p>
-
-<p>The communications of the young man of Nîmes
-strengthened Margaret, the king, and Du Bellay in
-their plans, and Francis resolved to send across the
-Rhine a confidential person, empowered to ask the
-doctors of the Reformation for a sketch of the means
-best suited to found an evangelical catholicism in
-Europe. It was not Baduel whom Du Bellay selected
-for this mission: he was too young. The diplomatist
-cast his eyes on Ulric Chelius, a doctor of medicine
-and native of Augsburg, at that time living at Strasburg,
-a great friend of Sturm and Bucer, and more
-than once employed by the King of France in various
-negotiations. Intelligent, active, and animated like
-Bucer with the double desire of reforming and at the
-same time of uniting christendom, Chelius was well
-suited for such a work. Although a German, and
-consequently knowing Germany thoroughly, he had
-all the promptitude of a Frenchman; and the circumstance
-that he was not of exalted rank rendered him
-fitter still for entering into negotiations that were to
-be carried on secretly. He left Strasburg and arrived
-at Wittemberg in July 1534.</p>
-
-<p>Melanchthon was at that time greatly agitated. The
-divisions which separated catholicism from reform, and
-the quarrels between the Zwinglians and the Lutherans,
-filled him with anguish. He often stole away
-from that crowd of every age, condition, and country
-which continually filled his house, eager to see him.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_621" id="Ref_621" href="#Foot_621">[621]</a></span>
-His wife's anxious heart was wrung when she saw
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">{347}</a></span>
-her husband's sadness, and even the children could
-scarcely cheer him by their innocent smiles. The
-future alarmed him.... 'What sad times are hanging
-over us,' he exclaimed, 'unless there be somebody to
-remedy the existing disorders!... We are moving
-to our destruction.... They will have recourse to
-arms ... and State and Church will perish!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_622" id="Ref_622" href="#Foot_622">[622]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As soon as Chelius reached Wittemberg, he called
-upon Melanchthon. 'King Francis,' he said, 'desires
-truth and unity. In almost every particular he is in
-accord with you, and approves of your book of
-<i>Common-places</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_623" id="Ref_623" href="#Foot_623">[623]</a></span>
-I am authorised to ask you for a
-plan to put an end to the religious dissensions which
-disturb christendom; and I can assure you that the
-King of France is doing, and will do, all he can with
-the pope to procure harmony and peace.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_624" id="Ref_624" href="#Foot_624">[624]</a></span>
-Nothing
-was better adapted to captivate Melanchthon. At
-this period the <i>moderates</i> had not yet renounced the
-idea of preserving external unity; they desired to
-maintain catholicity: even Melanchthon saw no other
-safety for divided and agitated christendom. Accordingly,
-never had message arrived at a more suitable
-time. Chelius was to him like an angel come from
-heaven; a beam of joy lighted up the great doctor's
-clouded brow. He went to see Luther, and conversed
-with him and other friends about the proposals of the
-King of France. 'If a few good and learned men,'
-said he, 'brought together by certain sovereigns, were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">{348}</a></span>
-to confer freely and amicably together, it would be
-easy, believe me, to come to an understanding with
-each other.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_625" id="Ref_625" href="#Foot_625">[625]</a></span>
-Ignorant men know nothing about the
-matter, and make the evil greater than it is.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_626" id="Ref_626" href="#Foot_626">[626]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=DIFFERENT OPINIONS ON THE UNION.=</p>
-
-<p>Melanchthon thought that he could unite catholics
-and protestants. We must not be surprised at it,
-for in our days very estimable, though not very clear-sighted
-men, entertain the same idea. Truth was
-dear to the doctor of Germany, but concord, unity,
-and catholicity were not less so. The Church, according
-to Melanchthon and his friends, ought to be
-universal; for redemption is appointed for all men,
-and all have need of it. The Church ought therefore
-to strive to unite all the children of Adam in communion
-with God, on the foundation of Christ, the only
-Redeemer. It possesses a power which can embrace
-all humankind and keep all differences in subjection.
-Such were the thoughts by which Melanchthon was
-inspired: if there were any sacrifices to be made to
-preserve the catholicity of the Church, he would
-gladly make them; he would recognise the bishops,
-and even the head of the bishops, rather than destroy
-unity. 'There is no question of abolishing the
-government of the Church,' he said; 'the chief men
-among us ardently desire that the received forms
-should be preserved as much as possible.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_627" id="Ref_627" href="#Foot_627">[627]</a></span>
-Luther's friend took the matter so much to heart that he began
-to address Du Bellay personally: 'I entreat you,' he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">{349}</a></span>
-said, 'to prevail upon the great monarchs to establish
-a concord which shall be consistent with piety.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_628" id="Ref_628" href="#Foot_628">[628]</a></span>
-The dangers which threaten us are such that so great a
-man as you ought not to be wanting in the cause
-of the State and of the Church.... But what am I
-doing?... What need to urge you to walk who are
-running already?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_629" id="Ref_629" href="#Foot_629">[629]</a></span>
-<i>Catholicity and truth</i>: such was
-the device graven on the arms borne by the champions
-who, under the auspices of the King of France,
-were to appear between the two camps of Rome and
-the Reformation.</p>
-
-<p>Melanchthon busied himself with sketching the plan
-of the new Church, which, with God's help and the
-support of the <i>great monarchs</i> (Francis I., Henry VIII.,
-and probably Charles V.), was to become the Church
-of modern times. It might be eventually one of the
-most important labours ever undertaken by man. Not
-only the politicians, but all pious, loving, and perhaps
-feeble hearts, who feared controversy more than anything,
-ardently hoped for the success of this heroic
-attempt. The <i>chief men</i>, said Melanchthon, shared his
-opinion and encouraged his projects. Yet there were
-simple, earnest, christian men, with minds determined
-to set truth above everything, who saw with uneasiness
-these theologico-diplomatic negotiations. Neither
-Farel, nor Calvin, nor probably Luther, was among
-those who rallied round the standard raised by Du
-Bellay and grasped by Melanchthon.</p>
-
-<p>That pious man, however, was far from wishing to
-sacrifice the truth. 'I am quite of your opinion,'
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">{350}</a></span>
-said he to Bucer, 'that there can be no agreement
-between us and the Bishop of Rome.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_630" id="Ref_630" href="#Foot_630">[630]</a></span>
-But, to satisfy
-the worthy men who are endeavouring to bring this
-great matter to a happy issue, I shall lay down what
-ought to be the essential points of agreement.'
-Melanchthon then believed, and many evangelical
-christians in France, and particularly in Germany,
-believed also, that if a reform, though incomplete,
-were once established, the power of truth would
-soon bring about a complete reform. He therefore
-finished his sketch and gave it to Chelius.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=NOTES OF THE THREE DOCTORS.=</p>
-
-<p>The latter, imagining that he held the salvation of
-the Church in his hands, hastened to Strasburg to
-communicate Melanchthon's project to his friends.
-On arriving at Bucer's house (17th of August), he
-found him writing his answer to the <i>Catholic Axiom</i>
-of the Bishop of Avranches, a great enemy of
-protestantism. Bucer put aside his own papers and
-took those of the Wittemberg doctor, which he was
-impatient to see. He read them eagerly over and
-over again. 'Really there is nothing here to offend
-anybody,' he said, 'if people have the least idea of
-what the reign of Christ means. But, my dear
-Chelius,' he added, 'a union is possible only among
-those who truly believe in Christ. That there should
-be a superior authority, well and good! but it must be
-a holy authority in order that every man may obey
-it with a good conscience.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_631" id="Ref_631" href="#Foot_631">[631]</a></span>
-If we are to unite, all
-additions must be cut away, and we must return
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">{351}</a></span>
-simply to the doctrine of Scripture and of the
-Fathers.'</p>
-
-<p>Chelius desired Bucer to give him his opinion in
-writing. The reformer hastily drew up a memoir,
-which, being approved by his colleagues, he handed
-to his friend on the 27th of August.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_632" id="Ref_632" href="#Foot_632">[632]</a></span>
-Francis's agent
-had fixed that day for his departure; but at the last
-moment he changed his mind, and remained twenty-four
-hours longer in Strasburg. There was another
-doctor in that city, a meek, pious, and firm man, an
-old friend of Zwingle's:<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_633" id="Ref_633" href="#Foot_633">[633]</a></span>
-it was Hedio, and Chelius
-asked him for his opinion also. Then, taking with
-him the memoirs of the three doctors, he started
-without delay for Paris, convinced that catholicity
-and truth were about to be saved.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching the capital Chelius gave the papers to
-William du Bellay, who immediately laid them before
-the king. The latter ordered that the Bishop of Paris
-and certain of the nobles, men of letters, and ecclesiastics,
-who desired to see a united but reformed
-Church, should have these documents communicated
-to them. The arrival of this ultimatum of the
-Reformation was an event of great importance; and
-accordingly the memoirs of the three doctors were
-anxiously perused at the Louvre, in the bishop's
-palace, and in other houses of the capital. Perhaps
-history has made a mistake in taking so little note of
-this. Three of the reformers, with England, Francis I.,
-and some of the most eminent men of the epoch,
-demanded one only catholic but reformed Church.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">{352}</a></span>
-A great evangelical unity seemed on the point of being
-realised. Shall we not set forth in some detail a proposal
-of such high interest? There are individuals,
-we are aware, who are always looking for facts and
-sensations, never troubling themselves about principles
-and doctrines; but the wise, on the contrary, know
-that the world is moved by ideas, and, whatever may
-be the objections of curious minds, history must
-perform her task, and give to opinions the place that
-belongs to them.</p>
-
-<p>At this time several meetings of an extraordinary
-kind were held at the Louvre, and upon them, as some
-thought, the future of christendom depended. The
-opinions of Melanchthon, Bucer, and Hedio, demanded
-by the king, brought by Chelius, and laid before the
-monarch by Du Bellay, were in his majesty's closet.
-The walls of the Louvre, which had witnessed such
-levity of morals, and which hereafter were to witness
-so many crimes, heard those holy truths explained in
-which everlasting life is to be found. Around the table
-on which these documents lay, there were politicians
-no doubt who in this investigation looked only to
-temporal advantages, and Francis was at their head;
-but there were also serious men who desired for the
-new Church both unity and reform. We will let the
-reformers speak. They were not present in person,
-it will be understood, before the King of France;
-it is their written advice which he had asked for,
-and which was probably read by one of the Du
-Bellays. But, for brevity's sake, we shall designate
-these memoirs by the names of their authors, since it
-is the authors themselves who speak, and not the
-historian.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">{353}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=THE PROPOSALS EXAMINED.=</p>
-
-<p>Francis I., eager both to emancipate France from its
-subordination to the papacy, and to form in Europe
-a great united party capable of vanquishing and
-thwarting Austria, listened with goodwill to Melanchthon
-and his friends; yet he found the language of
-the reformers a little more severe and <i>heretical</i> than
-he had imagined. Some of the persons around him
-were pleased; some were astonished, and others were
-scandalised, and not without reason. To place the moderate
-Melanchthon by the side of the pacific Bishop
-of Paris, well and good! but to hope to unite the unyielding
-Luther and the fiery Beda, the pious elector
-and the worldly Francis ... what a strange undertaking!
-Let us listen, however; for these personages
-have taken their seats, and the inquiry is about to
-begin.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_634" id="Ref_634" href="#Foot_634">[634]</a></span></p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Bucer.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'There can be no concord in the Church except
-between those who are really of the Church.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_635" id="Ref_635" href="#Foot_635">[635]</a></span>
-There is nothing in common between Christ and Belial. We
-cannot unite God and the world.... Now, what are the
-majority of bishops and priests?... I grieve to say.'</p>
-
-<p>This introduction appeared to the king rather
-high-flown; but he said to himself that Bucer doubtless
-wished to make protestation of his loyalty at the
-very outset. Perhaps his colleagues will be more
-conciliating.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">{354}</a></div>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Melanchthon.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'The catholic doctrine, say some, has a few trifling
-blemishes here and there; while we and our friends
-have been making a great noise without any cause....
-That is a mistake. Let not the pontiff and the great
-monarchs of christendom shut their eyes to the diseases
-of the Church.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_636" id="Ref_636" href="#Foot_636">[636]</a></span>
-They ought, on the contrary, to
-acknowledge that these pretended trifling blemishes
-destroy the essential doctrines of the faith, and lead
-men into idolatry and manifest sin.'</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Bucer.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'If you wish to establish christian concord, apply
-to those who truly believe in Christ.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_637" id="Ref_637" href="#Foot_637">[637]</a></span>
-Those who do
-not listen to the Word cannot explain the Word....
-What errors have been introduced by wicked priests!
-Shall we apply to other priests to correct them, who
-perhaps surpass the former in wickedness?'</p>
-
-<p>Really the pacific Bucer and Melanchthon speak as
-boldly as Luther and Farel. The king and his councillors
-were beginning to be alarmed, but more conciliatory
-words revived their hopes.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Bucer.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'All that can be conceded, while maintaining the
-faith and the love of God, we will concede. Every
-salutary custom, observed by the ancients, we will
-restore. We have no desire to upset everything that
-is standing, and we know very well that the Church
-here below cannot be without blemish.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_638" id="Ref_638" href="#Foot_638">[638]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">{355}</a></div>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 side">~CHURCH GOVERNMENT.~</p>
-
-<p>The satisfaction of the king and his councillors
-increased when they came to Church government.
-There must be order in the Church, said the protestants.
-There must be a ministry of the Word;
-an inspection of the pastors and of the flocks, in
-order to secure discipline and peace. The service,
-the time appointed for worshipping in common, the
-place where the Church should assemble, the holy
-offices, the temporal aid necessary for the support of
-the ministry, the care of the poor: all these things
-require an attentive and faithful administration.
-These principles were set forth by the reformers, the
-Strasburg doctor insisting most on this point.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Bucer.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'The kingdom of Christ ought not to be without a
-government. In no place ought order to be stricter,
-obedience more complete, and power more respected.'</p>
-
-<p>Francis I. and his councillors heard these declarations
-with pleasure. They had been told that the
-<i>pretended</i> Church of the protestants was composed of
-atoms that had no cohesion with each other. Others
-affirmed that the only superior power recognised in
-it was that of certain theocratic prophets, like Thomas
-Munzer and others. Francis, therefore, was satisfied
-to learn that while they acknowledged a universal
-priesthood, by virtue of which every believer approached
-God in prayer, protestantism maintained a
-special evangelical ministry. But what was this
-ministry, this government? This the king and his
-advisers desired to know. Here, in our opinion, the
-mediating divines went wrong: the king's wishes were
-to be almost satisfied.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">{356}</a></div>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Melanchthon.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'As a bishop presides over several Churches, no
-one can think it wrong for a pontiff to preside at
-Rome over several bishops. The Church must have
-leaders to examine those who are called to the ministry,
-to judge in ecclesiastical causes, and watch over the
-teaching of the ministers.... If there were no such
-bishops, they ought to be created.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_639" id="Ref_639" href="#Foot_639">[639]</a></span>
-One sole pontiff
-may even serve to maintain harmony of faith between
-the different nations of christendom.'</p>
-
-<p>Francis was delighted; but the more decided evangelicals
-looked upon this idea of an <i>evangelical</i> pope as
-a dream to be consigned to the Utopia described by
-Sir Thomas More. An accessory declaration of another
-kind was to please the king even more.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Melanchthon.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'As for the Roman pontiff's claim to transfer kingdoms
-from one prince to another, that concerns neither
-the Gospel nor the Church; and it is the business of
-kings to combat that unjust pretension.'</p>
-
-<p>Now that these concessions were granted, the reformers
-were about to make the loud voice of the
-Reformation heard.</p>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 side">~JUSTIFICATION AND THE MASS.~</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Bucer.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'The first of doctrines is the justification of sinners.'</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Melanchthon.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'Remission of sins ought to be accompanied by a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">{357}</a></span>
-change of life; but this remission is not given us
-because of this new life; it comes to us only through
-mercy, and is given to us solely because of Christ.'</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Bucer.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'Thus, then, we have done with the merits ascribed
-to the observances and prayers of the monks and
-priests: we have done with all vain confidence in our
-own works. Let the grace of God be obscured no
-longer, and the righteousness of Christ be no more
-diminished! It is on account of the blood of his only
-Son that God forgives us our sins.'</p>
-
-<p>Francis and his advisers thought that <i>orthodox</i>
-enough. Even the schoolmen (they said) have used
-this language in some of their books. They raised
-no opposition to the opinion of the reformers upon
-justification by faith.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_640" id="Ref_640" href="#Foot_640">[640]</a></span>
-But one point made them
-uneasy.... What will they say of the mass? This
-important subject was not forgotten.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Bucer.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'What! to be present every day at mass without
-repentance, without piety, even without thinking of
-the mysteries connected with it, will suffice to obtain
-all kinds of grace from God!... No! when we celebrate
-the sacrament of our Lord's body and blood,
-there must be a living communion between Christ
-and the living members of Christ.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_641" id="Ref_641" href="#Foot_641">[641]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">{358}</a></div>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 side">~PROTEST AGAINST ABUSES.~</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Melanchthon.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'The mass is the only knot we cannot untie;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_642" id="Ref_642" href="#Foot_642">[642]</a></span>
-for it contains such horrible abuses ... invented for the
-profit of the monks. All impious rites must be interdicted,
-and others established in conformity with the
-truth.'</p>
-
-<p>'The mass must be preserved,' said Francis; 'but
-the stupid, absurd, and foolish legends abolished.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_643" id="Ref_643" href="#Foot_643">[643]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Frenchmen were anxious to learn the doctrine
-of the reformers on the sacraments: it was, in fact, the
-embarrassing point, in consequence of the different
-opinions of different doctors. The enemies of the
-Reformation spread the rumour through France that
-the sacraments were to protestants mere ceremonies
-only, by which christians show that they belong to the
-Church. 'No,' said the doctors, 'these outward forms
-are means by which grace works inwardly in our souls.
-Only this working does not proceed from the disposition
-of the priest administering the sacrament, but
-from the faith of him who receives it.' And here
-came the great question: 'Is Christ present or not
-in the communion?' Bucer and his friends cleverly
-extricated themselves from this difficulty.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Bucer.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'The body of Christ is received in the hands of the
-communicants, and eaten with their mouths, say some.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">{359}</a></span>
-The body of Christ is discerned by the soul of the believer
-and eaten by faith, say others. There is a way
-of putting an end to this dispute by simply acknowledging
-that, whatever be the manner of eating, there
-is a real <i>presence of Christ</i> in the Lord's Supper.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_644" id="Ref_644" href="#Foot_644">[644]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>By degrees the reformers became more animated.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Melanchthon.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'We must teach the people that the saints are not
-more merciful than Jesus Christ, and that we must not
-transfer to them the confidence due to Christ alone.</p>
-
-<p>'The monasteries must be converted into schools.</p>
-
-<p>'Celibacy must be abolished, for most of the priests
-live in open uncleanness.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_645" id="Ref_645" href="#Foot_645">[645]</a></span></p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Bucer.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'The Church must have a constitution in which
-everything will be decided by Scripture; and a conference
-of learned and pious men is wanted to draw
-it up.'</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Hedio.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'That assembly must not be composed of divines
-only, but of laymen also; and, above all things, no
-forward step should be taken so long as the pope and
-the bishops persist in their errors, and even defend
-them by force.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_646" id="Ref_646" href="#Foot_646">[646]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When the reformers drew up these articles, they
-had gradually begun to feel some hope. It is possible,
-perhaps probable, that unity will be restored....
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">{360}</a></span>
-Moved at the thought, they lifted their eyes towards
-the mighty arm from which they expected help.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Melanchthon.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'O that the Lord Jesus Christ would look down
-from heaven and restore the Church for which he
-suffered to a pious and perpetual union, which may
-cause his glory to shine afar!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_647" id="Ref_647" href="#Foot_647">[647]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Francis and his councillors were satisfied upon the
-whole;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_648" id="Ref_648" href="#Foot_648">[648]</a></span>
-but the doctors of Rome looked with an uneasy
-eye upon these (to them) detestable negotiations.
-There was agitation at the Sorbonne and even at the
-Louvre. All the leaders of the Roman party who had
-a voice at court made respectful representations. Cardinal
-de Tournon added remonstrances. Du Bellay
-held firm; but it was not so with Francis. He hesitated
-and staggered. An event occurred to give him
-a fresh impulse, and to legitimatise in his eyes the
-reforms demanded by his minister.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_612" id="Foot_612" href="#Ref_612">[612]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Mores modestissimi.'—Melanchthon to the Queen of Navarre, <i>Corp.
-Ref.</i> ii. p. 733.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_613" id="Foot_613" href="#Ref_613">[613]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Non solum mundities et elegantia singularis, sed etiam quædam non
-insuavis copia.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_614" id="Foot_614" href="#Ref_614">[614]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ad quasdam alias operas, a quibus et natura et voluntate
-abhorret.'—Ibid. p. 735.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_615" id="Foot_615" href="#Ref_615">[615]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Paupertas, quasi manus injecit.'—Ibid. p. 752.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_616" id="Foot_616" href="#Ref_616">[616]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Velut in quodam numine.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 752.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_617" id="Foot_617" href="#Ref_617">[617]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Homo infimæ sortis et ignotus Celsitudini tuæ.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_618" id="Foot_618" href="#Ref_618">[618]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Fama tuæ eximiæ pietatis quæ totum terrarum orbem pervagata
-est.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_619" id="Foot_619" href="#Ref_619">[619]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Et recensebit ad posteros universa ecclesia.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 733.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_620" id="Foot_620" href="#Ref_620">[620]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-He died there in 1561. See Senebier, <i>Hist. Litt. de Genève</i>. Ch. le
-Fort, <i>Livre du Recteur</i>, p. 371. Haag, <i>France Protestante</i>, which contains
-a list of Baduel's numerous writings.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_621" id="Foot_621" href="#Ref_621">[621]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Videres in ædibus illis perpetuo accedentes et discedentes atque
-exeuntes aliquos.'—Camerarius, <i>Vita Melanchthonis</i>, p. 40.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_622" id="Foot_622" href="#Ref_622">[622]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quanta dissipatio reipublicæ et ecclesiæ.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 740.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_623" id="Foot_623" href="#Ref_623">[623]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In plerisque dicebat regem esse non alienum a libro Philippi quo
-<i>locos</i> ille tractat <i>communes</i>.'—Gerdesius, <i>Hist. Evang. renov.</i> iv. p. 114.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_624" id="Foot_624" href="#Ref_624">[624]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Regem Gallorum apud pontificem de pace et mitigatione tantarum
-rerum acturum esse.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 976.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_625" id="Foot_625" href="#Ref_625">[625]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Si monarchæ aliqui efficerent ut aliqui boni et docti viri amanter et
-libere inter se colloquerentur.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 740.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_626" id="Foot_626" href="#Ref_626">[626]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Et interdum præter rem tumultuantur.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_627" id="Foot_627" href="#Ref_627">[627]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Usitatam ecclesiæ formam conservare, quantum possibile est.—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_628" id="Foot_628" href="#Ref_628">[628]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut Celsitudo tua, propter Christi gloriam, hortetur summos
-monarchas.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 740.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_629" id="Foot_629" href="#Ref_629">[629]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Sed nihil opus est, <i>te currentem</i>, ut dici solet, adhortari.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_630" id="Foot_630" href="#Ref_630">[630]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Assentior tibi, mi Bucere, desperandam esse concordiam cum pontifice
-romano.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 275.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_631" id="Foot_631" href="#Ref_631">[631]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Dass die obere Gewalt eine heilige sey.'—Schmidt, <i>Zeitschrift für
-Hist. Theol.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_632" id="Foot_632" href="#Ref_632">[632]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Consentientibus symmistis meis.'—Consilium Buceri, Strasburg
-MSS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_633" id="Foot_633" href="#Ref_633">[633]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Hist. of the Ref. of the Sixteenth Century</i>, vol. ii. bk. viii. ch. viii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_634" id="Foot_634" href="#Ref_634">[634]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Melanchthon's memoir will be found in the <i>Corpus Reformatorum</i>,
-published by Dr. Bretschneider, ii. pp. 743-766. I am indebted to
-Professor Schmidt for a copy of Bucer's memoir, which is in the Strasburg
-library. The volume containing Hedio's memoir has disappeared from
-the archives; we have, however, found a few extracts.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_635" id="Foot_635" href="#Ref_635">[635]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Concordia esse non potest nisi inter eos qui sunt de ecclesia.'—Consilium
-Buceri MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_636" id="Foot_636" href="#Ref_636">[636]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Pontifex et summi reges agnoscant ecclesiæ morbos.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i>
-ii. p. 743.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_637" id="Foot_637" href="#Ref_637">[637]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nisi inter eos qui Christo vere credunt.'—Consilium Buceri.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_638" id="Foot_638" href="#Ref_638">[638]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nec etiam ut nulla omnino labes tolleretur.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_639" id="Foot_639" href="#Ref_639">[639]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Creari tales oporteret.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 746.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_640" id="Foot_640" href="#Ref_640">[640]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Locum de justificatione, ut a nostris tractatur, <i>probare regem</i>.'—<i>Corp.
-Ref.</i> ii. p. 1017.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_641" id="Foot_641" href="#Ref_641">[641]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Viva vivorum membrorum Christi communione.'—Buceri Consilium
-MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_642" id="Foot_642" href="#Ref_642">[642]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hic unus nodus de missa videtur inexplicabilis esse.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i>
-ii. p. 781.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_643" id="Foot_643" href="#Ref_643">[643]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Orationes et legendas multas ineptas et impias abrogandas aut
-saltem emendandas.'—Ibid. p. 1015.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_644" id="Foot_644" href="#Ref_644">[644]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Veram Christi in cœna præsentiam exprimi.'—Buceri Cons.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_645" id="Foot_645" href="#Ref_645">[645]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Plurimi in manifesta turpitudine vivunt.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 764.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_646" id="Foot_646" href="#Ref_646">[646]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Schmidt, <i>Zeitschrift für Hist. Theolog.</i> 1850, p. 35.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_647" id="Foot_647" href="#Ref_647">[647]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut Christus ecclesiam suam ... redigat in concordiam piam et
-perpetuam.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_648" id="Foot_648" href="#Ref_648">[648]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hos articulos Francisco regi non displicuisse multa sunt quæ
-suadent.'—Gerdesius, <i>Hist. Evang. renov.</i> iv. p. 124.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">{361}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXXV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE APPARITION AT ORLEANS.<br />
- (<span class="smc">Summer 1534.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=THE PROVOST'S WIFE.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CALVIN, as it will be remembered, had studied and
-evangelised at Orleans, and his teaching had left
-deep traces, particularly among the students and with
-certain ladies of quality. The wife of the city provost
-seems to have been one of the souls converted by the
-ministry of the young reformer. The narrative he
-has devoted to her, the full details into which he
-enters, show the interest he took in her conversion.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_649" id="Ref_649" href="#Foot_649">[649]</a></span>
-This woman, who occupied a distinguished rank in
-the city, had found peace for her soul in faith in
-Christ; she had believed in the promises of the Word
-which Calvin had explained; she had felt keenly
-the nothingness of Roman pomps and superstitions;
-the grace of God was sufficient for her; and caring
-little for <i>outward adorning</i>, she strove after that <i>which
-is not corruptible</i>, the ornament of the <i>women who trusted
-in God</i>. 'She is a Lutheran,' said some; 'she belongs
-to those who have listened to the teaching of Luther's
-disciples.' Her husband the provost, a person of influence,
-a great landowner, an esteemed magistrate, a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">{362}</a></span>
-man of upright, prompt, and energetic character, was
-touched by the purity of his wife's conduct, and, without
-being converted to the Gospel, had become disgusted
-with the Roman superstitions, and despised the
-monks.</p>
-
-<p>The provostess (to adopt the language of the
-manuscripts) fell ill, sent for a lawyer, and dictated
-her will to him. Lying on a bed of sickness, which
-she was never to leave again, full of a living faith
-in Christ, she felt certain of going to her Saviour,
-and experienced an insurmountable repugnance to
-the performance over her grave of any of the superstitious
-ceremonies for which devout women have
-ordinarily such a strong liking. Accordingly, while the
-notary, pen in hand, was waiting the dictation of
-her last will, she said: 'I forbid all bell-ringing and
-chanting at my funeral, and no monks or priests
-shall be present with their tapers. I desire to be
-buried without pomp and without torches.' The lawyer
-was rather surprised, but he wrote down the words;
-and her husband, who remained near her and knew
-her faith, promised that her wishes should be kept
-sacred. When she died, the mortal remains of this
-pious woman were laid in the tomb of her father and
-grandfather, with no other accompaniment than the
-tears of all who had known her, and the prayers of the
-children of God who formed the little evangelical flock
-of Orleans.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE PROVOST AND THE MONKS.=</p>
-
-<p>When the ceremony was over, the provost proceeded
-to the convent of the Franciscans, in whose cemetery
-the burial had taken place. He was a liberal man,
-and, though despising the monks, did not wish to
-do them wrong, even in appearance. The friars,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">{363}</a></span>
-already much irritated, did not understand what the
-magistrate wanted with them, and received him very
-coldly. 'As you were not called upon to do duty,'
-he told them, 'here are six gold crowns by way of
-compensation.' The monks, who had reckoned on the
-death of this lady as a great windfall, were by no
-means satisfied with the six gold pieces; and, even
-while taking them, looked sulkily at the widower, and
-swore to be revenged.</p>
-
-<p>Not long after this, the provost having determined
-upon cutting down a wood he possessed near Orleans,
-was giving directions to his workmen, when two monks,
-following the narrow lanes running through the forest,
-arrived at the spot where the owner and the woodmen
-were at work, boldly addressed the former, and demanded
-in the name of the convent permission to
-send their waggon once a day during the felling to
-lay up their store. 'What!' answered the provost,
-whom the avarice of the monks had always disgusted,
-'a waggon a day! Send thirty, my reverend fathers,
-but (of course) with ready money. All that I want,
-I assure you, is good speed and good money.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_650" id="Ref_650" href="#Foot_650">[650]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The two cordeliers returned abashed and vexed,
-and carried the answer to their superiors. This was
-too much: two affronts one after the other! The
-monks consulted together; they desired to be revenged
-by any means; such <i>heresies</i>, if they were tolerated,
-would be the ruin of the convents. They deliberated
-on the best manner of giving a striking lesson to the
-provost and to all who might be tempted to follow
-the example of his wife. 'These gentlemen, to be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">{364}</a></span>
-revenged, proceeded to devise a fraud,' says Calvin.
-Two monks particularly distinguished themselves
-among the speakers: brother Coliman, provincial and
-exorcist of great reputation among the grey friars, and
-brother Stephen of Arras, 'esteemed a great preacher.'
-These two doctors, wishing to teach the city that
-monks are not to be offended with impunity, invented
-a 'tragedy,' which, they thought, would everywhere
-excite a horror of Lutheranism.</p>
-
-<p>Brother Stephen undertook to begin the drama:
-he shut himself up in his cell and composed, in a style
-of the most vulgar eloquence, a sermon which he
-fancied would terrify everybody. The news of a
-homily from the great preacher circulated through the
-city, and when the day arrived, he went up into the
-pulpit and delivered before a large congregation (for
-the church was crammed) a 'very touching' discourse,
-in which he pathetically described the sufferings of
-the souls in purgatory.... 'You know it,' he exclaimed,
-'you know it. The unhappy spirits, tormented
-by the fire, escape; they return after death,
-sometimes with great tumult, and pray that some
-consolation may be given them. Luther, indeed,
-asserts that there is no purgatory.... What horror!
-what abominable impiety!' 'The friar forgot nothing,'
-says Beza, 'to convince his audience that spirits return
-from purgatory.' The congregation dispersed
-in great excitement; and after that the least noise at
-night frightened the devout. The way being thus
-prepared, the impudent monks arranged among themselves
-the horrible drama which was to avenge them
-on the provost and his wife.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE APPARITION IN THE CONVENT.=</p>
-
-<p>On the following night the monks rose at the usual
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">{365}</a></span>
-hour and entered the church, carrying their antiphonaires
-or anthem-books in their hands. They
-began to chant; their hoarse voices were intoning
-matins ... when suddenly a frightful tumult was
-heard, coming from heaven as it seemed, or at least
-from the ceiling of the church. On hearing this
-'great uproar,' the chanting ceased, the monks appeared
-horrified, and Coliman, the bravest, moved
-forward, armed with all the weapons of an exorcist,
-and <i>conjured</i> the evil spirit; but the spirit said not a
-word. 'What wantest thou?' asked Coliman. There
-was no answer. 'If thou art dumb,' resumed the
-exorcist, 'show it us by some sign.' Upon this the
-spirit made another uproar. The hearers, not in the
-secret, were terror-stricken. 'All is going on well,'
-said Coliman, Stephen, and their accomplices; 'now
-let us circulate the news through Orleans.' The next
-day the friars visited some of the most considerable
-personages of the city who were among the number of
-their devotees. 'A misfortune has happened to us,'
-they said, without mentioning what it was; 'will you
-come to our help and be present at our matins?'</p>
-
-<p>These worthy citizens, anxious to know what
-was the matter, did not go to bed, and went to the
-convent at midnight. The monks had already
-assembled in the church to chant their collects,
-anthems, and litanies; they provided good places
-for the devout laymen, and with trembling voices
-began to intone:</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Domine! labia</i>...</p>
-
-<p>The words had hardly been uttered, when a frightful
-noise interrupted the chanting. 'The ghost!
-the ghost!' exclaimed the terrified monks. Then
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">{366}</a></span>
-Coliman, who had 'the usual equipment when he
-wished to speak to the devil,' came forward, and,
-playing his part admirably, said, 'Who art thou?'—Silence.—'What
-dost thou want?'—Silence.—'Art
-thou dumb?'—Silence.—'If thou art not permitted to
-speak,' said Coliman, 'answer my questions by signs....
-For <i>Yes</i>, give two knocks; and three for <i>No</i>. Now,
-tell me ... art thou not the ghost of a person buried
-here?' The ghost began to knock <i>Yes</i>. Then resumed
-Coliman: 'Art thou the ghost of such a one, or such
-a one?' naming in succession many of those who were
-buried in the church; but to each question the ghost
-answered <i>No</i>. After a long circuit, the exorcist
-came at last to the point he desired: 'Art thou the
-ghost of the provostess?' The spirit replied with a
-loud <i>Yes</i>. The mystery seemed about to be cleared
-up: a new act of the comedy began. 'Spirit, for
-what sin hast thou been condemned?' asked the
-exorcist: 'Is it for pride?'—<i>No!</i> 'Is it for unchastity?'—<i>No!</i>
-Coliman, after running through all
-the sins enumerated in Scripture, bethought himself
-at last, and said: 'Art thou condemned for having
-been a Lutheran?' Two knocks answered <i>Yes</i>, and
-all the monks crossed themselves in alarm. 'Now
-tell us,' continued the exorcist, 'why thou makest
-such an uproar in the middle of the night? Is it for
-thy body to be exhumed?'—<i>Yes!</i> There could no
-longer be any doubt about it: the provostess was
-suffering for her Lutheranism. The report had been
-prepared beforehand, but a few witnesses refused
-to sign it, suspecting some trick. The provincial
-concealed his vexation, and wishing to excite their
-imaginations still more strongly, he exclaimed: 'The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">{367}</a></span>
-place is profaned; let us leave it ... as the papal
-canons command.' Forthwith one of the monks
-caught up the pyx containing the <i>corpus Domini</i>;
-another seized the chalice; others took the relics
-of the saints and 'the rest of their tools;'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_651" id="Ref_651" href="#Foot_651">[651]</a></span>
-and all fled into the chapter-room, where divine service was
-thenceforward celebrated.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=INQUEST ON THE SPIRIT.=</p>
-
-<p>The news of this affair soon reached the ears of the
-bishop's official, and there was much talk about it at
-the palace. The Franciscans were pretty well known
-there. 'There is some monkish trick at the bottom,'
-said the official, an estimable and upright clergyman.
-He could not conceal his disgust at this cheat of the
-friars. He thought that these impetuous cordeliers
-would compromise, and perhaps ruin the cause of
-religion, instead of advancing it, by their pretended
-miracles. It was to be one of the peculiarities of protestantism
-to unveil the cunning, avarice, and hypocrisy
-of the priests, the workers of miracles. Extraordinary
-acts of the divine power were manifested at the time
-of the creation of the Church, as at the time when the
-heavens and the earth were first made by the Word of
-God. Is not all creation a miracle? But the Reformation
-turned away with disgust from the tricks and
-cheats of the Roman mountebanks, who presumed
-to ape the power of God. There were even in the
-Catholic Church men of good sense who shared this
-opinion. Of this number was the official of Orleans,
-the man who filled the place which some had destined
-for Calvin.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">{368}</a></div>
-
-<p>He took with him a few honest people, and went to
-the grey friars' church to inquire more particularly
-into the fact. He called the monks together: brother
-Coliman gravely told the whole story, and the official,
-after hearing their tales, said: 'Well, my brethren, I
-now order these conjurations to be performed in my
-presence.—You, gentlemen,' he said to some of his
-party, 'will mount to the roof and see if any ghost
-appears.'—'Do nothing of the kind,' exclaimed friar
-Stephen of Arras, in great alarm; 'you will disturb
-the spirit!' The official insisted that the conjuration
-should be performed; but it was not possible; the
-exorcist and the ghost both remained dumb. The
-episcopal judge withdrew, confirmed in his views.
-'Here's a ghost that appears only to the monks,'
-he said to his companions; 'it is frightened at the
-official.' This affair, which made some tremble and
-others smile, soon became known throughout the city;
-the news reached the dark and winding streets where
-the students lived: one told it to another, and all
-hurried off to the university. Everything was in commotion
-there: some were for the monks, the majority
-against them. 'Let us go and see,' exclaimed this
-young France. Off they started, and arriving in a
-large body, says Calvin, soon filled the church. They
-raised their heads, they fixed their eyes on the roof
-that had become so celebrated; but they waited in
-vain, it uttered no sound. 'Pshaw!' said they, 'it
-is a plot the friars have wickedly contrived to be
-revenged of the provost and his wife. We will find
-out all about it.' These curious and rather frolicsome
-youths rushed to the roof in search of the ghost;
-they looked for it in every corner, they called it, but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">{369}</a></span>
-the phantom was determined to be neither seen nor
-heard, and the students returned to the university,
-joking as they went.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE PROVOST APPEALS TO THE KING.=</p>
-
-<p>There was one person, however, in Orleans who did
-not joke: it was the provost. Irritated at the insult
-offered to his wife, he had recourse to the law: a
-written summons was left at the convent, but the
-monks refused to put in an answer, pleading the immunities
-they enjoyed in their ecclesiastical quality.
-The provost, true to his character, was not willing to
-lose this opportunity of giving the friars a severe
-lesson. 'What!' he exclaimed, 'shall these wretches
-make her, who rests at peace in the grave, the talk of
-the whole city? If she had been accused in her lifetime,
-I would have defended her, much more will I do
-so after her death!' He determined to lay the matter
-before the king, and set out for Paris.</p>
-
-<p>The story of the ghost who appeared with a great
-noise in a convent at Orleans, had already reached the
-capital, and been repeated at court. The monks, in
-general, were not in high favour there. The courtiers
-called to mind the words of the king's mother, who
-thanked God for having taught her son and herself to
-know 'those hypocrites, white, grey, black, and of all
-colours.' Du Bellay especially and his friends gladly
-welcomed a story which set in bold relief the vices of
-the old system and the necessity of a reform. As
-soon as the provost reached the capital, he had an
-audience of the king. Francis, who was not famed
-for his conjugal affections, could not understand the
-emotion of the widower; but despising the monks
-at least as much as his mother and sister did, and
-delighted to put in practice the new reforming ideas
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">{370}</a></span>
-which were growing in his mind, he resolved to seize
-the opportunity of humbling the insolence of the convents.
-He granted all the provost asked; he nominated
-councillors of parliament to investigate the matter; and
-as the cordeliers pleaded their immunities, Duprat, in
-his quality of legate, gave, by papal authority, power
-to the commissioners to proceed.</p>
-
-<p>The day when the royal agents arrived at Orleans
-was a day of sorrow to one part of the inhabitants of
-that city, but of joy to the greater number. People
-looked with astonishment on these gentlemen from
-Paris, who would be stronger than the monks, and
-would punish them for their long tyranny. A crowd
-followed them to the convent, and when they had entered,
-waited until they came out again. Oh! how
-every one of them would have liked to see what was
-going on within those gloomy walls! The officers of
-the parliament spoke to the monks with authority,
-exhibited their powers, and arrested the principal
-culprits, to the great consternation of all the other
-monks. Some wretched carts stood at the gate of
-the monastery; the archers brought out the insolent
-friars; and the crowd, to its unutterable amazement,
-saw them mount like vulgar criminals into these poor
-vehicles, which the maréchaussée was preparing to
-escort. What inexpressible disgrace for the disciples
-of St. Francis!</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE MONKS TAKEN TO PARIS.=</p>
-
-<p>The news of the arrest had spread to all the
-sacristies, parsonages, and convents of the city, and a
-cry of persecution arose everywhere. At the moment
-of departure, a bigoted and excited crowd collected
-round the carts in which sat the reverend fathers,
-quite out of countenance at their misfortune. These
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">{371}</a></span>
-people, some of whom no doubt were fanatics, but
-amongst whom were many who felt a sincere affection
-for the monks, wept bitterly; they uttered loud
-lamentations, and put money into the friars' hands,
-'as much to make good cheer with,' says Calvin, 'as
-to help in their defence.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_652" id="Ref_652" href="#Foot_652">[652]</a></span>
-But in the midst of this
-dejected crowd might be observed some citizens and
-jeering students, who exclaimed: 'Fine champions,
-indeed, to oppose the Gospel!' Certain sayings of
-Luther had crossed the Rhine, and were circulating
-among the youths of the schools: 'Who made the
-monks?' asked one. 'The devil,' answered another.
-'God having created the priests, the devil (as is always
-the case) wished to imitate him, but in his bungling
-he made the crown of the head too large, and instead
-of a priest he turned out a monk.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_653" id="Ref_653" href="#Foot_653">[653]</a></span>
-Such was the
-exodus of the reverend fathers: they arrived in Paris,
-and there they were separated and confined in different
-places, in order that they might not confer with one
-another.</p>
-
-<p>The deception was manifest, but it was impossible
-to obtain a confession. The monks had sworn to keep
-profound silence, in order to preserve the honour of
-their order and of religion, and also to save themselves.
-They called to mind what had happened in the Dominican
-convent at Berne in 1500: how a soul had appeared
-there in order to be delivered from purgatory;
-how the five wounds of St. Francis had been marked
-on a poor novice; and how, at the request of the
-papal legate, four of the guilty monks had been burnt
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">{372}</a></span>
-alive.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_654" id="Ref_654" href="#Foot_654">[654]</a></span>
-Might not the same punishment be inflicted
-on a monk of Orleans? They trembled at the very
-thought. In vain, therefore, did the councillors of
-parliament begin their inquiry; in vain did they go
-from one house to another, and enter the rooms where
-these reverend fathers were confined: the monks
-were sullen, unfathomable, and more silent than the
-ghost itself.</p>
-
-<p>The judges determined to try what they could with
-the novice who had acted the part of the ghost; but
-if the monks were silent, sullen, and immovable, the
-novice was agitated and frightened out of his senses.
-The friars had uttered the most terrible threats; and
-hence, when he was interrogated, 'he held firm,' says
-the Geneva manuscript, 'fearing, if he spoke, that the
-cordeliers would kill him.' The judges then reminded
-him of the power of the parliament and the protection
-of the king. 'You shall never return into the hands
-of the monks,' they told him. At these words the poor
-young fellow began to breathe; he recovered from his
-great fright; his tongue was loosened, and he 'explained
-the whole affair to the judges,' says Beza.
-'I made a hole in the roof,' he said, 'to which I applied
-my ear, to hear what the provincial said to me from
-below. Then I struck a plank which I held in my
-hand, and I hit it hard enough for the noise to be
-heard by the reverend fathers underneath. That was
-all the <i>fun</i>,' he added.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THEIR CONDEMNATION.=</p>
-
-<p>The friars were then confronted with the novice,
-who stoutly maintained the cheat got up by them.
-They were both indignant and alarmed at seeing this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">{373}</a></span>
-pitiful varlet turning against their reverences; but as
-it was now impossible to deny the fact, they began to
-protest against their judges, and to plead their privileges
-once more. They were condemned; the indignation
-was general, the king especially being greatly
-irritated. All his life long he looked upon the monks,
-black or white, as his personal enemies. Besides, the
-hatred he felt against that lazy and ignorant herd was,
-he thought, one of his attributes as the Father of
-Letters. His anger broke out in the midst of his
-court: 'I will pull down their convent!' he exclaimed,
-'and build in its place a palace for the duke!' (that is,
-for the Duke of Orleans, Catherine's husband). All
-the councillors of parliament, both lay and clerical,
-were assembled. The haughty Coliman, the eloquent
-brother Stephen, and their accomplices were forced
-to stand at the bar, and sentence was solemnly
-delivered. They were to be taken to the Chatelet
-prison at Orleans; there they would be stripped of
-their frocks, be led into the cathedral, and then, set
-on a platform with tapers in their hands, they were to
-confess 'that, with certain fraud and deliberate malice,
-they had plotted such wickedness.' Thence they were
-to be taken to their convent, and afterwards to the
-place of public execution, where they would again
-confess their crime.</p>
-
-<p>This promised the idlers of Orleans a still more
-extraordinary spectacle than that given them when
-the friars got into their carts. Every day they
-expected to see the sentence carried out; but the
-government feared to appear too favourable to the
-Lutherans. The matter was protracted; some of the
-monks died in prison; the others were suffered to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">{374}</a></span>
-escape; and thus ended an affair which characterises
-the epoch, and shows the weapons that a good many
-priests used against the Reformation. If the sentence
-was never executed, the moral influence of the story
-was immense, and we shall presently see some of its
-effects.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_649" id="Foot_649" href="#Ref_649">[649]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin's manuscript narrative, recently discovered in the Geneva
-library by Dr. J. Bonnet, has been printed in the <i>Bulletin de l'Histoire du
-Protestantisme Français</i>, iii. p. 33.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_650" id="Foot_650" href="#Ref_650">[650]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-This affair is mentioned by Sleidan and Theodore Beza, both of
-whom appear to have seen Calvin's narrative.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_651" id="Foot_651" href="#Ref_651">[651]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin, <i>Hist. de l'Esprit des Cordeliers d'Orléans</i>. Geneva MS.
-(<i>Bulletin de l'Histoire du Protestantisme Français</i>, iii.) Beza, <i>Hist. Eccles.</i>
-p. 11. Sleidan, i. p. 361.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_652" id="Foot_652" href="#Ref_652">[652]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin's MS. <i>Bulletin de l'Hist. du Prot. Fran.</i> iii. p. 36.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_653" id="Foot_653" href="#Ref_653">[653]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Lutheri <i>Opp.</i> xxii. p. 1463.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_654" id="Foot_654" href="#Ref_654">[654]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>History of the Reformation of the Sixteenth Century</i>, vol. ii. bk. viii.
-ch. ii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">{375}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XXXVI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">FRANCIS PROPOSES A REFORMATION TO THE SORBONNE.<br />
- (<span class="smc">Autumn 1534.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=FRANCIS CONFESSES HIS ERRORS.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE disgust inspired by the imposture of the cordeliers
-of Orleans, and the jests lavished upon
-the monks in the Louvre and throughout Paris, were
-further encouragements to the king to prosecute his
-alliances with protestantism. He had, however, little
-need of a fresh incentive; the reform proposed by
-Melanchthon was in his view acceptable and advantageous,
-because it diminished the power of the pope,
-and corrected abuses incompatible with the new light,
-at the same time that it left untouched that catholicism
-from which the king had no desire to secede. In his
-private conversations with Du Bellay, Francis, laying
-aside all reserve, acknowledged frankly that the
-Romish Church was upon the wrong track, and said
-in a confidential tone, that 'Luther was not so far
-wrong as people said.' He did not fear to add that it
-was himself rather who had been mistaken. The
-King of France, and the country along with him, thus
-appeared to be in a good way for reform.</p>
-
-<p>Francis determined to acquaint the protestant
-princes with his sentiments on Melanchthon's memoir.
-'My envoy, on his return to Paris,' he wrote, 'having
-laid before me the opinions of your doctors on the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">{376}</a></span>
-course to be pursued, I entertain a hope of seeing the
-affairs of religion enter upon a fair way at last.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_655" id="Ref_655" href="#Foot_655">[655]</a></span>
-Du Bellay, well satisfied on his part with the impression
-made on his master by the opinions of the evangelical
-divines, informed the magistrates of Augsburg, Ulm,
-Nuremberg, Meiningen, and other imperial cities, that
-the King of France approved of the Lutheran doctrines,
-and would protect the protestants. The Melanchthonian
-reformation was therefore in progress, and
-already men were preparing the stones for the edifice
-of the reformed Catholic Church. The French government
-did not confine itself to writing letters; but,
-strange to say! the sovereign, the absolute monarch,
-did not fear to make an acknowledgment of his errors,
-and to express his regret: he sent a thorough palinode
-into Germany. He who was putting the Lutherans to
-death was not far from declaring himself a Lutheran.
-In October and November 1534, an agent from Francis
-I. visited the cities of the Germanic empire, announcing
-everywhere that 'the king now saw his
-mistake in religious matters,'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_656" id="Ref_656" href="#Foot_656">[656]</a></span>
-and that the Germans
-who followed Luther <i>thought correctly as regards the
-faith that is in Christ</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_657" id="Ref_657" href="#Foot_657">[657]</a></span>
-The worthy burgomasters and
-councillors of Germany were amazed at such language,
-and looked at one another with an incredulous air;
-but the French envoy assured them repeatedly that
-the King of France desired a reform even in his own
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">{377}</a></span>
-country.... 'The emperor,' he added, 'wishes to constrain
-the protestants by force of arms to keep to the
-old doctrine; but the King of France will not permit
-it. He has sent me into Germany to form an alliance
-with you to that intent.' Such was the strange news
-circulated beyond the Rhine. It reached the ears of
-the Archbishop of Lunden, who immediately forwarded
-it to Charles V.</p>
-
-<p>When Francis I. annulled the pragmatic sanction
-at the beginning of his reign, he had reserved the
-right of appointing bishops, and had thus made the
-Church subordinate to the State. The time seemed to
-have arrived for taking a second step. It was necessary
-to put an end to the popish superstitions and abuses,
-condemned by the friends of letters, whose patron he
-claimed to be, and thus satisfy the protestants; and,
-by a wise reform, maintain in Europe the catholicity
-of the Church, which the popes were about to destroy
-by their incredible obstinacy. The king would thus
-appear to be a better guardian of European catholicism
-than even the pope, and secure for himself that European
-preponderance which Charles V. had hitherto
-possessed.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=FRENCH VERSION OF THE ARTICLES.=</p>
-
-<p>He must set his hand to the work and begin with
-the clergy. The king, seeing that it would be unwise
-to communicate to them unreservedly the opinions of
-the reformers, as they had been read at the Louvre,
-resolved to have a new edition of them prepared, which
-should contain the essential ideas. It would appear
-that he confided this task to a numerous commission.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_658" id="Ref_658" href="#Foot_658">[658]</a></span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">{378}</a></span>
-William du Bellay and his brother the Bishop of
-Paris were doubtless the two chief members. The
-commissioners set to work, correcting, suppressing,
-adding, hitting certain popular superstitions a little
-harder even than the reformers, and at length they
-prepared a memoir which may be considered as a
-statement of what the French government meant by
-the proposed reformation.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_659" id="Ref_659" href="#Foot_659">[659]</a></span>
-The changes made by
-the French excited much discontent among the German
-protestants, and Melanchthon himself complained
-of them bitterly.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_660" id="Ref_660" href="#Foot_660">[660]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The king, who carried into every pursuit the courage
-and fire of which he had given so many proofs on the
-field of battle, appeared at first to attack the papacy
-with the same resolution that he would have employed
-in attacking one of Charles's armies. It must be
-clearly remembered that, in his idea, the reform which
-he was preparing carried with it the cessation of schism,
-and that his plan would restore the catholicity torn to
-pieces by Roman insolence and imprudence. This
-remark, if duly weighed, justifies the king's boldness.
-He sent the project to Rome, we are assured, asking
-the pope to support or to amend it.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_661" id="Ref_661" href="#Foot_661">[661]</a></span>
-We may imagine
-the alarm of the Vatican on reading this heretical
-memoir. Then Du Bellay, taking the Sorbonne in
-hand, had a conference with the deputies of that illustrious
-body, whose whole influence was ever employed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">{379}</a></span>
-in maintaining the factitious unity that characterises
-the papacy. 'Gentlemen,' he said to them, 'by the
-king's commands I have endeavoured to prevail upon
-the German churches to moderate the doctrines on
-which they separated from the Roman Church, wishing
-thus to lead them back to union. By order, therefore, of
-my master, I hand you the present articles, to receive
-instruction from you as to what I shall have to say to
-the German doctors.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_662" id="Ref_662" href="#Foot_662">[662]</a></span>
-The deputies having received
-the paper from Du Bellay, forwarded it to the sacred
-faculty. The latter delegated to examine it 'eminent
-men, doctors of experience in such matters,'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_663" id="Ref_663" href="#Foot_663">[663]</a></span>
-who immediately set to work.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=TERROR OF THE SORBONNE.=</p>
-
-<p>The secretary of the Sorbonne began to read the
-articles: the doctors listened and soon began to look at
-each other and ask if they had heard correctly. The
-venerable committee was agitated like the surface of
-the sea by a sudden squall. They knew Francis; they
-knew he did not think there existed in his kingdom
-any society daring enough to set limits to his power.
-He expected that a word from his mouth would be
-considered as a decree from God. The doctors came
-to the conclusion, therefore, that if the king desired
-such a reform, nothing in the world could prevent
-him from establishing it. They saw the Church laid
-waste, and Rome in ruins.... It was the beginning
-of the end. Their terror and alarm increased every
-minute. All the sacred faculty, all the Church must
-rise and exclaim: 'Stop, Sire, or we perish!'</p>
-
-<p>The French autocrat, however, took his precautions,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">{380}</a></span>
-and even while meditating how he could strip the pope
-of his power, he put on a pleasant face, and ascribed to
-others the blows aimed by his orders against Rome.
-'They are <i>Melanchthonian</i> articles,' said his ministers.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_664" id="Ref_664" href="#Foot_664">[664]</a></span>
-True, but behind Melanchthon was Du Bellay, and
-behind him was the king. The tactics employed at
-this moment by Francis I. are of all times; and if the
-multitude is sometimes deceived, intelligent minds
-have always recognised the thoughts of the supreme
-mover under the pen of the humble secretary. The
-movement of Francis towards independence is in no
-respect surprising: the outburst is quite French if it
-is not christian. There has always existed in France
-a spirit of liberty so far as concerns the Church; and
-the most pious kings, even St. Louis, have defended
-the rights of their people against the holy see. The
-Gallican liberties, although they are nothing more than
-a dilapidated machine, are still a memorial of something;
-and what is dilapidated to-day may be restored
-to-morrow. It was therefore a truly French feeling,—it
-was that hidden chord which vibrates at the
-bottom of every generous heart, from the Channel to
-the Mediterranean Sea, whose harmonious sound was
-heard at this important period of the reign of Francis I.</p>
-
-<p>The venerable company had some difficulty to recover
-from their alarm. What! really, not in a dream,
-not figuratively, heresy is at the gates of the Church
-of France, introduced by the king ... who courteously
-offers her his hand!... The terrified Sorbonne raised
-a cry of horror, and mustered all their forces to prevent
-the <i>heretic</i> from entering. They turned over the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">{381}</a></span>
-volumes of the doctors; they opposed the <i>Summa</i> of
-St. Thomas to the Epistles of St. Paul; they sought
-by every means in their power to defend stoutly the
-scholastic doctrine in the presence of Francis. A fireship
-had been launched by the guilty hand of the
-king: did that prince imagine he would see the glorious
-vessel, which had so long been mistress of the seas, in
-a hurry to lower her flag? The crew were valiant,
-determined upon a deadly resistance, and ready to
-blow themselves into the air with the ship, rather than
-capitulate. The struggle between the king and the
-corporation was about to begin. Alas! Beda was no
-longer there to support them, and recourse must be
-had to others. 'Master Balue was elected to go to
-court, carrying the registers, and Master Jacques Petit
-was given him as his associate.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_665" id="Ref_665" href="#Foot_665">[665]</a></span>
-The Sorbonne was
-poor in resources: the strong men were in the camp
-of Luther, Calvin, and Melanchthon.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE MINISTERS AND THE SORBONNE.=</p>
-
-<p>What was said at court between Master Balue,
-Master Petit, and the King of France, has not been
-recorded; but we have the memoir sent by the king to
-the Sorbonne, and the answer returned by that body
-to the king. These documents may enlighten us as
-to what passed at the conference, and we shall allow
-them to speak for themselves, arranging the former
-under the name of the king's ministers. William du
-Bellay, his brother the Bishop of Paris, and others
-probably were the persons empowered by the king to
-confer with Master Balue and Master Jacques Petit.
-They were champions of very different causes—the
-men who then met, probably at the Louvre, in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">{382}</a></span>
-presence of Francis I., and whom we are about to
-hear.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">The King's Ministers.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'To establish a real concord in the Church of God,
-we must all of us first look at Christ; we must subject
-ourselves to him, and seek his glory, not our own.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_666" id="Ref_666" href="#Foot_666">[666]</a></span></p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Sorbonne.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'We have heard his Majesty's good and holy words,
-for which we all thank God, praying him to give the
-king grace to persevere.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_667" id="Ref_667" href="#Foot_667">[667]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This was doubtless a mere compliment.</p>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 side">~QUESTIONS DISCUSSED.~</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Ministers.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'Above all things, let us remember that the doctors
-of the Word of God ought not to fight like gladiators,
-and defend all their opinions <i>mordicus</i> (tooth and
-nail);<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_668" id="Ref_668" href="#Foot_668">[668]</a></span>
-but rather, imitating St. Augustin in his <i>Retractations</i>,
-they should be willing to give way a little
-to one another ... without prejudice to truth.'</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Sorbonne.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'Open your eyes, Sire; the Germans desire, in opposition
-to your catholic intention, that we should give
-way to them by retrenching certain ceremonies and
-ordinances which the Church has hitherto observed.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">{383}</a></span>
-They wish to draw us to them, rather than be converted
-to us.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_669" id="Ref_669" href="#Foot_669">[669]</a></span></p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Ministers.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'You are mistaken: important concessions have
-been obtained. The Germans are of opinion that
-bishops must hold the chief place among the ministers
-of the Churches, and that a pontiff at Rome should
-hold the first place among the bishops. But, on the
-other hand, the pontifical power must have respect
-for consciences, consult their wants, and be ready to
-concede to them some relaxation.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_670" id="Ref_670" href="#Foot_670">[670]</a></span></p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Sorbonne.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'It must not be forgotten that the ecclesiastical
-hierarchy is of divine institution, and will last until
-the end of time; that man can neither establish nor
-destroy it, and that every christian must submit to it.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_671" id="Ref_671" href="#Foot_671">[671]</a></span></p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Ministers.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'Having established the catholicity of the Church,
-let us consider what reforms must be effected in order
-to preserve it. First, there are indifferent matters, such
-as food, festivals, ecclesiastical vestments, and other
-ceremonials, on which we shall easily come to an understanding.
-Let us beware of constraining men to fast
-by commandments which nobody observes ... and
-<i>least of all those who make them</i>.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_672" id="Ref_672" href="#Foot_672">[672]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">{384}</a></div>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Sorbonne.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'None resist them but men corrupted by depraved
-passions.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_673" id="Ref_673" href="#Foot_673">[673]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=SAINTS AND MASS-MONGERS.=</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Ministers.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'Certain doctors of the Church, making use of a holy
-prosopopœia, have introduced into their discourses
-the saints whom they were eulogising, and have
-prayed for their intercession as if they were present
-before them;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_674" id="Ref_674" href="#Foot_674">[674]</a></span>
-but they only desired by this means
-to excite admiration for these godly persons, rather
-than to obtain anything by their intercession.... Let
-the people, then, be exhorted not to transfer to the
-saints the confidence which is due to Jesus Christ
-alone. It is Christ's will to be invoked and to answer
-prayer.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_675" id="Ref_675" href="#Foot_675">[675]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Here the French mind indulged in a sly hit which
-would not have occurred to the German mind; and
-the king's councillors, determining to strike hard,
-continued:</p>
-
-<p>'What abuses and disorders have sprung out of
-this worship of man! Observe the words, the songs,
-the actions of the people on the saints' days, near their
-graves or near their images! Mark the eagerness
-with which the idle crowd hurries off to banquets,
-games, dances, and quarrels. Watch the practices of
-all those paltry, ignorant, greedy priests, who think of
-nothing but putting money in their purses; and then
-... tell us whether we do not in all these things
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">{385}</a></span>
-resemble pagans, and revive their shameful superstitions?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_676" id="Ref_676" href="#Foot_676">[676]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Not a word of this popular description of saints'
-days will be found in Melanchthon's memoir: it is
-entirely the work of Francis and his councillors.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Sorbonne.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'Let us beware how we forsake ancient customs.
-Let us address our prayers directly to the saints who
-are our patrons and intercessors under Jesus Christ.
-To assert that they have not the prerogative of healing
-diseases, is in opposition to your Majesty's personal
-experience and the gift you have received from God of
-curing the king's evil.... Let us also pay our devotions
-to statues and images, since the seventh general council
-commands them to be adored.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_677" id="Ref_677" href="#Foot_677">[677]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When the Sorbonne, in order to defend the prerogatives
-of the saints, cited the miraculous powers
-of the king, they employed an argument to which it
-was dangerous to reply; and, accordingly, we find
-nothing on this point in the answers of the opponents
-of the faculty. The discussion, getting off this
-shoal, turned to the act which is the essence of the
-Romish doctrine, and priests were once more lashed
-by the royal hand, which was even more skilful at
-this work than in curing the evil.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Ministers.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'There ought to be in the Church a living communion
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">{386}</a></span>
-of the members of Christ.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_678" id="Ref_678" href="#Foot_678">[678]</a></span>
-But, alas! what
-do we find there? A crowd of ignorant and filthy
-priests, the plague of society, a burden to the earth, a
-slothful race who can do nothing but say mass, and
-who, while saying it, do not even utter those five intelligible
-words, preferable, as St. Paul thinks, to ten
-thousand words in an unknown tongue.... We must
-get rid of these mercenaries, these mass-mongers,
-who have brought that holy ceremony into contempt,
-and we must supply their place with holy, learned, and
-experienced men.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_679" id="Ref_679" href="#Foot_679">[679]</a></span>
-Then perhaps the Lord's Supper
-will recover the esteem it has lost. Then, instead of
-an unmeaning babble, we shall have psalms, and
-hymns, and spiritual songs. Then we shall sing to
-the Saviour, and every tongue will confess that Jesus
-Christ is the Lord, to the glory of God the Father....
-What false confidence, what wretched delusion is that
-which leads so many souls to believe that by attending
-mass every day, even when piety is neglected,
-they are performing an act useful to themselves and
-their friends, both for this life and for that which is to
-come!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_680" id="Ref_680" href="#Foot_680">[680]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE LORD'S SUPPER.=</p>
-
-<p>The Sorbonne contended for the external mechanism
-of the sacramental act, to which their opponents
-desired to impart a spiritual and living character, and
-defended without shame or scruple the material advantages
-the clergy derived from it.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">{387}</a></span></p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Sorbonne.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'The mass is a real sacrifice, of great benefit to the
-living and the dead, and its excellence is founded on
-the passion of Jesus Christ. It is right, therefore, to
-bestow temporal gifts on those who celebrate it, be
-they good or bad; and the priests who receive them
-ought not to be called mass-mongers, even though they
-are paid.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_681" id="Ref_681" href="#Foot_681">[681]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The king's ministers now came to the much disputed
-doctrine of the presence of Christ in the communion.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Ministers.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'Let us put aside the disputes that have divided us
-so long.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_682" id="Ref_682" href="#Foot_682">[682]</a></span>
-Let us all confess that in the eucharist the
-Lord truly gives believers his body to eat and his
-blood to drink to feed our souls in life everlasting;
-and that in this manner Christ remains in us and we
-in Christ. Whether this sacrament be called the
-Lord's Supper, the Lord's bread and wine, mass,
-eucharist, love-feast, or sacrifice, is of little moment.
-Christians ought not to dispute about names, if they
-possess the things; and, as the proverb says, "When
-we have the bear before us, let us not look after his
-track."<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_683" id="Ref_683" href="#Foot_683">[683]</a></span>
-Communion with Christ is obtained by
-faith, and cannot be demonstrated by human arguments.
-When we treat of theology, let us not fall
-into matæology.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_684" id="Ref_684" href="#Foot_684">[684]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">{388}</a></div>
-
-<p>The Sorbonne could not overlook this side-blow
-aimed at the scholastic style.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Sorbonne.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'It is very useful, and often very necessary for the
-extirpation of heresy, to employ words not to be found
-in Scripture, such as <i>transubstantiation</i>, &amp;c.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_685" id="Ref_685" href="#Foot_685">[685]</a></span>
-Yes, the
-bread and the wine are truly changed in substance,
-preserving only the accidents, and becoming the body
-and blood of Christ. It is not true that the <i>panitas</i>
-or <i>corporitas</i> of the bread combines with the <i>corporitas</i>
-of Christ. The transubstantiation is effected <i>in instanti</i>
-and not <i>successivè</i>; and it is certain that neither
-laymen nor women can accomplish this miraculous act,
-but priests only.'</p>
-
-<p>The controversy next turned on confession, justification,
-faith, works, and free-will; after which they
-came to practical questions.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Ministers.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'Good men do not ask that the monasteries should
-be destroyed, but be turned into schools;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_686" id="Ref_686" href="#Foot_686">[686]</a></span>
-so that thus
-the liberality of our brethren may serve to maintain,
-not idle people, but men who will instruct youth in
-sound learning and morality.'</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Sorbonne.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'What! the pope should permit the friars to leave
-their monasteries whenever they wish! This clearly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">{389}</a></span>
-shows us that the Germans are aiming at the overthrow,
-the ruin of all religion.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_687" id="Ref_687" href="#Foot_687">[687]</a></span></p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Ministers.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'And what prevents our restoring liberty of marriage
-to the ministers of the Church? Did not Bishop
-Paphnucius acknowledge at the Nicene council that
-those who forbid it encourage licentiousness? In that
-great crowd of priests and monks it is impossible for
-purity of life to be restored otherwise than by the
-divine institution which dates from Eden.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_688" id="Ref_688" href="#Foot_688">[688]</a></span></p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Sorbonne.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'An article quite as dangerous as the secularisation
-of monks.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=AN ASSEMBLY OF LAITY AND CLERGY.=</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Ministers.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'In this age, when everything is in a ferment,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_689" id="Ref_689" href="#Foot_689">[689]</a></span>
-and when so many sects are raising their heads in various
-places, the interest of the christian Church requires
-that there should be an assembly composed not only
-of priests and theologians, but also of laymen and
-upright, sensible, courageous magistrates, who have
-at heart the glory of the Lord, public morality, and
-general usefulness.... Ah! it would be easy to agree
-if we thought of Christ's glory rather than of our
-own!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_690" id="Ref_690" href="#Foot_690">[690]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">{390}</a></div>
-
-<p>The doctors of the Sorbonne had no great liking
-for deliberative assemblies where they would sit with
-laymen and even with heretics.</p>
-
-<h4><span class="smc">Sorbonne.</span></h4>
-
-<p>'Beware! ... it is to be feared that, under the
-pretext of uniting with us, the heretics are conspiring
-to lead the people astray.... Have we not seen such
-assemblies in Germany, called together on a pretence
-of concord, produce nothing but divisions, discord,
-and infinite ruin of souls?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_691" id="Ref_691" href="#Foot_691">[691]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But the Sorbonne warned the king in vain. Francis
-at this time, through policy no doubt, was opposed to
-the doctrines maintained by the priests. He desired
-to be freed at home from that papal supremacy which
-presumed to direct the policy and religion of his
-kingdom; and abroad he knew that a league with
-England and Germany could alone destroy the overwhelming
-preponderance of Charles V. And hence
-the meetings of the Sorbonne grew more and more
-agitated; the doctors repeated to one another all the
-alarming reports they had heard; there was sorrow
-and anger; never, they thought, had Roman-catholicism
-in France been threatened with such terrible
-danger. It was no longer a few obscure sects; no
-longer a Brueys, a Henry of Lausanne, a Valdo,
-Albigenses, or Waldenses, who attacked the Church:
-no! powerful states, Germany and England, were separating
-from the papacy, and the absolute monarch of
-France was endeavouring to introduce revolutionary
-principles into his kingdom. The Church, as its
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">{391}</a></span>
-Head had once been, was deserted by its friends.
-The grandees who were subsequently to form a
-league around the Guises, were silent now; the rough
-and powerful Montmorency himself seemed dumb;
-and, accordingly, agitation and alarm prevailed
-in the corporation. Certain ultramontane fanatics
-proposed petitioning the king to put down heresy
-by force, and to uphold the Roman dogmas by
-fire and sword. More moderate catholics, observing
-with sorrow the catholicity so dear to them rent by
-schism, sought for more rational means of restoring
-the unity destroyed by the Reformation. Everybody
-saw clearly that the enemy was at the gate, and that
-no time must be lost in closing it.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=DANGER OF CATHOLICISM.=</p>
-
-<p>Alas! they had to deal with others besides heretics.
-All reflecting minds in Europe, and especially in
-France, were struck with the example set by the King
-of England, and the members of the Roman party
-thought that Francis was about to adopt the same
-course in his kingdom. There was indeed a difference
-between the systems of these two princes. Henry
-desired the doctrine of Rome, but not its bishop;
-Francis accepted the bishop, but rejected the doctrine.
-Nevertheless, as each of these reforms was a heavy
-blow aimed at the system of the middle ages, they
-were looked upon as identical. The success which
-Henry's plan had met with in England was an indication
-of what Francis's plan would meet with in France.
-The two monarchs who reigned on each side of the
-Channel were equally absolute.</p>
-
-<p>The Roman doctors, finding that their controversy
-had not succeeded, resolved to go to work in a more
-cunning way, and, without seeming to reject a union
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">{392}</a></span>
-with Germany, to oppose the heretics by putting them
-out of court. 'Sire,' they said to Francis, 'your very
-humble servants and most obedient subjects of the
-Faculty of Theology pray you to ask the Germans
-whether they confess that the Church militant, whose
-head (under Jesus) is Peter and his successors, is
-infallible in faith and morals? whether they agree to
-obey him as his subjects, and are willing to admit all
-the books contained in the Bible,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_692" id="Ref_692" href="#Foot_692">[692]</a></span>
-as well as the
-decisions of the councils, popes, and doctors?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_693" id="Ref_693" href="#Foot_693">[693]</a></span>
-Obedience to the pope and to tradition, without
-discussing doctrines, was their summary of the controversy.
-It did not succeed.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=SHOULD KINGS FEAR PROTESTANTISM?=</p>
-
-<p>The doctors of the faculty, finding that the king
-would not aid them, applied to the papal nuncio.
-They found him also a prey to fear. They began to
-consult together on the best means of keeping France
-in communion with the holy see. As Francis was
-deaf to theological arguments, the Sorbonne and the
-nuncio agreed that some other means must be
-used. The prelate went to the Louvre, carrying with
-him a suggestion which the Sorbonne had prompted.
-'Sire,' he said, 'be not deceived. The protestants
-will upset all civil as well as religious order.... The
-throne is in as much danger as the altar.... The
-introduction of a new religion must necessarily introduce
-a new government.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_694" id="Ref_694" href="#Foot_694">[694]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>That was indeed the best way of treating the affair;
-the nuncio had found the joint in the armour, and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">{393}</a></span>
-king was for a moment staggered; but the pope's
-conduct restored his confidence. Rome began to
-proceed against Henry VIII. as she had formerly done
-against kings in the middle ages. This proceeding, so
-offensive to the royal dignity, drew Francis towards
-the Reformation. If there is danger towards royal
-power, it exists on both sides, he thought. He
-believed even that the danger was greater on the side
-of Rome than of Germany, since the protestants of
-that country showed their princes the most loyal
-submission, and the most religious and profound
-respect. He had observed, that while the pope
-desired to deprive the King of England of his states
-and release his subjects from their obedience, the
-reformation which that prince had carried out had
-not prejudiced one of his rights; that there was a
-talk, indeed, of insurrections against Henry VIII.,
-but they were got up by Rome and her agents.
-Enlightened men suggested to Francis, that while
-popery kept the people in slavery, and caused insurrection
-and rebellion against the throne, the Reformation
-would secure order and obedience to kings, and
-liberty to the people. He seems to have been convinced
-... for the moment at least. 'England and I,'
-he said, 'are accustomed to keep together and to
-manage our affairs in harmony with each other, and
-we shall continue to do so.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_695" id="Ref_695" href="#Foot_695">[695]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This new movement on the part of Francis emboldened
-the evangelicals. They hoped that he would
-go on to the end, and would not leave the pope even the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">{394}</a></span>
-little place which he intended to reserve for him. If
-a prince like Louis IX. maintained the rights of
-the Gallican Church in the thirteenth century;
-if a king like Charles VII. restored ecclesiastical
-liberty in the fifteenth; shall we not see in this
-universal revival of the sixteenth century a monarch
-like Francis I. emancipating France from the Roman
-yoke? At a great sacrifice he has just done much
-for Wurtemberg, and will he do nothing for his own
-kingdom? The friends of the Reformation encouraged
-one another to entertain the brightest hopes. 'What
-a noble position!' they said.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_696" id="Ref_696" href="#Foot_696">[696]</a></span>
-Whenever they met,
-whether in the university, in the country, or in
-the town, they exchanged congratulations.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_697" id="Ref_697" href="#Foot_697">[697]</a></span>
-In their opinion, old things had passed away.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=UNEASINESS OF THE REFORMERS.=</p>
-
-<p>But there were other evangelicals—men more decided
-and more scriptural—who looked with a distrustful
-eye upon these mysterious conferences between
-Francis and the protestants of Germany. Those fine
-speeches of Du Bellay, and that remarkable conference
-at Bar-le-Duc, were in their eyes policy and diplomacy,
-but not religion. They felt uneasy and alarmed; and
-when they met to pray in their obscure conventicles,
-these humble christians said to one another with terror:
-'Satan is casting his net to catch those who are not on
-the watch. Let us examine the colours in which he
-is disguised.' Astonished and even distressed, they
-asked if it was not strange to assert, as Melanchthon
-had done, 'that no good man would protest against
-the monarchy of the Roman bishop,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_698" id="Ref_698" href="#Foot_698">[698]</a></span>
-and that, in consideration
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">{395}</a></span>
-of certain reforms, we should hasten to recognise
-him!' No, the Roman episcopate will never be
-reformed, they said. Remodel it as you like, it will
-always betray its domineering spirit, revive its ancient
-tricks, and regain its ascendency, even by fire. We
-must be on our guard.... Between Rome and the
-Reformation it is a matter of mere yes or no: the pope
-or Jesus Christ! Unable to conquer the new Church
-in fair fight, they hope to strangle it in their embraces.
-Delilah will lull to sleep in her lap the prophet whom
-the strong men have been unable to bind with green
-withes and new ropes. Under the pretence of screening
-the Reform from evil influences, they desire to
-set it, like a flower of the field, in some place without
-light and air, where, fading and pining away ... it
-will perish. Thanks to the protection of the Queen of
-Navarre, the gallant and high-spirited charger that
-loved to sport in the meadows is about to be taken to
-the king's stable, where it will be adorned with a
-magnificent harness ... but its mouth will be deformed
-by the bit, its flanks torn by the spur, and
-even the plaits of its mane will bear witness to its
-degradation.</p>
-
-<p>This future was not reserved for the Reform.
-While the mild and prudent voices of Melanchthon
-and Bucer were soothing it to sleep, innocently enough
-no doubt, bolder and freer voices, those of a Farel and
-a Calvin, were preparing to arouse it. While the papers
-of the conciliating theologians were lying on the velvet
-cover of the royal table, another paper, whose lines of
-fire seemed penned by the thunderbolt, was about to
-circulate through the kingdom, and be posted even at
-the door of the king's chamber by a too daring hand,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">{396}</a></span>
-which was to arouse in that prince one of the most terrible
-bursts of passion ever recorded in history. A loud
-peal of thunder would be heard, and the heavy atmosphere
-which stifled men's minds would be followed
-by a pure and reviving air. There would be furious
-tempests; but the christians of the scriptural, practical,
-and radical Reformation rejoiced at witnessing the
-failure of this specious but impossible project, which
-aimed at reforming the Church even while preserving
-Roman-catholicism. The system of the Queen of
-Navarre will have to be abandoned; that of Calvin
-will prevail. To uphold truth, the evangelicals were
-about to sacrifice unity. No doubt furious persecutions
-would be the consequence, but they said to each other
-that it was better to live in the midst of hurricanes that
-awaken, than in mephitic vapours which lull men into
-the sleep of death.</p>
-
-<p>We shall describe hereafter the event which had so
-notable an influence on the destinies of the Reformation
-in France. They were Frenchmen who caused
-it; it was a Frenchman who was the principal author;
-but it was from Switzerland, as we shall see, that this
-formidable blow was to come, and to that country we
-must now return.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_655" id="Foot_655" href="#Ref_655">[655]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Dadurch Ich in gute Hoffnung kommen die Sachen sollten auf
-gute Wege gerichtet werden.' This German translation of the king's
-letter is given in the <i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. pp. 828-835.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_656" id="Foot_656" href="#Ref_656">[656]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Rex suus cognoscit nunc errorem suum in religione.'—Lanz, <i>Correspondance
-de l'Empereur Charles-Quint</i>, ii. p. 144.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_657" id="Foot_657" href="#Ref_657">[657]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quod isti Germani Lutherum sequentes de Christo et de fide illius
-recte sentiant.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_658" id="Foot_658" href="#Ref_658">[658]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Fuerunt illi (Melanchthonis articuli) a <i>quamplurimis</i> in Gallia
-excerpti, sed non integri verum mutilati.'—Gerdesius, <i>Hist. Evang.
-renov.</i> iv. p. 124.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_659" id="Foot_659" href="#Ref_659">[659]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-This memoir is printed in the <i>Corpus Reformatorum</i>, ii. pp.
-765-775; and while Melanchthon's is entitled <i>Consilium Gallis Scriptum</i>,
-this is headed <i>Idem Scriptum a Gallis editum</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_660" id="Foot_660" href="#Ref_660">[660]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Qua de re Melanchthon ipse conqueritur.'—Gerdesius, iv. p. 124.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_661" id="Foot_661" href="#Ref_661">[661]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Eosdem articulos Romam misisse dicitur, quo pontificis ipsius
-quoque impetraret vel emendationem vel consensum.'—Gerdesius, <i>Hist.
-Evang. renov.</i> iv. p. 124.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_662" id="Foot_662" href="#Ref_662">[662]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-D'Argentré, <i>De novis Erroribus</i>, i. p. 3553. Gerdesius, iv. App. xiii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_663" id="Foot_663" href="#Ref_663">[663]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Letter from the Faculty of Theology to Francis I. D'Argentré,
-i. p. 3953. Gerdesius, iv. App. xiii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_664" id="Foot_664" href="#Ref_664">[664]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-D'Argentré, i. p. 3953. Gerdesius, iv. App. xiii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_665" id="Foot_665" href="#Ref_665">[665]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Gerdesius, i. App. xiii. p. 75.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_666" id="Foot_666" href="#Ref_666">[666]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Necessarium ut in Christum omnes spectemus.'—Scriptum a Gallis
-editum, <i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 765.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_667" id="Foot_667" href="#Ref_667">[667]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Facultatis Theologiæ Parisiensis Responsum ad Regem Franciscum</i>,
-D'Argentré, i. p. 3953.—Gerdesius, iv. App. p. 75.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_668" id="Foot_668" href="#Ref_668">[668]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nec geramus alterutri gladiatorios animos nostra mordicus defendendi.'—Scriptum
-a Gallis editum, <i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 765.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_669" id="Foot_669" href="#Ref_669">[669]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Facultatis Theol. Paris. Resp. ad Regem.</i> Gerdesius, iv. App. p. 75.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_670" id="Foot_670" href="#Ref_670">[670]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ut consulat conscientiis, aliquando concedere relaxationem.'-Scriptum
-a Gallis editum, <i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 766.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_671" id="Foot_671" href="#Ref_671">[671]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Jure divino institutam, quæ usque ad consummationem sæculi
-perduratura est.'—Gerdesius, iv. App. p. 78.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_672" id="Foot_672" href="#Ref_672">[672]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quæ tamen nemo observat, atque hi minime omnium qui præcipiunt.'—<i>Corp.
-Ref.</i> ii. p. 767.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_673" id="Foot_673" href="#Ref_673">[673]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-D'Argentré, i. p. 397. Gerdesius, iv. App. p. 79.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_674" id="Foot_674" href="#Ref_674">[674]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Pia mortuorum facta prosopopœia ... quasi præsentes a præsentibus
-orasse.'—Scriptum a Gallis editum, <i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 768.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_675" id="Foot_675" href="#Ref_675">[675]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Qui et velit invocari et velit exaudire.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_676" id="Foot_676" href="#Ref_676">[676]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Videbimus nos minime abesse a superstitione Ethnicorum.'—Scriptum
-a Gallis editum, <i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 768.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_677" id="Foot_677" href="#Ref_677">[677]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Statuas et imagines sanctorum quas adorandas sept. œcum. synodus
-decernit.'—<i>Facultatis Theol. Paris. Resp.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_678" id="Foot_678" href="#Ref_678">[678]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Viva membrorum Christi communione.'—Scriptum a Gallis ed.
-<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 769.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_679" id="Foot_679" href="#Ref_679">[679]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Semotis his missarum conducticiis nundinatoribus.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_680" id="Foot_680" href="#Ref_680">[680]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Præpostera ejus operis fiducia quæ plerosque sic seduxit.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_681" id="Foot_681" href="#Ref_681">[681]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Vocari non debent nundinatores.'—<i>Facult. Theol. Paris Resp.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_682" id="Foot_682" href="#Ref_682">[682]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Sublatis quæ inter nos diu viguerunt altercationibus.'—Script. a
-Gallis ed., <i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 770.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_683" id="Foot_683" href="#Ref_683">[683]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Præsente urso, quod dicitur, vestigia non quæramus.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_684" id="Foot_684" href="#Ref_684">[684]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Theologiam sic tractemus ut non incidamus in matæologiam.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_685" id="Foot_685" href="#Ref_685">[685]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Utile et necessarium certa verborum forma uti, in sacra scriptura
-non expressa.'—<i>Facult. Theol. Paris. Resp.</i> p. 82.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_686" id="Foot_686" href="#Ref_686">[686]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Non petunt boni ut monasteria deleantur, sed ut sint scholæ.'—Script.
-a Gallis ed., <i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 773.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_687" id="Foot_687" href="#Ref_687">[687]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Facultatis Theologiæ Parisiensis Responsum.</i> Gerdesius, <i>Hist. Evang.
-renov.</i> p. 76.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_688" id="Foot_688" href="#Ref_688">[688]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In tanta sacerdotum et monachorum turba restitui aliter vitæ
-puritas non poterit.'—Scriptum a Gallis editum, <i>Corpus Reformatorum</i>, ii.
-p. 774.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_689" id="Foot_689" href="#Ref_689">[689]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hoc fermentato sæculo.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_690" id="Foot_690" href="#Ref_690">[690]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Perfacile autem coalescere possumus.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_691" id="Foot_691" href="#Ref_691">[691]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Facultatis Theologiæ Parisiensis Responsum.</i> Gerdesius, <i>Hist. Evang.
-renov.</i> p. 77.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_692" id="Foot_692" href="#Ref_692">[692]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Including the apocryphal books.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_693" id="Foot_693" href="#Ref_693">[693]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Facultatis Theologiæ Parisiensis Responsum.</i> Gerdesius, <i>Hist. Evang.
-renov.</i> iv. App. p. 77.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_694" id="Foot_694" href="#Ref_694">[694]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Du Bellay, <i>Mémoires</i>, ed. Petitot, Introd. p. 123. Schmidt, <i>Hist.
-Theol.</i> p. 36 (ed. 1850).</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_695" id="Foot_695" href="#Ref_695">[695]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'England und Ich pflegen zusammen zu halten und sämmtlich
-unsere Sachen vornehmen.'—Rex Galliæ ad principes protest. <i>Corp.
-Ref.</i> ii. p. 830.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_696" id="Foot_696" href="#Ref_696">[696]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quam pulchre staremus.'—Sturm to Melanchthon, MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_697" id="Foot_697" href="#Ref_697">[697]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_698" id="Foot_698" href="#Ref_698">[698]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Neque bonus ullus erit, qui reclamet in pontificis monarchiam.—<i>Corp.
-Ref.</i> ii. p. 762.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">{397}</a></div>
-
- <h2>BOOK III.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">FALL OF A BISHOP-PRINCE, AND FIRST EVANGELICAL
- BEGINNINGS IN GENEVA.</span></h2>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER I.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE RENAISSANCE, THE REFORMATION, THE MIDDLE AGES.<br />
- (1526.)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE Reformation was necessary to christian society.
-The Renaissance, daughter alike of ancient and
-of modern Rome, was a movement of revival, and yet
-it carried with it a principle of death, so that wherever
-it was not transformed by heavenly forces, it fell away
-and became corrupted. The influence of the humanists—of
-such men as Erasmus, Sir Thomas More, and
-afterwards of Montaigne—was a balmy gale that shed
-its odours on the upper classes, but exerted no power
-over the lower ranks of the people. In the elegant
-compositions of the men of letters, there was nothing
-for the conscience, that divinely appointed force of the
-human race. The work of the Renaissance, had it
-stood alone, must of necessity, therefore, have ended
-in failure and death. There are persons in these days
-who think otherwise: they believe that a new state of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">{398}</a></span>
-society would have arisen without the Reformation,
-and that political liberty would have renewed the
-world better than the Gospel. This is assuredly a
-great error. At that time liberty had scarcely any
-existence in Europe, and even had it existed, and the
-dominion of conscience not reappeared along with
-it, it is certain that, though powerful enough, perhaps,
-to destroy the old elements of order prevailing in
-society, it would have been unable to substitute any
-better elements in their place. If, even in the nineteenth
-century, we tremble sometimes when we hear the distant
-explosions of liberty, what must have been the
-feeling in the sixteenth? The men who were about to
-appear on the theatre of the world were still immersed
-in disorder and barbarism. Everything betokened
-great virtues in the new generation, but also tumultuous
-passions; a divine heroism, but also gigantic
-crimes; a mighty energy, but at its side a languishing
-insensibility. A renewed society could not be constituted
-out of such elements. It wanted the divine
-breath to inspire high thoughts, and the hand of God to
-establish everywhere the providential order.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the
-sixteenth century, society was in a state of excitement.
-The world was in suspense, as when the statuary
-is about to create a work that shall be the object of
-universal admiration. The metal is melted, the mass
-flows from the furnace like glowing brass; but the
-approaching lava alarms, and not without reason, the
-anxious spectators. At this period we witness struggles,
-insurrections, and reaction. The perfumed spirit of
-the Renaissance was unable to check the evil and to
-establish order and liberty. Society had appeared to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">{399}</a></span>
-grow young again under the breath of antiquity;
-but wherever a knowledge of the Gospel was not
-combined with the cultivation of letters, that purity,
-boldness, and elevation of youth, which at first had
-charmed contemporaries, disappeared. The melting
-was checked, the metal grew cold, and instead of the
-masterpiece that had been expected, there appeared
-the repulsive forms of servility, immorality, and superstition.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CRISIS AND MEANS OF SALVATION.=</p>
-
-<p>Was there any means of preventing so fatal a future?
-How, in the midst of the old society, which was
-crumbling to pieces, could a new one be formed, with
-any certain prospect of vitality? In religion only
-the coming age was to find its living force. If the
-conscience of man was awakened and sanctified by
-christianity, then and then only the world would
-stand.</p>
-
-<p>Was it possible to look for this regenerating element
-in the society which was expiring? That would be
-to search among the dead for the principle of life. It
-was necessary to have recourse to the primitive sources
-of faith. The Gospel, more human than literature,
-more divine than philosophy, exerts an influence over
-man that these two things cannot possess. It goes
-down into the depths—that is, into the people—which
-the Renaissance had not done; it rises towards the
-high places—that is, towards heaven—which philosophy
-cannot do. When the Gospel lifted up its
-voice in the days of the Reformation, the people
-listened. It spoke to them of God, sin, condemnation,
-pardon, everlasting life—in a word, of Christ.
-The human soul discovered that this was what it
-wanted; and was touched, captivated, and finally
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">{400}</a></span>
-renewed. The movement was all the more powerful
-because the doctrine preached to the people had
-nothing to do with animosities, traditions, interests of
-race, dynasties, or courts. True, it got mixed up
-with these things afterwards; but in the beginning it
-was simply the voice of God upon earth. It circulated
-a purifying fire through corrupted society, and
-the new world was formed.</p>
-
-<p>The old society, whose place was about to be occupied,
-did all in its power to resist the light. A terrible
-voice issued from the Vatican; a hand of iron
-executed its behests in many a country, and strangled
-the new life in its cradle. Spain, Italy, Austria, and
-France were the chief theatres of the deplorable tragedies,
-whose heroes were Philip II. and the Guises.
-But there were souls, we may even say nations, protected
-by the hand of God, who have been ever since
-like trees whose leaves never wither.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_699" id="Ref_699" href="#Foot_699">[699]</a></span>
-Intelligent
-men, struck by their greatness, have been alarmed for
-the nations that are not watered by the same rivers.
-Against such a danger there is, however, a sure remedy;
-it is that all people should come and drink at those
-fountains of life which have given protestant nations
-'all the attributes of civilisation and power.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_700" id="Ref_700" href="#Foot_700">[700]</a></span>
-Or do
-they perchance imagine that by shutting their windows
-against the sun, the light will spread more widely?...
-A new era is beginning, and all lingering nations
-are now invited to the great renovation of which the
-Gospel is the divine and mighty organ.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=NEW SITUATION OF GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p>In 1526 Geneva was in a position which permitted
-it to receive the new seed of the new society. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">{401}</a></span>
-alliance with the cantons, by drawing that city nearer
-to Switzerland, facilitated the arrival of the intrepid
-husbandmen who brought with them the seeds of life.
-At Wittemberg, at Zurich, and even in the upper extremities
-of Lake Leman, in those beautiful valleys
-of the Rhone and the Alps which Farel had evangelised,
-the divine sun had poured down his first rays.
-When the Genevans made their alliance with the Swiss,
-they had only thought of finding a support to their
-national existence; but they had effected more: they
-had opened the gates of day, and were about to
-receive a light which, while securing their liberties,
-would guide their souls along the path of eternal life.
-The city was thus to acquire an influence of which
-none of its children had ever dreamt, and by the instrumentality
-of Calvin, one of the noblest spirits that
-ever lived, 'she was about to become the rival of
-Rome,' as an historian says (perhaps with a little
-exaggeration), 'and wrest from her the dominion of
-half the christian world.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_701" id="Ref_701" href="#Foot_701">[701]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>If the alliance with the cantons opened Geneva on
-the side of Switzerland, it raised a wall of separation
-between that city and Savoy—which was not less
-necessary for the part she was called upon to play in
-the sixteenth century. The valley of the Leman was
-at that time dotted with châteaux, whose ruins may
-still be seen here and there. As invasion, pillage, and
-murder formed part of social life in the middle ages,
-the nobles surrounded their houses with walls, and
-some even built their dwelling-places on the mountains.
-From Geneva might be descried the castle of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">{402}</a></span>
-Monnetier standing on immense perpendicular rocks
-on Mont Salève....</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">J'aimais tes murs croulants, vieux moutier ruiné!</div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Naître, souffrir, mourir!</i> devise triste et forte . . .</div>
-<div class="verse">Quel châtelain pensif te grava sur la porte?<span
- class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_702" id="Ref_702"
- href="#Foot_702">[702]</a></span></div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Further on, and near Thonon, on an isolated hill,
-shaded by luxuriant chestnut trees, stood the vast
-castle of Allinges, which is still a noble ruin. The
-lords of these places, energetic, rude, freebooting, and
-often cruel men, growing weary of their isolation
-and their idleness, would collect their followers,
-lower their drawbridges, rush into the high roads in
-search of adventures, and indulge in a life of raids and
-plunder, violence and murder.</p>
-
-<p>The towns, with their traders and travellers, were
-especially the abhorrence of these gentlemen robbers.
-From the tenth century the Genevan travellers and
-foreign merchants, passing through Geneva with their
-goods, often fell a prey to the plundering vagabondage
-of the neighbouring lords. This was not without
-important consequences for civilisation and liberty.
-Seeing the nobles perpetually in insurrection against
-social order, the burghers learnt to revolt against
-despotism, murder, and robbery. Geneva received
-one of these lessons, and profited by it better than
-others.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_703" id="Ref_703" href="#Foot_703">[703]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=PONTVERRE AND THE SAVOYARD NOBLES.=</p>
-
-<p>In all the castles of Genevois, Chablais, and the
-Pays de Vaud, it was said, in 1526, that the alliance
-of Geneva with the free Swiss cantons menaced the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">{403}</a></span>
-rights of Savoy, the temporal (and even the spiritual)
-power of the bishop, and Roman-catholicism. And
-hence the irritated nobles ruminated in their strongholds
-upon the means of destroying the union, or at
-least of neutralising its effects. François de Ternier,
-seigneur of Pontverre, whose domains were situated
-between Mont Salève and the Rhone, about a league
-from Geneva, thought of nothing else night or day.
-A noble, upright, but violent man; a fanatical enemy
-of the burgher class, of liberty, and of the Reformation;
-and a representative of the middle ages, he swore
-to combat the Swiss alliance unto death, and he kept
-his oath. Owing to the energy of his character and
-the nobility of his house, François possessed great
-influence among his neighbours. One day, after long
-meditation over his plans, he left his residence, attended
-by a few horsemen, and visited the neighbouring
-castles. While seated at table with the knights, he
-made his apprehensions known to them, and conjured
-them to oppose the accursed alliance. He asked them
-whether it was for nothing that the privilege of bearing
-arms had been given to the nobles. 'Let us make
-haste,' he said, 'and crush a new and daring power
-that threatens to destroy our castles and our churches.'
-He sounded the alarm everywhere; he reminded the
-nobles that they had a right to make war whenever
-they pleased;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_704" id="Ref_704" href="#Foot_704">[704]</a></span>
-and forthwith many lords responded to
-his energetic appeals. They armed themselves, and,
-issuing from their strongholds, covered the district
-around Geneva like a cloud of locusts. Caring little
-for the political or religious ideas with which Pontverre
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">{404}</a></span>
-was animated, they sought amusement, plunder,
-and the gratification of their hatred against the citizens.
-They were observed at a distance, with their mounted
-followers, on the high roads, and they were not idle.
-They allowed nobody to enter the city, and carried off
-property, provisions, and cattle. The peasants and the
-Genevan merchants, so disgracefully plundered, asked
-each other if the tottering episcopal throne was to be
-upheld by <i>banditti</i>.... 'If you return,' said these noble
-highwaymen, 'we will <i>hang you up by the neck</i>.' Nor
-was that all: several nobles, whose castles were near the
-water, resorted to piracy on the lake: they pillaged the
-country-houses near the shore, imprisoned the men,
-insulted the women, and cut off all communication
-with Switzerland.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=NOBLES TURN HIGHWAYMEN.=</p>
-
-<p>One difficulty, however, occurred to these noble
-robbers: they chanced to maltreat, without their
-knowing it, some of their own party, who were
-coming from German Switzerland. Having been
-much reproached for this, they took counsel on the
-road: 'What must we do,' they asked, 'to distinguish
-the Genevans?' They hit upon a curious shibboleth.
-As soon as they caught sight of any travellers in the
-distance, they spurred their horses, galloped up, and
-put some ordinary question to the strangers, 'examining
-in this way all who passed to and fro.' If the
-travellers replied in French, the language of Geneva,
-the knightly highwaymen declared they were <i>huguenots</i>,
-and immediately carried them off, goods and
-all. If the victims complained, they were not listened
-to; and even when they came from the banks
-of the Loire and the Seine, they were taken and shut
-up in the nearest castle. Many messengers from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">{405}</a></span>
-France to the Swiss cantons, who spoke like the
-Genevans, were arrested in this way.</p>
-
-<p>France, Berne, and Geneva complained bitterly;
-but the lords (for the most part Savoyards) took no
-notice of it. By chastising these burghers, they believed
-they were gaining heaven. They laughed
-among themselves at the universal complaints, and
-added sarcasm to cruelty. One day a Genevan
-deputy having appeared before Pontverre, to protest
-against such brigandage, the haughty noble replied
-coldly: 'Tell those who sent you, that in a fortnight
-I will come and set fire to the four corners of your
-city.' Another day, De la Fontaine, a retired syndic
-and mameluke, as he was riding along the high road,
-met a huguenot, and said to him: 'Go and tell your
-friends that we are coming to Geneva shortly, and
-will throw all the citizens into the Rhone.' As the
-Genevan walked away, the mameluke called him
-back: 'Wait a moment,' he said, and then continued
-maliciously: 'No, I think it will be better to cut off
-their heads, in order to multiply the relics.' This
-was an allusion to Berthelier's head, which had been
-solemnly buried. In the noisy banquets which these
-nobles gave each other in their châteaux, they related
-their feats of arms: anecdotes akin to those just
-quoted followed each other amid roars of laughter:
-the subject was inexhaustible. The politicians, although
-more moderate in appearance, were not less
-decided. They meditated over the matter in cold
-blood. 'I will enter Geneva sword in hand,' said
-the Count of Genevois, the duke's brother, 'and will
-take away six score of the most rebellious patriots.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_705" id="Ref_705" href="#Foot_705">[705]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">{406}</a></div>
-
-<p>Thus the middle ages seemed to be rising in defence
-of their rights. The temporal and spiritual authority
-of the bishop-prince was protected by bands of highwaymen.
-But while these powers, which pretended
-to be legitimate, employed robbery, violence, and
-murder, the friends of liberty prepared to defend
-themselves lawfully and to fight honourably, like regular
-troops. Besançon Hugues, reelected captain-general
-three days after the alliance with the Swiss,
-gave the signal. Instantly the citizens began to
-practise the use of arms in the city; and in the
-country, where they were placed as outposts, they
-kept strict watch over all the movements of the
-gentlemen robbers. Fearing that the latter, to crown
-their brigandage, would march against Geneva, the
-syndics had iron gratings put to all the windows in
-the city walls, built up three of the gates, placed a
-guard at the others, and stretched chains across
-every street. At the same time they brought into
-the harbour all the boats that had escaped the piratical
-incursions of the nobles, placed a sentry on the belfry
-of St. Pierre, and ordered that the city should be
-lighted all the night long. This little people rose
-like one man, and all were ready to give their lives
-to protect their goods and trade, their wives and
-children, and to save their old liberties and their new
-aspirations.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_706" id="Ref_706" href="#Foot_706">[706]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=GENEVAN DEPUTATION TO BERNE.=</p>
-
-<p>While thus resolute against their enemies in arms,
-the citizens showed moderation towards their disarmed
-foes. Some of those who were most exasperated,
-wishing to take their revenge, asked permission to
-<i>forage</i>, that is, to seize the property of the disloyal
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">{407}</a></span>
-and fugitive mamelukes. 'It is perfectly fair,' they
-said, 'for their treason and brigandage have reduced
-Geneva to extreme misery: we shall only get back
-what they have taken from us.' But Hugues, the
-friend of order as well as of liberty, made answer:
-'Let us commence proceedings against the accused;
-let us condemn them in penalties more or less severe;
-but let us refrain from violence, even though we have
-the appearance of right in our favour.'—'The ducal
-faction,' replied these hot-headed men, 'not only
-plundered us, but conspired against the city, and
-took part in the tortures and murders inflicted upon
-the citizens.' The syndics were not convinced, and
-the property of the offenders was respected; but after
-a rigorous investigation, they were deprived of the
-rights of citizenship.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_707" id="Ref_707" href="#Foot_707">[707]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Swiss cantons, discontented because the Genevans,
-who were in great straits, had not repaid the
-expenses incurred on their behalf, asked more for the
-mamelukes than the council granted: they demanded
-that they should all be allowed to return to the city.
-But to receive those who were making war against
-them, seemed impossible to the Genevans. They sent
-two good huguenots to Berne, François Favre and
-Baudichon de la Maison-Neuve, to make representations
-in this matter. The deputies were admitted to
-the great council on the 5th of June, 1526. De Lullins,
-the Savoyard governor, was also received on the same
-day, and in the duke's name he made great complaints
-against Geneva. Favre, a quick, impatient, passionate
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">{408}</a></span>
-man, replied in <i>coarse terms</i>. The Bernese firmly adhered
-to their resolution, and reprimanded the Genevan
-deputy, who candidly acknowledged his fault: 'Yes,'
-he said, 'I am <i>too warm</i>; but I answered rather as a
-private individual than as an ambassador.' On returning
-to his inn, he thought that the payment of the sum
-claimed by the Bernese would settle everything, and
-the same day he wrote to the council of Geneva: 'Your
-humble servant begs to inform you that you must send
-the money promised to my lords of Berne. Otherwise,
-let him fly from the city who can! Do you
-think you can promise and not be bound to keep your
-word? Find the money, or you are lost. I pray you
-warn my wife, that she may come to Lausanne. I am
-serving at my own expense, and yet I must pay for
-others also. Do not ruin a noble cause for such a
-trifle. If Berne is satisfied, we shall be all right with
-the mamelukes.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_708" id="Ref_708" href="#Foot_708">[708]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=CARTELIER'S CONDEMNATION.=</p>
-
-<p>Robber nobles were not the only supporters of the
-middle ages. That epoch has had its great men, but
-at the time of its fall it had but sorry representatives.
-The knights of the highway had their companions in
-the intriguers of the city. Among the latter we may include
-Cartelier, who had played his part in the plots got
-up to deliver Geneva to Savoy.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_709" id="Ref_709" href="#Foot_709">[709]</a></span>
-This man, who hated
-independence and the Reformation even more than
-Pontverre did, was, through the anger of the citizens
-and the avarice of the bishop, to suffer for the crimes
-of which his party was guilty. Being utterly devoid of
-shame, he went up and down the city as if he had
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">{409}</a></span>
-nothing to fear, and when he chanced to meet the indignant
-glance of a huguenot, he braved the anger with
-which he was threatened by assuming an air of contempt
-and defiance. Rich, clever, but of low character, he
-had contrived to be made a citizen in order to indulge in
-the most perfidious intrigues. One day he was apprehended,
-notwithstanding his insolent airs, and put into
-prison. A thrill ran through all the city, as if the hand
-of God had been seen striking that great criminal. Amblarde,
-Berthelier's widow, and his two children; John,
-Lévrier's brother; and a hundred citizens who had all
-just cause of complaint against the wretch, appeared
-before the council, and called for justice with cries
-and tears: 'He has spilt the blood of our fathers, our
-brothers, and our husbands,' said the excited crowd.
-'He wished to destroy our independence and subject us
-to the duke.' Convicted of conspiring against the State,
-the wretch was condemned to death. The executioner,
-putting a rope round his neck, led him through the
-city, followed by an immense crowd. The indignant
-people were delighted when they saw the rich and
-powerful stranger reduced to such humiliation. Proud
-and pitiless, he had plotted to ruin the city, and now
-he was expiating his crimes. Things did not stop here:
-while moderate men desired to remain in the paths of
-justice, the more hot-headed of the party of independence
-<i>derided</i> him, says a chronicler, and some mischievous
-boys pelted him with mud. The unhappy
-man, whose fall had been so great, thus arrived at the
-place of execution, and the hangman prepared to perform
-his duty.</p>
-
-<p>Cartelier had but a few minutes more to live, when
-the bishop's steward was seen hurrying forward with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">{410}</a></span>
-letters of grace, commuting the capital punishment
-into a fine of six thousand golden crowns payable to
-the prelate and to the city. To spare the life of the
-wretched man might have been an act of mercy and
-equity, especially as his crimes were political; but the
-angry youths who surrounded the criminal ascribed the
-bishop's clemency to his covetousness and to the hatred
-he bore the cause of independence. They desired the
-execution of the condemned man. Twice the hangman
-removed the rope, and twice these exasperated
-young men replaced it round Cartelier's neck. They
-yielded at last, however, and were satisfied with having
-made the conspirator feel all the anguish of death.
-Cartelier was set at liberty. When the bishop was
-informed of what had happened, he became afraid,
-imagining his authority compromised and his power
-endangered. 'It was for good reasons,' he wrote to
-the syndics, 'that I pardoned Cartelier; however,
-write and tell me if the people are inclined to revolt
-on account of this pardon.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_710" id="Ref_710" href="#Foot_710">[710]</a></span>
-The people did not
-revolt, and the rich culprit, having paid the fine,
-retired quietly to Bourg in Bresse, whence he had
-come.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE BISHOP'S HESITATION.=</p>
-
-<p>The bishop, who had first sentenced, then pardoned,
-and then repented of his pardon, was continually hesitating,
-and did not know what party to side with. He
-was not devoted body and soul to the duke, like his
-predecessor. Placed between the Savoyards and the
-huguenots, he was at heart, equally afraid of both, and
-by turns flung himself into the arms of opposite parties.
-He was like a stag between two packs of hounds,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">{411}</a></span>
-always afraid and panting. 'I write <i>angrily</i>,' he says
-in his letters: he was, indeed, always angry with one
-party or the other. Even the canons, his natural
-friends, and the members of his council aroused his
-fears, and not without cause; for these reverend persons
-had no confidence either in the bishop's character or in
-the brigandage of the gentry of the neighbourhood.
-Messieurs De Lutry, De Montrotier, De Lucinge, De
-St. Martin, and other canons said that the temporal authority
-of the prelate was too weak to maintain order;
-that the sword of a secular prince was wanted, and at
-the bottom of their hearts they called for the duke.
-'Ah!' said La Baume to Hugues, 'the chapter is a
-<i>poisoned</i> body;' he called the canons thieves and
-robbers: <i>Ille fur et latro est</i>, he said of one of them.
-The episcopal office appeared a heavy burden to him;
-but it put him in a position to give good dinners to his
-friends, and that was one of the most important duties
-of his life. 'I have wine for the winter,' he wrote in a
-postscript to the letter in which he made these complaints,
-'and plenty to entertain you with.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_711" id="Ref_711" href="#Foot_711">[711]</a></span>
-Such were his episcopal consolations.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_699" id="Foot_699" href="#Ref_699">[699]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Psalm i.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_700" id="Foot_700" href="#Ref_700">[700]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-M. Michel Chevalier, on the Prosperity of Protestant Nations.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_701" id="Foot_701" href="#Ref_701">[701]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Galiffe, <i>Matériaux pour l'Histoire de Genève</i>, ii. p. xxviii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_702" id="Foot_702" href="#Ref_702">[702]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Galloix, <i>Salève</i>. The author remembers reading, since the time of
-his boyhood, these three words on the ruins that have been since restored,
-<i>Nasci, pati, mori</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_703" id="Foot_703" href="#Ref_703">[703]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Spon, <i>Hist. de Genève</i>. Gautier MS. Guizot, <i>Civilisation en France
-et en Europe</i>. Froment.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_704" id="Foot_704" href="#Ref_704">[704]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ordonnance de Louis Hutin. Guizot, <i>Civilisation en France</i>, v. p.
-138.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_705" id="Foot_705" href="#Ref_705">[705]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil du 3 décembre. Lettres de Messieurs de
-Berne. Galiffe fils, <i>Besançon Hugues, Pièces Justificatives</i>, p. 487.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_706" id="Foot_706" href="#Ref_706">[706]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 15, 16, 23, 24, 28 mars.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_707" id="Foot_707" href="#Ref_707">[707]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Roset, <i>Chron.</i> MS. liv. ii. ch. ii. Registres du Conseil du 7 septembre
-1526. Spon, <i>Histoire de Genève</i>, ii. p. 396. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. pp. 446,
-447. Gautier MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_708" id="Foot_708" href="#Ref_708">[708]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-This letter will be found in Galiffe, <i>Matériaux pour l'Histoire de
-Genève</i>, ii. p. 489.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_709" id="Foot_709" href="#Ref_709">[709]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See above, vol. i. p. 228.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_710" id="Foot_710" href="#Ref_710">[710]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Archives de Genève. Lettre de Pierre de la Baume aux syndics, du
-24 janvier 1527.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_711" id="Foot_711" href="#Ref_711">[711]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil de décembre 1526, de janvier et avril 1527.
-Roset MS. bk. ii. ch. v. Galiffe, <i>Matériaux pour l'Histoire de Genève</i>,
-ii. pp. 264, 437, 439, 440. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. pp. 452-454. <i>Mém.
-d'Archéologie</i>, ii. p. 11. La Sœur de Jussie, <i>Le Levain du Calvinisme</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">{412}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER II.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE GOSPEL AT GENEVA, AND THE SACK OF ROME.<br />
- (<span class="smc">January to June 1527.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE bishop was about to have enemies more formidable
-than the duke and the League. The
-Reformation was approaching. There is a characteristic
-trait in the history of Geneva; the several surrounding
-countries were by turns to scatter the seeds
-of life in that city; in it was to be heard a concert of
-voices from France, Italy, and German Switzerland.
-It was the last of these that began.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=LAYMEN AND CLERGY.=</p>
-
-<p>At the time when treason was expelled from the
-city in the person of Cartelier, the Gospel entered it
-in that of an honest Helvetian, one of the Bernese
-and Friburg deputies who went there in 1527 about
-the affairs of the alliance concluded in 1526. Friburg
-would not have permitted a heretic preacher to accompany
-the deputation; even Berne would not have desired
-it just yet; but one of the Bernese ambassadors,
-a pious layman, who was coming to give a valuable
-support to national independence, was to call the
-Genevese to spiritual liberty. The lay members of
-the Church occupied in the time of the apostles, as
-is well known, a marked station in the religious community;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_712" id="Ref_712" href="#Foot_712">[712]</a></span>
-but by degrees the dominion of the clergy
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">{413}</a></span>
-had been substituted for evangelical liberty. One of
-the principal causes of this revolution was the inferiority
-of the laity; for many centuries ecclesiastics
-were the only educated men. But if this state of
-things should change, if the laity should attain to
-more knowledge and more energy than the clergy,
-a new revolution would be effected in an opposite
-direction. And this is really what happened in the
-sixteenth century. The christian layman who then
-arrived at Geneva was Thomas ab Hofen, a friend
-of Zwingle, whom we have already mentioned.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_713" id="Ref_713" href="#Foot_713">[713]</a></span>
-In the year 1524 he had declared at Berne in favour of
-the Reformation. The Zurich doctor, hearing of
-his departure for the shores of Lake Leman, was rejoiced,
-for the piercing eye of his faith had fancied it
-could perceive a ray of evangelical light breaking over
-those distant hills. He desired that the Genevans,
-now united to Switzerland, should find in her not only
-liberty but truth. 'Undoubtedly,' wrote Zwingle
-to the excellent Bernese, 'undoubtedly this mission
-may be of extraordinary advantage to the citizens of
-Geneva, who have been so recently received into alliance
-with the cantons.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_714" id="Ref_714" href="#Foot_714">[714]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Ab Hofen did not go to Geneva with the intention
-of reforming it; his mission was diplomatic; but he
-was one of that 'chosen generation' of whom St. Peter
-speaks—one of those christians who are always ready
-to 'show forth the praises of Him who has called them
-to his marvellous light.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_715" id="Ref_715" href="#Foot_715">[715]</a></span>
-As he entered the city, he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">{414}</a></span>
-said to himself that he would do with earnestness
-whatever work God might set before him, as his
-Zurich friend had prayed him. Simple-minded,
-moderate, and sensitive, Ab Hofen placed the kingdom
-of heaven above the things of the earth; but he
-was subject to fits of melancholy, which occasionally
-made him faint-hearted. When he arrived at Geneva,
-he visited many citizens, attended the churches and
-the meetings of the people, and, having reflected upon
-everything, he thought to himself that there was much
-patriotism in the city, but unfortunately little christianity,
-and that religion was the weak side of Genevan
-emancipation. He was distressed, for he had expected
-better things. With a heart overflowing with
-sorrow he returned to his inn (17th of January, 1527),
-and feeling the necessity of unburdening himself on
-the bosom of a friend, he sat down and wrote to the
-great reformer of Zurich: 'The number of those who
-confess the doctrine of the Gospel must be increased.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_716" id="Ref_716" href="#Foot_716">[716]</a></span>
-There were, therefore, at this time in Geneva christians
-who confessed salvation by Jesus Christ, and not
-by the ceremonies of the Church; but their number
-was not large.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=AB HOFEN'S CHRISTIAN CONVERSATION.=</p>
-
-<p>Ab Hofen determined to do his best to remedy this
-evil. He had a loving heart and practical mind, and
-with indefatigable zeal took advantage of every moment
-of leisure spared him by his official duties. As
-soon, therefore, as a conference with the Genevan magistrates
-was ended, or a despatch to the Bernese government
-finished, he laid aside his diplomatic character and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">{415}</a></span>
-began to visit the citizens, conversing with them, and
-telling them of what was going on at Zurich and preparing
-at Berne. Being received into the families of some of
-the principal huguenots, and seated with them round
-the hearth, at the severest portion of the year (January
-1527), he spoke to them of the Word of God, of its
-authority, superior (he said) to the pope's, and of the
-salvation which it proclaimed. He taught them that
-in the Gospel God gives man full remission of his
-sins. These doctrines, unknown for so many ages,
-and subversive of the legal and ceremonial religion of
-Rome, were heard at Geneva with astonishment and
-pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>At first the priests received the evangelist magistrate
-rather favourably. The rank which he bore
-made him honourable in their eyes; and he, far from
-being rude towards them, like certain huguenots, was
-amiable and sympathising. Some ecclesiastics, believing
-him to belong to their coterie, because he
-spoke of religion, did not conceal their uneasiness
-from him, and described to him, very innocently, the
-fine times when presents of bread, wine, oil, game,
-and tapers were plentiful in their kitchen, and when
-they used to say, with a gracious tone, to the believers
-who brought these donations in white napkins:
-<i>Centuplum accipietis et vitam æternam possidebitis</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_717" id="Ref_717" href="#Foot_717">[717]</a></span>
-Then they added, with loud complaints: 'Alas! the
-faithful bring us no more offerings, and people do not
-run so ardently after indulgences as they used to do.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_718" id="Ref_718" href="#Foot_718">[718]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">{416}</a></div>
-
-<p>The Bernese envoy, inwardly delighted at these
-candid avowals, which he did not fail to transmit to
-Zwingle, apparently avoided all controversy, and continued
-to announce the simple Gospel. The citizens
-listened to him; they sought his company, and invited
-him to take a seat in their family circle, or in some
-huguenot assembly, and to speak of the noble things
-that were doing at Zurich. These successes encouraged
-him: his eyes sparkled, he accosted the
-citizens freely, and his words flowed copiously from
-his lips. 'I will not cease proclaiming the Gospel,'
-he wrote to Zwingle; 'all my strength shall be devoted
-to it.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_719" id="Ref_719" href="#Foot_719">[719]</a></span>
-Erelong the well-disposed men who had
-gathered round him were joined by other citizens,
-exclusively friends of liberty; they listened to him
-with interest; but when he began to blame certain
-excesses, and to require certain moral reforms, he met
-with coldness and even determined opposition from
-them, and they turned their backs on him. Ab
-Hofen, although a man of zeal and piety, did not
-possess the faith which moves mountains; he returned
-dispirited to his inn, shut himself up in his room, and,
-heaving deep sighs, wrote all his trouble to Zwingle.
-The latter, who possessed a sure glance, saw that
-the opportunity was unique. To establish the Reformation
-at the two extremities of Switzerland,
-at Zurich and Geneva, appeared to him a most
-important work. Would not these two arms, as
-they drew together, drag all Switzerland with them,
-especially if the powerful Berne lent its support in
-the centre? But he knew Ab Hofen, and fearing his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">{417}</a></span>
-dejection, he wrote to him: 'Take care that the work
-so well begun is not stopped. While transacting the
-business of the republic, do not neglect the business
-of Jesus Christ.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_720" id="Ref_720" href="#Foot_720">[720]</a></span>
- You will deserve well of the citizens
-of Geneva if you put in order not only their laws
-and their rights, but their souls also.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_721" id="Ref_721" href="#Foot_721">[721]</a></span>
-Now what can
-put the soul in order except it be the Word and the
-teaching of Him who created the soul?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_722" id="Ref_722" href="#Foot_722">[722]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=ZWINGLE ENCOURAGES AB HOFEN.=</p>
-
-<p>Zwingle went further than this, and, in order to
-revive Ab Hofen's fainting heart, made use of an
-argument to which the politician could not be insensible.
-The reformer of Zurich was the friend of
-liberty as well as of the Gospel, and he believed that
-a people could be governed in only one of two ways:
-either by the Bible or by the sword, by the fear of
-God or by the fear of man. In his opinion Geneva
-could protect her independence against the attacks of
-Savoy, France, and all foreign powers, only by submitting
-to the King of heaven. 'O my dear Thomas,'
-he wrote to his friend, 'there is nothing I desire so
-much as to see the doctrine of the Gospel flourishing
-in that republic (Geneva). Wherever that doctrine
-triumphs, the boldness of tyrants is restrained.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_723" id="Ref_723" href="#Foot_723">[723]</a></span>
-At the same time, not wishing to offend the Bernese
-deputy, Zwingle added: 'If I write these things, it is
-not to awaken one who sleeps, but to encourage one
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">{418}</a></span>
-who runs.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_724" id="Ref_724" href="#Foot_724">[724]</a></span>
-He ended his letter with a fraternal
-salutation to the evangelical christians of Geneva:
-'Salute them all in my name,' he said.</p>
-
-<p>Ab Hofen was not insensible to this appeal; if he
-was easily cast down, he was as easily lifted up. He
-therefore redoubled his zeal, and pressed Geneva to
-imitate Zurich and Berne; but he perceived that his
-evangelical exertions were appreciated by a very small
-number only, and regarded with coldness, and even
-with displeasure and contempt, by the majority of
-politicians. Citizens, who had at first given him the
-warmest welcome, scarcely saluted him when he met
-them, and if he went to any meeting his presence
-put a restraint upon the whole assembly. He soon
-encountered opposition of a more hostile nature; the
-priests eyed him angrily, and the confidence which
-some ecclesiastics had placed in him was succeeded by
-a violent hatred. The clergy proclaimed a general
-crusade against heresy; the canons put themselves at
-the head of the opposition; priests and monks filled
-the streets, going from house to house, and bade
-the citizens be on their guard against the evangelical
-addresses of the Bernese envoy. They cried down,
-abused, and anathematised the doctrines he taught,
-and made war against the New Testament wherever
-they found it. They encouraged one another, and
-frightened the women especially. According to their
-representations, the city would be ruined if it listened
-to the heretical diplomatist.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=AB HOFEN'S INFLUENCE AND DEATH.=</p>
-
-<p>Ab Hofen now fell into a state of discouragement
-more serious than the former. 'All my efforts are
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">{419}</a></span>
-vain,' he wrote to Zwingle; 'there are about <i>seven
-hundred</i> clergymen in Geneva who do their utmost
-to prevent the Gospel from flourishing here.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_725" id="Ref_725" href="#Foot_725">[725]</a></span>
-What can I do against such numbers? And yet a wide
-door is opened to the Word of God.... The priests
-do not preach; and as they are unable to do so, they
-are satisfied with saying mass in Latin.... Miserable
-nourishment for the poor people!... If any preachers
-were to come here, proclaiming Christ with boldness,
-the doctrine of the pope would, I am sure, be soon
-overthrown.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_726" id="Ref_726" href="#Foot_726">[726]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But such preachers did not appear. Convinced of
-his insufficiency, and continually repeating that true
-ministers, like Zwingle and Farel, were wanted in that
-city; finding that many of the Genevans desired to
-be liberated not only from the vexations of Savoy, the
-shuffling of the bishop, and the doctrines of the pope,
-but also from the laws of morality; struck with the
-evils he saw ready to burst upon Geneva, and which
-the Gospel alone could avert,—this simple-minded,
-pious, and sensitive man returned heartbroken to
-Berne. Had this disappointment any effect upon
-his health? We cannot say; but he died not long
-after, in the month of November, 'as a christian ought
-to die,' it was said. It was found after his departure
-that his exertions had not been useless, and that some
-Genevans at least had profited by his teaching: among
-their number were counted Besançon Hugues and
-Baudichon de la Maison-Neuve. Some astonishment
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">{420}</a></span>
-may be felt at seeing these two names together, for
-they are those of the chiefs of two opposite parties;
-but there is nothing improbable about it, for Hugues
-must have been frequently brought into contact with
-Ab Hofen, and it is not impossible that he listened to
-his religious conversation. Hugues was a serious man;
-he was, moreover, a statesman, and must have desired
-to know something about the religious opinions which
-seemed at that time likely to be adopted by the whole
-confederation; but his policy consisted in maintaining
-the rights of the bishop-prince on one side, and those
-of the citizens on the other; as for his religion, he was
-a catholic, and we do not see that he changed in either
-of those relations. What he might have been, if he
-had been living at the time when the Reformation
-was carried through, no one can say. De la Maison-Neuve,
-on the contrary, was a decided huguenot, and
-certainly needed the Gospel to moderate the ardour of
-his character. William de la Mouille, the bishop's
-chamberlain and confidant, appears to have been the
-person who profited most by the teaching of the layman
-of Berne.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=SACK OF ROME.=</p>
-
-<p>While the Gospel was entering Geneva, desolation
-was entering Rome. It is a singular circumstance,
-the meeting of these two cities in history: one so
-powerful and glorious, the other so small and obscure.
-That, however, is capable of explanation: the great
-things of the world have always come from great
-cities and great nations; but the great things of God
-have usually small beginnings. Conquerors must have
-treasures and armies; but evangelical christianity,
-which undertakes to change man, nations, and the
-whole human race, has need of the strength of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">{421}</a></span>
-God, and God affects little things. In the first century,
-he chose Jerusalem; in the middle ages, the
-Waldensian valleys; in the sixteenth century, Wittemberg
-and Geneva. 'God hath chosen the weak
-things of the world to confound the things which
-are mighty.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_727" id="Ref_727" href="#Foot_727">[727]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the month of May (1527) a rumour of startling
-importance suddenly spread through the world:
-'Rome has just been destroyed,' said the people, 'and
-there is no more pope.' The troops of Charles V.
-had taken and sacked the pontifical city, and if the
-pope was still alive, he was in concealment and almost
-in prison. The servants of the Church, who were
-terrified at first, soon recovered their breath, and
-directly their alarm was dissipated, avarice and covetousness
-took its place. In the presence of the
-ruins of that ancient city, its friends thought only
-of dividing its spoils. The Bishop of Geneva, in
-particular, found himself surrounded by petitioners,
-who sought to be collated to the benefices hitherto
-held by clergymen resident in Rome. 'They have
-all perished,' he was told; 'their benefices are vacant:
-give them to us.' The bishop granted everything;
-and he even conferred on himself (Bonivard tells us)
-the priory of St. Jean-lez-Genève, which belonged to a
-cardinal. Seldom had so many deaths made so many
-people happy.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_728" id="Ref_728" href="#Foot_728">[728]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The sack of Rome had more important results
-for Geneva and the protestant nations. When they
-saw the ruin of that city, it appeared to them that the
-papacy had fallen with it. The huguenots never grew
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">{422}</a></span>
-tired of listening to the wonderful news and of commenting
-upon it. Struck with the example set them by
-Charles V., they thought to themselves that 'if the emperor
-had set aside the bishop and prince of Rome, they
-might well abandon the prince and bishop of Geneva.'
-Their right to do so was far clearer. The pope-king
-had at least been elected at Rome, and in conformity
-with ancient custom; while the bishop-prince had not
-been elected at Geneva and by Genevans, in accordance
-with the ancient constitutions, but by a foreign
-and unlawful jurisdiction. The huguenots promised
-even to be more moderate than his catholic majesty.
-Finally, the acts which impelled them to turn Pierre
-de la Baume out of the city, were far more vexatious
-in their eyes than those which had induced Charles to
-expel Clement VII. from Rome. 'Are we not much
-more oppressed by ecclesiastical tyranny,' they said,
-'than by secular tyranny? Are we not forced to
-pay, always to pay, and is it not our money that
-makes the bishop's pot boil?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_729" id="Ref_729" href="#Foot_729">[729]</a></span>
-Further, the shameful
-conduct of many of the ecclesiastics seemed to
-them a sufficient motive for putting an end to their
-rule.</p>
-
-<p>A scandal which occurred just at this time increased
-the desire felt by certain huguenots to withdraw themselves
-from the government of the monks and priests.
-On the 10th of May, certain inhabitants of St. Leger
-appeared before the council. For some time past
-their sleep had been disturbed by noises and shouting,
-in which the cordeliers, jacobins, and other friars were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">{423}</a></span>
-concerned; and they desired to put an end to it.
-'Some disorderly women have settled in our quarter,'
-they told the council, 'and certain monks frequent
-their houses.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_730" id="Ref_730" href="#Foot_730">[730]</a></span>
-... 'If you observe the monks going
-there at night-time,' replied the council, 'give information
-to the syndics and the captain-general. The watch
-will immediately go and take them.' The citizens
-withdrew half satisfied with the answer, but fully
-determined to call the watch as soon as the disorder
-was renewed.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=UNION OF FAITH AND MORALITY.=</p>
-
-<p>These scandals—an acknowledged thing at Rome—greatly
-exasperated the citizens of Geneva, and made
-the better disposed long for a reformation of faith
-and morals. They said that soldiers use their arms
-as their officers command them: that the monks and
-priests (they should have said all christians) ought
-also to use their lives as their chief orders them;
-and that if they make a contrary use of them, they
-enlist under the standard of vice and avow themselves
-its soldiers. The worthy citizens of Geneva could
-not make that separation between religion and morality,
-of which the greater part of the clergy set
-the example. In proportion as the Reformation made
-progress in the world, the opposition increased against
-a piety which consisted only in certain formulas, ceremonies,
-and practices, but was deprived of its true
-substance—living faith, sanctification, morality, and
-christian works. Christianity, by the separation which
-Rome had made between doctrines and morals, had
-become like one of those spoilt and useless tools that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">{424}</a></span>
-are thrown aside because they can no longer serve
-in the operations for which they were made. The
-reformers, by calling for a living, holy, active faith,
-were again to make christianity in modern times a
-powerful engine of light and morality, of liberty and
-life.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_712" id="Foot_712" href="#Ref_712">[712]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Acts i. 15; vi. 5; xv.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_713" id="Foot_713" href="#Ref_713">[713]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See above, vol. i. p. 371.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_714" id="Foot_714" href="#Ref_714">[714]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nunc vero cum te Gebennæ reipublicæ gratia abesse constat ...
-reficiemur. Utilitatem autem non vulgarem recens factis civibus per te
-comparari.'—Zwingle to Thomas ab Hofen, 4 Jan. 1527. <i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_715" id="Foot_715" href="#Ref_715">[715]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-1 Peter ii. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_716" id="Foot_716" href="#Ref_716">[716]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hic Genevæ numerus Evangelii doctrinam confitentium augeri
-incipiat.'—Ab Hofen to Zwingle, January 17, 1527. Zwinglii <i>Epp.</i>
-ii. p. 15.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_717" id="Foot_717" href="#Ref_717">[717]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'You shall receive a hundredfold, and shall possess everlasting life.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_718" id="Foot_718" href="#Ref_718">[718]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Clerici queruntur homines neque amplius sacra dona præbere velle,
-neque tam vehementer ad indulgentias currere.'—Ab Hofen to Zwingle.
-Zwinglii <i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 16.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_719" id="Foot_719" href="#Ref_719">[719]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quousque meæ vires valeant, in ea re nequaquam me defecturum
-esse.'—Ab Hofen to Zwingle. Zwinglii <i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 15.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_720" id="Foot_720" href="#Ref_720">[720]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In mediis reipublicæ negotiis, Christi negotiorum minime sis
-negligens.'—Zwinglii <i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 9.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_721" id="Foot_721" href="#Ref_721">[721]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Optime de Gebennæ civibus merebere, si non tantum leges eorum
-ac jura, quantum animos componas.'—Ibid. p. 10.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_722" id="Foot_722" href="#Ref_722">[722]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Animos autem quid melius componet, quam ejus sermo atque
-doctrina qui animos ipse formavit?'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_723" id="Foot_723" href="#Ref_723">[723]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hæ enim ubi crescunt, tyrannorum audacia coerceretur.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_724" id="Foot_724" href="#Ref_724">[724]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Non quasi torpentem sim expergefacturus; sed currentem adhortor.'—Zwinglii
-<i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 10.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_725" id="Foot_725" href="#Ref_725">[725]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In hac urbe clerici sunt ad 700, qui manibus pedibusque impediunt,
-quominus Evangelii doctrina efflorescat.'—Zwinglii <i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 10.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_726" id="Foot_726" href="#Ref_726">[726]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Si prædicatores haberent, fore puto ut pontificia doctrina labefactetur.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_727" id="Foot_727" href="#Ref_727">[727]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-1 Cor. i. 27.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_728" id="Foot_728" href="#Ref_728">[728]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 461.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_729" id="Foot_729" href="#Ref_729">[729]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ne sont-ce pas nos écus qui font bouillir le pot de l'évêque?'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_730" id="Foot_730" href="#Ref_730">[730]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Querelaverunt de putanis et certis religiosis qui ibidem affluunt.'—Registres
-du Conseil du 10 mai 1527.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">{425}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER III.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE BISHOP CLINGS TO GENEVA, BUT THE CANONS DEPART.<br />
- (<span class="smc">Summer 1527.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=THE BISHOP'S NEW SCHEMES.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE sack of Rome had made a great sensation in
-catholic countries. Pierre de la Baume almost
-believed that the reign of popery had come to an end,
-and was much alarmed for himself. If a prince so
-powerful as the pope had succumbed, what would
-become of the Bishop of Geneva? The alliance with
-the cantons, and the Gospel which a Swiss magistrate
-had just been preaching, seemed to him the forerunners
-of his ruin. He had no lansquenets before him,
-like those who had compelled Clement VII. to flee,
-but he had huguenots, who, in his eyes, were more
-formidable still. Liberty seemed to be coming forth,
-like the sun, from the night of the middle ages; and
-the bishop thought the safest course would be to turn
-towards the rising orb, and to throw himself into the
-arms of the liberals. He had a strong preference for
-the Savoyard despotism; but, if his interests required
-it, he was ready to pay court to liberty. Other instances
-of this have been seen. The bishop, therefore,
-sanctioned the sequestration of the property of
-the mamelukes, and made Besançon Hugues a magnificent
-present. He conferred on him the perpetual
-fief of the fishery of the lake, the Rhone, and the Arve,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">{426}</a></span>
-reserving to himself (which showed the value of the
-gift) the right of redemption for two thousand great
-ducats of gold.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_731" id="Ref_731" href="#Foot_731">[731]</a></span>
-All this was but a step towards the
-accomplishment of a strange design.</p>
-
-<p>The bishop had taken it into his head that he would
-form an alliance with the Swiss, feeling convinced that
-they alone could protect him against the impetuosity
-of the huguenots and the tyranny of the Duke of
-Savoy. He therefore sent Robert Vandel to Friburg
-and Basle, to entreat these states to admit him into
-their citizenship. This move caused the greatest surprise
-among the Genevans. 'What!' said they, 'is
-Monseigneur turning huguenot?' The Swiss rudely
-rejected the Romish prelate's request. 'We will not
-have the bishop for our fellow-citizen,' they made
-answer, 'and that for four reasons: first, he is fickle
-and changeable; second, he is not beloved in Geneva;
-third, he is imperialist and Burgundian; and fourth,
-he is a <i>priest</i>!' The cantons did not mention the
-strongest reason. Friburg and Berne, allies of the
-city, could not be at the same time the allies of the
-bishop, for how could they have supported the rights
-of the Genevans against him?<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_732" id="Ref_732" href="#Foot_732">[732]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The bishop was not discouraged. At one time he
-felt his throne shaking beneath him, and, fearing that
-it would fall, he clung to liberty with all his might;
-at another, he fancied he could see the phantom of
-heresy approaching with slow but sure step, and
-erelong taking its seat on his throne ... and the
-sight increased his fear. He therefore sent Besançon
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">{427}</a></span>
-Hugues to Berne—a more influential diplomatist than
-Vandel—who was received with consideration in the
-aristocratic circles, but had to bear all kinds of reproach.
-The proud Bernese were indignant at his
-becoming the advocate of a person so little esteemed
-as the bishop. One day, in the presence of these
-energetic men who had witnessed so many struggles,
-as Hugues was warmly pleading the prelate's cause,
-his listener suddenly turned away with horror, and,
-as if he had been waving aside with his hand some
-satanic vision, he said: 'The name of the bishop is
-more hateful among us than that of the devil himself.'
-This was enough for Hugues, who returned to Geneva
-greatly disheartened. Pierre de la Baume, a vain and
-frivolous priest, soon consoled himself for this discomfiture,
-laughing at the reproaches uttered against him.
-He amused himself with the objections of the Swiss,
-and was continually repeating to those about him:
-'What would you have?... How could the Helvetians
-receive me into their alliance? I am a priest
-and Burgundian!'... Thus, at one time trembling,
-at another laughing, the Bishop of Geneva was moving
-towards his ruin.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_733" id="Ref_733" href="#Foot_733">[733]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE DUKE PLOTS AGAINST THE BISHOP.=</p>
-
-<p>For some time Charles III., Duke of Savoy, had
-been watching the prelate, and noting with vexation
-the interested and (in his opinion) culpable overtures
-he was making to the Genevans and the confederates.
-The news that the bishop had sent two envoys in
-succession to the Swiss put a climax to the prince's
-anger. It is not sufficient for the citizens to desire to
-emancipate themselves; even the bishops, whom the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">{428}</a></span>
-dukes have always regarded as their agents, presume
-to tread in their footsteps. This deserves a terrible
-punishment. The duke conferred with his advisers
-on the nature of the lesson to be given the prelate.
-One of the most decided of Charles's ministers proposed
-that he should be kidnapped; the motion was
-supported, and the resolution taken. In order to
-carry it into execution, it was necessary to gain some
-of the clergy about him. The canons were sounded,
-and many of them, already sold to the duke, promised
-their good offices. 'The bishop is a great devotee of
-the Virgin,' they said; 'on Saturday, the day dedicated
-to St. Mary, he generally goes to hear mass
-at Our Lady of Grace, outside the city. He rides on
-a mule in company with other members of the cloth.
-Now, as this church is separated from Savoy only
-by a bridge, the captain of his highness's archers has
-simply to lie in ambush near the river to snap up
-(<i>happer</i>) Monseigneur. The priests and officers about
-him, being bribed or men of no courage, will run away.
-Let him be dragged hastily to the other side of the
-Arve, and, once in the territory of Savoy, he can be
-put to death as a traitor.' Everything was arranged
-by good catholics, and the Archbishop of Turin probably
-had a share in it. The reformers never went
-to work in so off-hand a manner as regards bishops.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE DUKE'S AMBUSCADE.=</p>
-
-<p>Thus war broke out between the two great enemies
-of Geneva. The Genevans knew not how to get rid
-of the prelate, and here was Charles, like another
-Alexander, cutting the Gordian knot. The bishop
-once carried off, one of the most formidable obstacles
-to independence, morality, religion, and civilisation
-will be removed. So long as he is there, nothing that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">{429}</a></span>
-is good can be done in Geneva; and when he is no
-longer there, the city will become free. This, however,
-was not his highness's plan: having 'snapped
-up' the duke, he expected to 'snap up' the city
-also. This was his scheme for taking Geneva. 'As
-soon as the Savoyard archers have kidnapped the
-bishop, certain of his highness's creatures will go to
-the belfry of Notre Dame and ring the great bell.
-All the bells of the adjoining villages will answer the
-signal; the nobles will rush sword in hand from their
-castles, the country-people will take up their scythes
-or other weapons, and all will march to Geneva.
-The Genevans are hot and hasty: when they learn
-that the Savoyards have crossed the Arve and violated
-their territory, they will take up arms and march into
-the domains of Savoy to avenge the offence; but they
-will find Pontverre and all his friends there ready to
-meet them. In the midst of this agitation the duke
-will have a capital excuse for entering the city and
-taking possession of it. And when he is established
-there, he will cut off the heads of Hugues, the
-syndics, the councillors, M. de Bonmont, and many
-others. Finally, Geneva shall have a bishop who will
-occupy himself with refuting the heretics, and his
-highness will undertake to make the hot-headed
-republicans bow beneath the sword of the temporal
-power, and expel for ever from the city both reformers
-and Reformation.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_734" id="Ref_734" href="#Foot_734">[734]</a></span>
-The duke, charmed with this
-plan, made immediate preparations for its execution.
-To prevent Pierre de la Baume from escaping into
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">{430}</a></span>
-Burgundy, he posted soldiers in all the passes of the
-Jura, whilst his best captains were stationed round
-the city to carry out the ambuscade.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE DUKE'S PLOT FAILS.=</p>
-
-<p>These various measures could not be taken without
-something creeping out. Geneva had friends in the
-villages, where an unusual agitation indicated the
-approaching execution of some act of treachery. On
-Thursday, the 11th of July, a man, making his way
-along by-paths, arrived from Savoy, and said to the
-people of Geneva: 'Be on your guard!' Two days
-later, Saturday the 13th, which was the day appointed
-for action, another man, crossing the bridge of Arve,
-came and told one of the syndics, between eight and
-nine in the morning, that some horse and foot soldiers
-had been secretly posted at Lancy, only half a league
-from the city. The syndics did not trouble themselves
-much about it; and the bishop, who was naturally
-a timid man, but whom these warnings had not
-reached, mounted his mule—it was the day when he
-went to make adoration to the Virgin—rode out to
-Our Lady's, took his usual place, and the mass began.
-Charles's soldiers were already advancing in the direction
-of the bridge, in order to seize the prelate directly
-he left the church. Some devout persons had pity on
-him, and just as the priest had celebrated the mystery,
-a man, with troubled look, entered the building
-(whether he came from Geneva or Savoy is unknown),
-walked noiselessly to the place where the bishop was
-sitting, and whispered in his ear: 'Monseigneur, the
-archers of Savoy are preparing to clutch you (<i>gripper</i>).'
-At these words the startled La Baume turned pale
-and trembled. He did not wait for the benediction;
-fear gave him wings; he got up, rushed hastily out
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">{431}</a></span>
-of the church, and leaped upon his mule 'without
-putting his foot in the stirrup, for he was a very
-nimble person,' says Bonivard; then, using his heels
-for spurs, he struck the animal's flanks, and galloped
-off full speed, shouting, at the top of his
-voice, to the guards as he passed: 'Shut the gates!'
-The prelate reached the city out of breath and all of
-a tremble.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_735" id="Ref_735" href="#Foot_735">[735]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The city was soon in commotion. Besançon Hugues,
-the captain-general, who was sincerely attached to La
-Baume, and strongly opposed to the usurpations of
-Savoy, had divined the duke's plot, and, with his usual
-energy, began to pass through the streets, saying:
-'Close your shops, put up the chains, bolt the city
-gates, beat the drum, sound an alarm, and let every
-man take his arquebuse.' Then, leaving the streets,
-Hugues went to St. Pierre's, and, notwithstanding the
-opposition of the canons, accomplices in the conspiracy,
-he ordered the great bell to be rung. A rumour had
-already spread on the other side of the Arve that the
-plot had failed, and that the bishop had escaped on his
-mule. The men-at-arms of Savoy were disconcerted;
-the village bells were not rung, the nobles remained
-in their castles, the peasants in their fields. 'Our
-scheme has got wind,' said the Savoyard captains; 'all
-the city is under arms; and we must wait for a better
-opportunity.'</p>
-
-<p>The canons, though siding with the duke, had concealed
-their game, and employed certain creatures of
-Savoy to carry out the plot. These people were known;
-they became alarmed, and saw no other means of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">{432}</a></span>
-escaping death than by leaving the city. But all the
-gates were shut!... What of that: despair gave them
-courage. At the very moment when the armed men
-of Savoy were retiring, several persons were seen to
-run along the streets, jump into the ditches of St. Gervais,
-scale the palisades, and scamper away as fast as
-their legs could carry them. They were the traitors
-who had corresponded with the enemy outside.</p>
-
-<p>As for La Baume, he had lost his presence of mind.
-Rejected by the Swiss, despised by the Genevans,
-persecuted by the duke, what should he do? If he
-could but escape to his benefices in Burgundy, where
-the people are so quiet and the wine is so good!—but,
-alas! all the passes of the Jura are occupied by
-Savoyard soldiers. He was in great distress. Not
-thinking himself safe in his palace, he had taken
-refuge in the house of one of his partisans when he
-returned on his mule from his visit to Our Lady's.
-He expected that the duke would follow up his plan,
-would enter Geneva, and seek him throughout the
-city. Accordingly, he remained quiet in the most
-secret hiding-place of the house which had sheltered
-him. It was only when he was told that the Savoyard
-soldiers had really retired, that all was tranquil outside
-the city, and that even the huguenots did not
-think of laying hands on him, that he took courage,
-came out of his hiding-place, and returned to the
-palace. Nevertheless, he looked stealthily out of the
-window to see if the huguenots or the ducal soldiers
-were not coming to seize him even in his own house.
-The Genevans smiled at his terror; but everybody,
-the creatures of Charles excepted, was pleased at the
-failure of the duke's treachery. Religious men saw
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">{433}</a></span>
-the hand of Heaven in this deliverance. 'They gave
-God thanks,' says Balard.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_736" id="Ref_736" href="#Foot_736">[736]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This attack, abortive as it was, had one important
-consequence; it delivered the city from the canons,
-and thus paved the way for the Reformation. These
-men were in Geneva the representatives and supporters
-of all kinds of religious and political tyranny.
-To save catholicism, it would have been necessary for
-the clergy, and particularly for the canons, who were
-their leaders, to unite with the laity, and, while maintaining
-the Roman ceremonial, to demand the suppression
-of certain episcopal privileges and ecclesiastical
-abuses. Some of the huguenot chiefs—those who,
-like Hugues, loved the bishop, and those also who
-subsequently opposed Calvin's reformation—would
-probably have entered with joy into this order of
-things. For the execution of such a plan, however, the
-priests ought to have been upright and free. But the
-absolute authority of the Church, which had enfeebled
-the vigour of the human mind, had specially degraded
-the priests. The clergy of Geneva had fallen too low
-to effect a transformation of catholicism. Many of
-the canons and even of the curés could see nothing
-but the act of a revolutionist or even of a madman in
-the bishop's desire to ally himself with the Swiss, and
-had consequently entered into Charles's scheme, which
-was so hateful to the Genevans.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE BISHOP IMPRISONS THE CANONS.=</p>
-
-<p>The huguenots hastened to take advantage of it. If
-the ducal plot had not delivered them from the bishop,
-it must at least free them from the canons. These
-ecclesiastical dignitaries never quitted Geneva, while
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">{434}</a></span>
-the bishop often absented himself to intrigue in Italy
-or to amuse himself in Burgundy. They were besides
-more bigoted and fanatical than the worldly prelate,
-and therefore all the more dangerous. And then, if
-they desired to get rid of the bishop, was it not the
-wisest plan to begin with his council? Shortly after
-the famous alert, some Genevan liberal went to the
-palace and said to La Baume: 'The canons, my lord,
-are the duke's spies: so long as they remain in Geneva,
-Savoy will have one foot in the city.' The poor bishop
-was too exasperated against the canons not to lend an
-ear to these words, and after ruining himself with the
-duke, he took steps to ruin himself with the clergy,
-and to throw overboard the most devoted friends of
-the Roman institutions. 'Yes,' said he, 'they intrigue
-(<i>grabugent</i>) against the Church!... Let them be arrested....
-It is they who wished to see me kidnapped....
-Let them be put in prison!' The next morning
-the procurator-fiscal, with his sergeants, knocked at the
-doors of the most influential of the canons, Messieurs
-De la Madeleine, De Montrotier, De Salery, De Veigy,
-and others, arrested them, and, to the indescribable
-astonishment of the servants and neighbours of these
-reverend gentlemen, carried them off to prison.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_737" id="Ref_737" href="#Foot_737">[737]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As soon as the gates were shut upon the canons,
-the bishop began to reflect on the daring act he had
-just achieved. Still flushed with anger, he did not
-repent, but he was uneasy, distressed, and amazed
-at his own courage. If the duke sought to kidnap
-him but the other day, what will this terrible prince
-do, now that he, La Baume, has boldly thrown his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">{435}</a></span>
-most devoted partisans into prison?... All Savoy
-will march against him. He sent for the captain-general,
-imparted to him all his fears; and Besançon
-Hugues, his most faithful friend, wishing to dissipate
-his alarm, placed watchmen on the tower of St. Pierre,
-on the walls, and at every gate. They had instructions
-to inform the commander-in-chief if a single
-horseman appeared on the horizon in the direction of
-Savoy.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=HE DESIRES TO BE MADE FREE OF THE CITY.=</p>
-
-<p>La Baume began to breathe again; yet he was not
-entirely at his ease. He smiled to himself at the
-<i>watch</i> of Besançon Hugues. What can these few
-armed citizens do against the soldiers of the nephew
-of Francis I. and brother-in-law of Charles V.? The
-Duke of Savoy was prowling round him like a wild
-beast eager to devour him; the bishop thought that
-the bear of Berne alone could defend him. But alas!
-Berne would have nothing to do with him, because he
-was a <i>priest</i> and a <i>Burgundian</i>!... He turned all
-this over in his mind. He, so wary a politician, he
-whom the emperor employed in his negotiations—shall
-not he find some outlet, when it is a question of
-saving himself? On a sudden he hit upon a scheme
-for becoming an ally of Berne, in spite of Berne.
-He will get himself made a <i>citizen of Geneva</i>, and, by
-virtue of the general co-citizenship, he will thus become
-the ally of the cantons. Delighted at this bright
-idea, he communicated it to his intimate friends,
-and, unwilling to lose a day, ordered the council-general
-to be convened for the morrow.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_738" id="Ref_738" href="#Foot_738">[738]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">{436}</a></div>
-
-<p>On the next morning (15th of July) the bells of
-the cathedral rang out; the burgesses, girding on
-their swords, left their houses to attend the general
-council, and the bishop-prince, accompanied by his
-councillors and officers, appeared in the midst of the
-people, and sat down on the highest seat. Entirely
-absorbed by the strange ambition of becoming a plain
-burgess of the city in which he was prince, he was
-profuse in salutations; and to the huguenots he was
-particularly gracious. 'I recall,' he said, 'my protest
-against the alliance with the Swiss. I know how you
-cling to it; well! ... I now approve of it; I am
-willing to give my adhesion to it; and, the more
-clearly to show my approval, I desire that I may be
-made a freeman of the city.' Great was the astonishment
-of the people. A bishop made a citizen of
-Geneva! Such a thing had never been heard of. All
-the friends of independence, however, were favourable
-to the scheme. Some wished to gratify the bishop;
-others were pleased at anything that could separate
-him more completely from the duke; all agreed that
-if the bishop were made a citizen of Geneva, and united
-with their friends the confederates, great advantage
-would result to the city. If he begins with turning
-Swiss, who knows if he will not turn protestant? The
-general council therefore granted his request.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=HE CONCEDES THE CIVIL JURISDICTION.=</p>
-
-<p>Wishing to make him pay for his freedom, and
-not to lose an opportunity of recovering their liberties,
-the syndics begged him to transfer all civil
-suits to lay jurisdiction. Laymen judges in an ecclesiastical
-principality!... It was a great revolution,
-and three centuries and more were to pass away
-before a similar victory was gained in other states of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">{437}</a></span>
-that class. The bishop understood the great importance
-of such a request; he fancied he could already
-hear the endless appeals of the clergy who found
-themselves deprived of their honours and their profits;
-but at this time he was acting the part of a liberal
-pope, while the canons were playing the incorrigible
-cardinals. He said Yes. It was an immense gain
-to the community, for interminable delays and crying
-abuses characterised the ecclesiastical tribunals at
-Geneva as well as at Rome.</p>
-
-<p>The syndics, transported with joy, manifested all
-their gratitude to the prelate. They told him he had
-nothing to fear, either from the Genevans or even
-from the duke. Then turning to the people, they
-said: 'Let every citizen draw his sword to defend
-Monseigneur. If he should be attacked, we desire
-that, at the sound of the tocsin, all the burgesses, and
-even the priests, should fly to arms.'—'Yes, yes!'
-shouted the citizens; 'we will be always faithful to
-him!' A transformation seemed to have been effected
-in their hearts. They knew the great value of the
-sacrifice the bishop had made, and showed their
-thankfulness to him. Upon this, the bishop, 'raising
-his right hand towards heaven, and placing his left
-on his breast (as was the custom of prelates),' said:
-'I promise, on my faith, loyally to perform all that
-is required of a citizen, to prove myself a good
-prince, and never to separate myself from you!'
-The delighted people also raised their hands and
-exclaimed: 'And we also, my lord, will preserve you
-from harm as we would our own heads!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_739" id="Ref_739" href="#Foot_739">[739]</a></span>
-The poor
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">{438}</a></span>
-prelate would have sacrificed still more to protect
-himself from Charles's attacks, which filled him with
-indescribable terror.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed as if this concession, by uniting the
-bishop and the Genevans more closely, ought to have
-put off the Reformation; but it was not so. In proportion
-as the Genevans obtained any concession, they
-desired more; accordingly, when the citizens had returned
-home, or when they met at one another's houses,
-they began to say that it was something to have
-obtained the civil judicature from the bishop, but that
-there were other restitutions still to be made. Some
-men asked by what right he held the temporal authority;
-and others—those who knew best what was
-passing at Zurich—desired to throw off the spiritual
-jurisdiction of the prelate in order to acknowledge
-only that of Holy Writ.</p>
-
-<p>Opposition to ecclesiastical principalities began,
-then, three centuries ago at Geneva. 'The bishop
-grants us the civil jurisdiction,' said Bonivard; 'an
-act very damaging to himself, and very profitable to
-us.... But ... this is an opening to deprive him
-entirely of his authority. Neither La Baume nor the
-other bishops were lawfully elected, that is to say by
-the clergy at the postulation of the people. They were
-thrust into the see by the pope.... They are but
-tyrants set over us by other tyrants. We can therefore
-reject them without danger to our souls; and
-since they came in by the caprice of arbitrary power,
-it is lawful for us to expel them by the free authority
-of the city. Geneva has never acknowledged other
-princes than those whom the people themselves elected.'
-Some were astonished at Bonivard's language; but the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">{439}</a></span>
-larger number listened to him with enthusiasm. The
-catholics, growing more and more uneasy, anticipated
-great disasters. The edifice of popery, continually
-undermined in Geneva, was tottering; its pillars and
-buttresses were giving way; and the keystone of the
-arch, the episcopal power itself, was on the point of
-crumbling to dust. Alas! catholic Geneva was a dismantled
-fortress.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_740" id="Ref_740" href="#Foot_740">[740]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE DUKE'S IRRITATION.=</p>
-
-<p>When the duke heard of the bishop's concessions, he
-was seized with one of his fits of anger. And not
-without cause: by transferring the civil authority to
-a lay tribunal, La Baume had been guilty of a new
-offence against the duke; for it was in reality the
-jurisdiction of the vidame (that is to say, of the duke)
-which the bishop had thus ceded; and hence it was
-that he had been induced to do it so readily.</p>
-
-<p>Charles had no need of this new grievance. When
-they learnt at the court of Turin that the canons had
-been put in prison by the prelate, there was a violent
-commotion; the friends and relatives of those reverend
-gentlemen made a great noise, and the duke
-resolved to send the most urgent remonstrances to
-the Genevans, reserving the right to have recourse to
-more energetic measures if words did not suffice. He
-commissioned M. de Jacob, his grand equerry, to
-go and set this little people to rights, and the ducal
-envoy arrived in Geneva about the middle of July.
-He carried his head very high, and behaved with
-great reserve, as if he had been injured: he had come
-with the intention of making that city, so small and
-yet so arrogant, feel how great is the power of a mighty
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">{440}</a></span>
-prince. On the 20th of July, the Sire de Jacob being
-introduced before the council, haughtily represented
-to them, not that the reverend fathers imprisoned as
-criminals were innocent, but that they belonged to high
-families and were his highness's subjects, and added
-that the duke consequently ordered them to be immediately
-set at liberty. 'Otherwise,' added the ambassador
-in an insolent tone, 'my lord will see to it, as
-shall seem good to him.' The tone and look of the ducal
-envoy explained his words, and every one felt that
-Charles III. would come and claim the canons at the
-head of his army. The embarrassed magistrates and
-prelates answered the envoy by throwing the blame
-upon one another. The former declared that they had
-not interfered in the matter, which concerned Monseigneur
-of Geneva only; and the bishop, in his turn, laid
-all the blame on the people. 'I was obliged to do so,'
-he said, 'to save the canons from being killed.' Nevertheless,
-he showed himself merciful. The avoyer of
-Friburg, who had been delegated for this purpose by
-his council, added his entreaties to the ducal summons;
-and, pressed at once by Switzerland and Savoy, the
-bishop thought he could not resist. The arrest of the
-canons was in reality, on his part, an act of passion as
-much as of justice. 'I release them,' he said; 'I
-pardon them. I leave vengeance to God.'</p>
-
-<p>The canons quitted the place where they had been
-confined, bursting with anger and indignation. Having
-had time to reflect on what was passing in Geneva, on
-the impetuous current that was hurrying the citizens
-in a direction contrary to Rome, they had made up
-their minds to quit a city where they had been so unceremoniously
-thrown into the receptacle for criminals.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">{441}</a></span>
-De Montrotier, De Veigy, and their colleagues had
-hardly returned to their houses when they told everybody
-who would listen to them that they would leave
-Geneva and the Genevans to their miserable fate.
-This strange resolution immediately spread through
-the city, and excited the people greatly; it was important
-news, and they could hardly believe it. The
-canons of Geneva were a very exalted body in the
-opinion of catholicity. In order to be received among
-them, the candidate must show titles of nobility or
-be a graduate in some famous university; and since
-the beginning of the century their number included
-members of the most illustrious families of Savoy—De
-Gramont, De la Foret, De Montfalcon, De Menthon,
-De la Motte, De Chatillon, De Croso, De Sablon, and
-others as noble as they.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_741" id="Ref_741" href="#Foot_741">[741]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE CANONS LEAVE THE CITY.=</p>
-
-<p>The canons kept their word. As soon as they had
-made the necessary arrangements for their departure,
-they mounted their mules or got into their carriages,
-and set off. The Genevans, standing at the doors of
-their houses and in groups in the streets, watched these
-Roman dignitaries thus abandoning their homes, some
-with downcast heads, others with angry looks, who
-moved along sad and silent, and went out by the
-Savoy gate with hearts full of resentment against a
-city which they denounced as ungrateful and rebellious.
-Out of thirty-two, only seven or eight remained.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_742" id="Ref_742" href="#Foot_742">[742]</a></span>
-The citizens, assembling in various places, were agitated
-with very different thoughts. The huguenots said to
-themselves that these high and reverend clerks, true
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">{442}</a></span>
-cardinals, who supported the papacy much better
-than the bishop, would no longer be there to prevent
-the new generation from throwing off the shackles of
-the middle ages; that this unexpected exodus marked
-a great revolution; and that the old times were departing,
-and the Reformation beginning. On the other
-hand, the creatures of Rome felt a bitter pang, and
-flames of vengeance were kindled in their hearts.
-Lastly, those citizens who were both good Genevans
-and good catholics, were seized with fear and melancholy.
-'No more canons, erelong perhaps no more
-bishop!... Will Geneva, without its canons and
-bishops, be Geneva still?' But the great voice, which
-drowned all the rest, was that of the partisans of progress,
-of liberty, of independence, and of reform, who
-desired to see political liberty developed among the
-community, and the Church directed by the Word of
-God and not by the bulls of the pope. Among them
-were Maison-Neuve, Bonivard, Porral, Bernard, Chautemps,
-and others. These men, the pioneers of modern
-times, felt little respect and no regret for the canons.
-They said to one another that these noble and lazy
-lords were pleased with Geneva so long as they could
-luxuriously enjoy the pleasures of life there; but that
-when the hour of combat came, they fled like cowards
-from the field of battle. The canons did fly in fact;
-they arrived at Annecy, where they settled. As for
-Geneva, they were never to enter it again.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_731" id="Foot_731" href="#Ref_731">[731]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Pro summa ducatorum auri largorum duorum millia.'—Galiffe fils,
-<i>Besançon Hugues</i>, p. 454; <i>Pièces Justificatives</i>, No. 4.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_732" id="Foot_732" href="#Ref_732">[732]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Spon, <i>Hist. de Genève</i>, i. p. 407, note.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_733" id="Foot_733" href="#Ref_733">[733]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 468. <i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 112. Gautier
-MS. <i>Mém. d'Archéologie</i>, iv. p. 161.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_734" id="Foot_734" href="#Ref_734">[734]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-In his journal recently published, Balard, one of the most respected
-and most catholic magistrates of the time, describes this plot at full
-length, pp. 117, 118. See also Bonivard, <i>Police de Genève</i>, p. 396.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_735" id="Foot_735" href="#Ref_735">[735]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 118. Bonivard, <i>Police de Genève</i>, p. 396.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_736" id="Foot_736" href="#Ref_736">[736]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'On regratia Dieu.'—<i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 117. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i>
-ii. p. 467.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_737" id="Foot_737" href="#Ref_737">[737]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 119. Registres du Conseil, <i>ad locum</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_738" id="Foot_738" href="#Ref_738">[738]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 13 et 14 juillet 1527. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i>
-ii. p. 467. Galiffe, <i>Matériaux pour l'Histoire de Genève</i>, ii. pp. 421, 517.
-<i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 119.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_739" id="Foot_739" href="#Ref_739">[739]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil du 15 juillet 1527. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii.
-p. 471. <i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 119.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_740" id="Foot_740" href="#Ref_740">[740]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil du 15 juillet 1527. <i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 119.
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> pp. 471, 472.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_741" id="Foot_741" href="#Ref_741">[741]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Besson, <i>Mémoire du Diocèse de Genève</i>, p. 87.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_742" id="Foot_742" href="#Ref_742">[742]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 18, 19, 23, 24 juillet 1527. Bonivard,
-<i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 468. <i>Journal de Balard</i>, pp. 121-124.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">{443}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER IV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE BISHOP-PRINCE FLEES FROM GENEVA.<br />
- (<span class="smc">July and August 1527.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=BISHOPERS AND COMMONERS.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">FROM this time parties in Geneva took new forms
-and new names. There were not simply, as before,
-partisans of the foreign domination and Savoy,
-and those of independence and Switzerland: the latter
-were divided. Some, having Hugues and Balard as
-leaders, declared for the bishop; others, with Maison-Neuve
-and Porral at their head, declared for the
-people. They desired not only to repel the usurpations
-of Savoy, but also to see the fall of the temporal
-power of the bishop in Geneva. 'Now,' said Bonivard,
-'that the first division into mamelukes and
-huguenots has almost come to an end, we have the
-second—that of bishopers (<i>évêquains</i>) and commoners
-(<i>communiaires</i>).' These two parties had their
-men of sense and importance, and also their hotheaded
-adherents; as, for instance, De la Thoy on
-the side of the commoners, and Pécolat, the man of
-whom it would have been least expected, among the
-bishopers. A singular change had been effected in
-this former martyr of the bishop: the <i>jester</i> had joined
-the episcopal band. Was it because he was at heart
-catholic and even superstitious (he had ascribed, it
-will be remembered, the healing of his tongue to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">{444}</a></span>
-intervention of a saint), or because, being a thorough
-parasite, he preferred the well-covered tables of the
-bishopers? We know not. These noisy partisans,
-the vanguard of the two parties, were frequently
-quarrelling. 'They murmured, jeered, and made
-faces at each other.'</p>
-
-<p>At the same time this new division marked a step
-made in advance by this small people. Two great
-questions were raised, which sooner or later must
-rise up in every country. The first was <i>political</i>, and
-may be stated thus: 'Must we accept a traditional
-dominion which has been established by trampling
-legitimate rights under foot?' (This was the dominion
-of the bishop.) The second was <i>religious</i>, and
-may be expressed thus: 'Which must we choose,
-popery or the Gospel?' Many of the <i>commoners</i>, seeing
-the bishop and the duke disputing about Geneva,
-said that these two people were fighting for what belonged
-to neither of them, and that Geneva belonged
-to the Genevans. But there were politicians also
-among them, lawyers for the most part, who founded
-their pretensions on a legal basis. The bishops and
-princes of Geneva ought by right, as we have seen, to
-be elected at Geneva and not at Rome, by Genevans
-and not by Romans. The issue of the struggle was
-not doubtful. How could the bishop make head
-against magistrates and citizens relying on positive
-rights, and against the most powerful aspirations of
-liberty that were awaking in men's hearts? How
-could the Roman doctrine escape the floods of the
-Reformation? Certain scandals helped to precipitate
-the catastrophe.</p>
-
-<p>On the 12th of July some huguenots appeared
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">{445}</a></span>
-before the council. 'The priests of the Magdalen,'
-they said, 'keep an improper house, in which reside
-several disorderly women.' There were among the Genevans,
-and particularly among the magistrates, men of
-good sense, who had the fear of God before their eyes
-and confidence in him in their hearts. These respectable
-laymen (and there may have been priests who
-thought the same) had a deep conviction that one of the
-great defects of the middle ages was the existence of
-popes, bishops, priests, and monks, who had separated
-religion from morality. The council attended to these
-complaints to a certain extent. They banished from
-Geneva the persons who made it their business to
-facilitate illicit intercourse, obliged the lewd women
-to live in a place assigned them, and severely remonstrated
-with the priests.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_743" id="Ref_743" href="#Foot_743">[743]</a></span>
-The first breath of the
-Reformation in Geneva attacked immorality. It was
-not this affair, however, which gave the bishop his
-death-blow; it was a scandal occasioned by himself,
-and in his own house. 'Halting justice' was about
-to overtake the guilty man at last.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=ABDUCTION OF A YOUNG WOMAN.=</p>
-
-<p>One day a report suddenly got abroad which put
-the whole city in commotion. 'A young girl, of respectable
-family,' said the crowd, 'has just been carried
-off by the bishop's people: we saw them dragging her
-to the palace.' It was an electric spark that set the
-whole populace on fire. The palace gates had been
-immediately closed upon the victim, and the bishop's
-servants threatened to repel with main force the persons
-who demanded her. 'Does the bishop imagine,'
-said some of the patriots, 'that we will put up with
-his beatings as quietly as the folks of St. Claude do?'
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">{446}</a></span>
-It would seem that La Baume permitted such practices
-among the Burgundians, who did not complain
-of them. The girl's mother, rushing into the street,
-had followed her as fast as possible, and had only
-stopped at the closed gates of the episcopal palace.
-She paced round and round the building, roaring like
-a lioness deprived of her whelp. The citizens, crowding
-in front of the palace, exclaimed: 'Ha! you are
-now throwing off the mask of holiness which you
-held up to deceive the simple. In your churches you
-kiss God's feet, and in your life you daringly spit in
-his face!' Many of them called for the bishop, summoning
-him to restore the young woman to her
-mother, and hammering violently at the gate.</p>
-
-<p>The prelate, who was then at dinner, did not like
-to be disturbed in this important business; being
-puzzled, moreover, as to the course which he ought to
-adopt, it appeared that the best thing he could do was
-to be deaf. He therefore answered his servants, who
-asked him for orders, 'Do not open the door;' and
-raising the glass to his lips, he went on with his repast.
-But his heart was beginning to tremble: the
-shouts grew louder, and every blow struck against
-the gate found an echo in the soul of the guilty priest.
-His servants, who were looking stealthily out of the
-windows, having informed him that the magistrates
-had arrived, Pierre de la Baume left his chair, paler
-than death, and went to the window. There was a
-profound silence immediately, and the syndics made
-the prelate an earnest but very respectful speech.
-The bishop, terrified at the popular fury, replied:
-'Certainly, gentlemen, you shall have the young
-woman.... I only had her carried off for a harper,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">{447}</a></span>
-who asked me for her in return for his services.'
-Monseigneur had not carried off the girl in the
-violence of passion, but only to pay the wages of a
-musician! It was not more guilty, but it was more
-vile. The palace gates were opened, and the girl
-was restored to her mother. Michael Roset does not
-mention the harper, and leads us to believe that the
-bishop had taken her for himself. This scandalous
-abduction was the last act done in Geneva by the
-Roman bishops.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_744" id="Ref_744" href="#Foot_744">[744]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>From that moment the deposition of the bishop
-was signed, as it were, in the hearts of most of the
-citizens. 'These, then, are the priests' works,' they
-said, 'debauchery and violence!... Instead of purifying
-the manners of the people, they labour to corrupt
-them! Ha! ha! you bishopers, a fine religion is that
-of your bishop!'</p>
-
-<p>Opposition to a corrupt government soon began to
-appear a duty to them. The right of resistance was
-one of the principles of that society in the middle
-ages, which some writers uphold as a model of servility.
-In the Great Charter of England, the king
-authorised his own subjects, in case he should violate
-any one of their liberties, 'to pursue and molest him
-to the uttermost of their power, by seizing his castles,
-estates, possessions, and otherwise.' In certain cases,
-the vassals could separate themselves entirely from
-their suzerain. Some vassals, it is true, might carry
-this principle too far, and claim to throw off the
-feudal authority <i>whenever it pleased them</i>; but the
-law made answer: 'No, not unless there is <i>reasonable cause</i>.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_745" id="Ref_745" href="#Foot_745">[745]</a></span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">{448}</a></span>
-When freeing herself from the bishop-princes,
-who had so often violated the franchises and
-connived with the enemies of the city, Geneva thought
-she was acting with very reasonable cause, and not
-going beyond the bounds of legality. The ruin of the
-bishops and princes of Geneva, already prepared by
-their political misdeeds, was completed by their moral
-disorders.</p>
-
-<p>But if the friends of law and morality desired to
-break by legal means the bonds which united them to
-the bishop-prince, other persons, the wits and brawlers,
-envenomed against his partisans, began to get up
-quarrels with the bishopers. One day 'the young
-men of Geneva,' returning from a shooting match,
-where, says the chronicler, they had 'had many a
-shot at the pot' (that is, had drunk deeply), determined
-to give a smart lesson to two of the bishop's
-friends, Pécolat and Robert Vandel. The latter, at
-that time attached personally to Pierre de la Baume,
-afterwards became one of the most zealous patriots.
-'They are at St. Victor's,' somebody said; 'let us go
-and fetch them.' The party, headed by a drummer,
-went to the priory, where Bonivard told the ringleaders
-that the two bishopers and others were
-diverting themselves at Plainpalais. Just as the
-band arrived, the episcopals were entering the city:
-one of the 'sons of Geneva,' catching sight of Pécolat
-and Vandel, exclaimed: 'My lord, you have traitors
-among you there!' The bishop spurred his mule and
-rode off; Pécolat drew his sword; his opponent, De la
-Thoy, did the same, and they began to cut at each other.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">{449}</a></span>
-The fray was so noisy that the guards in alarm shut
-the gates, when a few reasonable men parted the combatants.
-A more serious movement was accomplishing
-in the depths of men's minds. Nothing but
-secularisation and reformation could put an end to
-the almost universal discontent.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_746" id="Ref_746" href="#Foot_746">[746]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE DUKE'S MENACES.=</p>
-
-<p>The Duke of Savoy wished for another solution.
-His councillors represented to him that the bishop
-had lost his credit among the nobles and clergy,
-through his desire to ally himself with the Swiss;
-that he was ruined with the citizens by his unedifying
-mode of life; and that the moment had come
-for giving these restless people a <i>stronger shepherd</i>,
-who would cure them of their taste for political and
-religious liberty. In consequence of this, the duke
-summoned the Genevans, on the 30th of July, to
-recognise his claims, and his ambassadors added that,
-if the citizens refused, 'Charles III. would come in
-person with an army, and then they would have to
-keep their city ... if they could.' The Genevans
-made answer: 'We will suffer death rather.' The
-Bernese, informed of the threats of Savoy, sent ambassadors
-to Chambéry to admonish (<i>admonester</i>) the
-duke. 'I have a grudge against the city,' he said,
-'and against the bishop also, and I will do my pleasure
-upon him in defiance of all opposition.'—'Keep
-a good look-out,' said the Bernese ambassadors to
-the syndics, on their return, 'for the duke is preparing
-to carry off the bishop and confiscate the
-liberties of the city.' The bishop and the citizens
-were exceedingly agitated. Men, women, and children
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">{450}</a></span>
-set to work: they cut down the trees round the
-walls, pulled down the houses, and levelled the gardens,
-while four gangs worked at the fortifications.
-'We would rather die defending our rights,' said the
-Genevans, 'than live in continual fear.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_747" id="Ref_747" href="#Foot_747">[747]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It might have been imagined that the duke, by declaring
-war at the same time against the bishop and the
-city, would have brought them nearer each other; but
-the popular irritation against the bishop and clergy
-was only increased by it. The citizens said that all the
-misfortunes of Geneva proceeded from their having a
-bishop for a prince; and La Baume saw a conspirator
-in every Genevan. More than one bishop, the oppressor
-of the liberties of his people, had fallen during
-the middle ages under the blows of the indignant
-burgesses. For instance, the wretched Gaudri, bishop
-of Laon in the twelfth century, having trampled the
-rights of the citizens under foot, had been compelled
-to flee from their wrath, and hide himself in a cask
-in the episcopal cellar. But, being discovered and
-dragged into the street, he was killed by the blow
-of an axe, and his body covered with stones and mud.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_748" id="Ref_748" href="#Foot_748">[748]</a></span>
-If good <i>catholics</i> had practised such revenge upon their
-bishop, what would <i>huguenots</i> do?</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE BISHOP RESOLVES TO LEAVE GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p>La Baume had other fears besides. An intriguing
-woman, his cousin Madame de Besse, generally known
-as Madame de la Gruyère, being gained over by the
-duke, alarmed the bishop by insinuating that he
-was to be kidnapped, and that this time his mule
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">{451}</a></span>
-would not save him. That lady had scarcely left the
-palace when the Bernese entered and said to the
-frightened bishop: 'Make haste to go! for the duke is
-coming to take you.' They may have said this with
-a mischievous intention, desiring to free the city from
-the bishop. La Baume had not a minute of repose
-afterwards. His servants, threatened by the huguenots,
-began to be afraid also, and thus increased their master's
-alarm. He passed the day in anguish, and awoke
-in the night uttering cries of terror. At times he listened
-as if he heard the footsteps of the men coming to
-carry him off. He did not hesitate: his residence in the
-episcopal city had become insupportable. He had too
-much sense not to see that the cause of his temporal
-principality was lost, and, to add to his misfortune, the
-only prince who could defend him was turning against
-him. Whatever the risk, he must depart. 'Whereat
-the bishop was so vexed,' says Bonivard, 'that he
-meditated retiring from Geneva into Burgundy.' He
-flattered himself that he would be quiet in the midst
-of his good vassals of St. Claude, and happy near his
-cellars of Arbois!<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_749" id="Ref_749" href="#Foot_749">[749]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was, however, no easy thing to do. He would
-have to get out of Geneva, pass through the district of
-Gex, and cross the Jura mountains, all filled with armed
-men. Feeling the want of some one to help him, he
-determined to apply to Besançon Hugues. He invited
-him to come to the palace, but in the night, so that no
-one might see him. When Hugues got there, the
-wretched and guilty prelate squeezed his hand, and told
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">{452}</a></span>
-him all his troubles. 'I can no longer endure the
-wrong, violence, and tyranny which the duke does me,'
-he said. 'I know that he is plotting to kidnap me and
-shut me up in one of his monasteries. On the other
-hand, I mistrust my own subjects, for they are aiming
-at my life. I am day and night in mortal torment.
-You alone can get me out of the city, and I hope you
-will manage so that it shall not be talked of.' Besançon
-Hugues was touched when he saw the man whom he
-recognised as his lord agitated and trembling before
-him. How could he refuse the alarmed priest the
-favour he so earnestly demanded?... He left the
-bishop, telling him that he would go and make preparations
-for a nocturnal flight.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_750" id="Ref_750" href="#Foot_750">[750]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=FLEES BY NIGHT TO ST. CLAUDE.=</p>
-
-<p>In the night of the 1st and 2nd of August, 1527,
-Hugues went secretly to the palace, accompanied by
-Michael Guillet, a leading mameluke. The prelate
-received his friends like liberating angels. They all
-three went down into the vaults, where La Baume
-ordered a private door to be opened which led into
-the street now called the Rue de la Fontaine. He
-had to go along this street to reach the lake; but
-might not some of those terrible huguenots stop him
-in his flight? He crept stealthily and in disguise out
-of the palace, put himself between his two defenders,
-and, a prey to singular alarm, went forward noiselessly.
-On arriving at the brink of the water, the fugitive
-and his two companions descried through the darkness
-the boatmen whom Hugues had engaged. La
-Baume and Besançon entered the boat, while Michael
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">{453}</a></span>
-Guillet returned to the city. The boatmen took their
-oars, and crossed the lake at the point where the
-Rhone flows out of it. La Baume looked all round
-him; but he could see nothing, could hear nothing
-but the dull sound of the oars. The danger, however,
-was far from being passed. The right bank might be
-occupied by a band of his enemies.... When the boat
-touched the shore, La Baume caught sight of two or
-three men with horses. They were friends. Hugues
-and the bishop got into their saddles without a
-moment's loss, and galloped off in the direction of the
-Jura. The bishop had never better appreciated his good
-luck in being one of the best horsemen of his day; he
-drove the spurs into his steed, fancying at times that
-he heard the noise of Savoyard horses behind him. In
-this way the bishop and his companion rode on, all the
-night through, along by-roads and in the midst of great
-dangers, for all the passes were guarded by men-at-arms.
-At last the day appeared. In proportion as
-they advanced, La Baume breathed more freely. After
-four-and-twenty hours of cruel fright, the travellers
-arrived at St. Claude. Pierre de la Baume was at the
-summit of happiness.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_751" id="Ref_751" href="#Foot_751">[751]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The day after his departure, the news of the bishop's
-flight suddenly became known in Geneva, where it
-caused a great sensation. 'Alas!' said the monks in
-their cloisters, 'Monseigneur, seeing the approaching
-tribulation, has got away by stealth across the lake.'
-The patriots, on the contrary, collecting in groups in
-the public places, rejoiced to find themselves delivered
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">{454}</a></span>
-by one act both from their bishop and their prince.
-At the same time the Savoyard soldiers, posted round
-Geneva, were greatly annoyed; they had been on the
-watch night and day, and yet the bishop had slipped
-through their fingers. To avenge themselves, they
-swore to arrest Besançon Hugues on his return. The
-latter, making no stay at St. Claude, reappeared next
-morning at daybreak in the district of Gex, when he
-soon noticed that gentlemen and soldiers were all joining
-in the chase after him. The bells were rung in the
-village steeples, the peasants were roused, and every
-one shouted: 'Hie! hie! the traitor Besançon!' It
-seemed impossible for him to escape. Having descended
-the mountain, he followed the by-roads through
-the plain, when suddenly a number of armed men fell
-upon him. Hugues had great courage, a stout sword,
-and a good horse; fording the water-courses, and galloping
-across the hills, he saved himself, 'as by a
-miracle,' says his friend Balard.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_752" id="Ref_752" href="#Foot_752">[752]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE HIRELING FORSAKES THE SHEEP.=</p>
-
-<p>The Genevans were very uneasy about him, for they
-all loved him. The drums beat, the companies mustered
-under their officers, and they were about to
-march out with their arms to protect him, when suddenly
-he arrived, panting, exhausted, and wounded.
-They would have liked to speak to him, and, above
-all, to hear him; but Hugues, hardly shaking hands
-with his friends, rode straight to his own house and
-went to bed; he was completely knocked up. The
-syndics went to his room to investigate the circumstances
-of which he had to complain. But erelong the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">{455}</a></span>
-brave man recovered from his fatigue, and the city
-was full of joy. The bishop's flight still further increased
-their cheerfulness: it snapped the bonds of
-which they were weary. 'The <i>hireling</i>,' they said,
-'leaveth the sheep, and fleeth, when he seeth the wolf
-coming.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_753" id="Ref_753" href="#Foot_753">[753]</a></span>
-'Therefore,' they added, 'he is not the shepherd.'</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_743" id="Foot_743" href="#Ref_743">[743]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil du 12 juillet 1527.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_744" id="Foot_744" href="#Ref_744">[744]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Roset MS. <i>Chronol.</i> liv. ii. ch. xv. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 455.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_745" id="Foot_745" href="#Ref_745">[745]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Beaumanoir, <i>Coutumes de Beauvaisis</i>, p. 61. Guizot, <i>Histoire de la
-Civilisation en France</i>, iv. p. 72.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_746" id="Foot_746" href="#Ref_746">[746]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 464.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_747" id="Foot_747" href="#Ref_747">[747]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 30 juillet et 25 août 1527. <i>Journal de
-Balard</i>, pp. 125, 126.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_748" id="Foot_748" href="#Ref_748">[748]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quot saxis, quot et pulveribus corpus oppressum.'—G. de Novigento,
-<i>Opp.</i> p. 507.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_749" id="Foot_749" href="#Ref_749">[749]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 473. Spon, <i>Hist. de Genève</i>, ii. p. 410.
-Gautier MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_750" id="Foot_750" href="#Ref_750">[750]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Savyon, <i>Annales</i>, p. 139. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 474. Galiffe,
-<i>Matériaux pour l'Histoire de Genève</i>, pp. 427, 428, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_751" id="Foot_751" href="#Ref_751">[751]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 126. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 474. <i>Mém.
-d'Archéol.</i> ii. p. 12.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_752" id="Foot_752" href="#Ref_752">[752]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 127. Registres du Conseil du 6 août 1527,
-La Sœur de Jussie, p. 4.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_753" id="Foot_753" href="#Ref_753">[753]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-John x. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">{456}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER V.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">EXCOMMUNICATION OF GENEVA AND FUNERAL PROCESSION OF
- POPERY.<br />
- (<span class="smc">August 1527 to February 1528.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE Duke of Savoy was the wolf. When he heard
-of the bishop's flight, his vexation was greater
-than can be imagined. He had told the Bernese: 'I
-shall have Monsieur of Geneva at my will,'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_754" id="Ref_754" href="#Foot_754">[754]</a></span>
-and now
-the wily prelate had escaped him a second time. At
-first Charles III. lost all self-control. 'I will go,' he
-said, 'and drag him across the Alps with a rope round
-his neck!' After which he wrote to him: 'I will
-make you the poorest priest in Savoy;' and, proceeding
-to gratify his rage, he seized upon the abbeys of
-Suza and Pignerol, which belonged to La Baume.
-Gradually his anger cooled down; the duke's counsellors,
-knowing the bishop's irresolute and timid character,
-said to their master: 'He is of such a changeable
-disposition<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_755" id="Ref_755" href="#Foot_755">[755]</a></span>
-that it will be easy to bring him
-over again to the side of Savoy.' The prince yielded
-to their advice, and sent Ducis, governor of the Château
-de l'Ile, to try to win him back. It appeared to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">{457}</a></span>
-ducal counsellors that Pierre de la Baume, having
-fled from Geneva, could never return thither, and
-would have no wish to do so; and that the time had
-come when a negotiation, favourable in other respects
-to the prelate, might put the duke in possession of a
-city which he desired by every means to close against
-heresy and liberty.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE DUKE TRIES TO WIN THE BISHOP.=</p>
-
-<p>The bishop, at that moment very dejected, was
-touched by the duke's advances; he sent an agent to the
-prince, and peace seemed on the point of being concluded.
-But Charles had uttered a word that sounded
-ill in the prelate's ears. 'The duke wishes me to
-subscribe myself <i>his subject</i>,' he wrote to Hugues. 'I
-think I know why.... It is that he may afterwards
-lay hands on me.' Nevertheless, the duke appeared
-to restrain himself. 'I will give back all your benefices,'
-he told the bishop, 'if you contrive to annul
-the alliance between Geneva and Switzerland.' La
-Baume consented to everything in order to recover
-his abbeys, whose confiscation made a large gap in his
-revenues. He did not care much about living at
-Geneva, but he wished to be at his ease in Burgundy.
-At this moment, as the duke and the Genevans left
-him at peace, he was luxuriously enjoying his repose.
-Instead of being always in the presence of huguenots
-and mamelukes, he walked calmly in his garden
-'among his pinks and gilly-flowers.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_756" id="Ref_756" href="#Foot_756">[756]</a></span>
-He ordered some
-beautiful fur robes, lined with black satin, for the
-winter; he kept a good table, and said: 'I am much
-better supplied with good wine here than we are at
-Geneva.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_757" id="Ref_757" href="#Foot_757">[757]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">{458}</a></div>
-
-<p>The bishop having fled from his bishopric like a
-hireling,—the prince having run away from his principality
-like a conspirator,—the citizens resolved to take
-measures for preserving order in the State, and to make
-the constitution at once stronger and more independent.
-The general council delegated to the three
-councils of Twenty-five, Sixty, and Two-Hundred
-the duty of carrying on the necessary business, except
-in such important affairs as required the convocation
-of the people. A secret council was also appointed,
-composed of the four syndics and of six of the most
-decided huguenots. A distinguished historian says
-that the Genevan constitution was then made democratic;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_758" id="Ref_758" href="#Foot_758">[758]</a></span>
-another historian affirms, on the contrary,
-that the power of the people was weakened.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_759" id="Ref_759" href="#Foot_759">[759]</a></span>
-We are of a different opinion from both. In proportion
-as Geneva threw off foreign usurpation, it would
-strengthen its internal constitution. Undoubtedly,
-this little nation desired to be free, and the Reformation
-was to preserve its liberties; there is a democracy
-in the Reform. Philosophy, which is satisfied with a
-small number of disciples, has never formed more than
-an intellectual aristocracy; but evangelical christianity,
-which appeals to all classes, and particularly to the
-lowly, develops the understanding, awakens the conscience,
-and sanctifies the hearts of those who receive
-it, in this way spreading light, order, and peace all
-around, and forming a true democracy on earth, very
-different from that which does without Christ and
-without God. But Geneva, at that time surrounded
-by implacable enemies, required, as necessary to its
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">{459}</a></span>
-existence, not only liberty, but order, power, and consequently
-authority.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE DUCAL ARMS FALL AT GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p>The bishop had hardly disappeared from Geneva
-when the insignia of ducal power disappeared also.
-Eight years before this, Charles III. had caused the
-white cross of Savoy, carved in marble, to be placed
-on the Château de l'Ile, 'at which the friends of liberty
-were much grieved.'—'I have placed my arms in the
-middle of the city as a mark of sovereignty,' he had
-said haughtily, 'and have had them carved in hard
-stone. Let the people efface them if they dare!' On
-the morning of the 6th of August (five days after the
-bishop's flight), some people who were passing near
-the castle perceived to their great astonishment that the
-ducal arms had disappeared.... A crowd soon gathered
-to the spot, and a lively discussion arose. Who did
-it? was the general question. 'Oh!' replied some,
-'the stone has accidentally fallen into the river;' but
-although the water was clear, no one could see it.
-'It was you,' said the duke's partisans to the huguenots,
-'and you have hidden it somewhere.' Bonivard, who
-stood thoughtful in the midst of the crowd, said at
-last: 'I know the culprit.'—'Who is it? who is it?'
-'St. Peter,' he replied. 'As patron of Geneva, he is
-unwilling that a secular prince should have any ensign
-of authority in his city!' This incident, the authors
-of which were never known, made a great impression,
-and the most serious persons exclaimed: 'Truly, it is a
-visible sign, announcing to us a secret and mysterious
-decision of the Most High. What the hand of God hath
-thrown down, let not hand of man set up again!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_760" id="Ref_760" href="#Foot_760">[760]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">{460}</a></div>
-
-<p>The Genevans wanted neither duke nor bishop;
-they went farther still, and being harassed by the
-court of Rome, they were going to show that they did
-not care for the pope. They had hardly done talking
-of La Baume's flight and of the Savoy escutcheon,
-when they were told strange news. A report was
-circulated that an excommunication and interdict
-had been pronounced against them, at the request of
-the mamelukes. This greatly excited such citizens
-as were still attached to the Roman worship. 'What!'
-said they; 'the priests will be suspended from their
-functions, the people deprived of the benefit of the sacraments,
-divine worship, and consecrated burial ...
-innocent and guilty will be involved in one common
-misery.'... But the energy of the huguenots, whom
-long combats had hardened like steel, was not to be
-weakened by this new attack. The most determined
-of them resolved to turn against Rome the measure
-plotted against Geneva. The council, being resolved to
-prevent the excommunication from being placarded
-in the streets,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_761" id="Ref_761" href="#Foot_761">[761]</a></span>
-ordered 'a strict watch to be kept at
-the bridge of Arve, about St. Victor and St. Leger,
-and that the gates should be shut early and opened late.'
-This was not enough. Five days later (the 29th of
-December, 1527), the people, lawfully assembled,
-caused the <i>Golden Bull</i> to be read aloud before them,
-which ordered that, with the exception of the emperor
-and the bishop, there should be no authority in
-Geneva. Then a daring proposition was made to the
-general council, namely, 'that no metropolitan letters,
-and further still no apostolical letters (that is to say,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">{461}</a></span>
-no decrees emanating from the pope's courts), should
-be executed by any priest or any citizen.'—'Agreed,
-agreed!' shouted everybody. It would seem that
-the vote was almost unanimous. In this way the
-bishop on the banks of the Tiber found men prepared
-to resist him on the obscure banks of the Leman.</p>
-
-<p>This vote alarmed a few timid persons of a traditional
-tendency. Advocates of the <i>status quo</i> entreated the
-progressionists to restrain themselves; but the latter
-had no wish to do so. They answered that the Reformation
-was triumphing among the Swiss; that
-Zwingle, Œcolampadius, and Haller were preaching
-with daily increasing success at Zurich, Basle, and
-Berne. They added that on the 7th of January, 1528,
-the famous discussion had begun in the last-named
-city, and that the Holy Scriptures had gained the
-victory; that the altars and images had been thrown
-down 'with the consent of the people;' that a spiritual
-worship had been substituted in their place, and that
-all, including children fourteen years old, had sworn
-to observe 'the Lutheran law.' The huguenots
-thought that if excommunication came to them from
-Rome, absolution would come to them from Berne—or
-rather from heaven.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=FUNERAL PROCESSION OF POPERY.=</p>
-
-<p>The more light-hearted among them went further
-than this. For ages the Roman Church had accustomed
-its followers to unite masquerades with the most
-sacred recollections. In some cantons there had been
-great rejoicings over the abolition of the mass. Such
-a fire could not be kindled in Switzerland without
-scattering a few sparks over Geneva. Baudichon de
-la Maison-Neuve, a great enemy to superstition, an
-active and even turbulent man, and daring enough to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">{462}</a></span>
-attempt anything, resolved to organise a funeral procession
-of the papacy. He would attack Rome with
-the weapons that the Roman carnival supplied him,
-and would arrange a great procession. Whilst serious
-men were reading the epistle from heaven (the Gospel),
-which absolved them from the excommunication of its
-pretended vicar, the young and thoughtless were in great
-excitement; they dressed themselves in their houses
-in the strangest manner; they disguised themselves,
-some as priests, some as canons, and others as monks;
-they came out, met together, drew up in line, and
-soon began to march through the streets of the city.
-There were white friars, grey friars, and black friars,
-fat canons, and thin curates. One was begging,
-another chanting; here was one scourging himself,
-there another strutting solemnly along; here a man
-carrying a hair shirt, there a man with a bottle.
-Some indulged in acts of outrageous buffoonery;
-others, the more completely to imitate the monks,
-went so far as to take liberties with the women who
-were looking on, and when some fat friar thus made
-any burlesque gesture, there was loud applause, and
-the crowd exclaimed: 'That is not the worst they
-do.' In truth the reality was more culpable than
-the burlesque. When they saw this tumultuous
-procession and heard the doleful chanting, mingled
-with noisy roars of laughter, every one said that
-popery was dying, and singing its <i>De profundis</i>, its
-burial anthem.</p>
-
-<p>The priests took the jest in very bad part, and the
-procession was hardly over before they hurried, flushed
-with anger, to complain to the syndics of 'the enmity
-raised against them by Baudichon and others.' The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">{463}</a></span>
-syndics referred their complaint to the episcopal
-council, and the latter severely reprimanded the
-offenders. But Maison-Neuve and his friends withdrew,
-fully convinced that the priests were in the
-wrong, and that the victory would ultimately be on
-their side.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_762" id="Ref_762" href="#Foot_762">[762]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=BONIVARD AT THE PRIORY.=</p>
-
-<p>They were beginning in Geneva to estimate a
-papal excommunication at its proper value. No one
-knew more on this subject than Bonivard, and he
-instructed his best friends on this difficult text.
-Among the number was François Favre, a man of
-ardent character, prompt wit, and rather worldly
-manners, but a good citizen and determined huguenot.
-Favre was one day, on a famous occasion, to be at the
-head of Bonivard's liberators. He went sometimes
-to the priory, where he often met Robert Vandel, a
-man of less decision than his two friends. Vandel,
-who still kept on good terms with the bishop, was
-at heart one of the most independent of men, and
-Bonivard had made him governor of the domain of
-St. Victor.</p>
-
-<p>These Genevans and others continued the conversations
-that Bonivard had formerly had with Berthelier
-in the same room and at the same table. They spoke
-of Berne, of Geneva, of Switzerland, of the Reformation,
-and of excommunication. Bonivard found erelong
-a special opportunity of enlightening his two
-friends on the acts of the Romish priesthood.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=BONIVARD ON EXCOMMUNICATION.=</p>
-
-<p>There was no one in Geneva whom the papal party
-detested more than him. The ultramontanists could
-understand why lawyers and citizens opposed the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">{464}</a></span>
-clergy; but a prior!... His enemies, therefore, formed
-the project of seizing the estates of St. Victor, and of
-expelling Bonivard from the monastery. The huguenots,
-on hearing of this, ardently espoused his cause,
-and the council gave him, for his protection (20th of
-January, 1528) six arquebuses and four pounds of gunpowder.
-These were hardly monastic weapons; but
-the impetuous Favre hastened to offer him his heart
-and his arm; and, to say the truth, Bonivard in case
-of need could have made very good use of an arquebuse.
-He had recourse, however, to other defenders;
-he resolved to go and plead his cause before the League.
-But this was not without danger, for the duke's agents
-might seize him on the road, as he afterwards had the
-misfortune to know. Favre, ever ready to go where
-there was any risk to be run, offered to accompany
-him to Berne. Vandel had to go as governor of St.
-Victor: they set off. Arriving at a village in the Pays
-de Vaud, the three huguenots dismounted and took a
-stroll while their horses were resting. Bonivard, as
-he was riding along, had noticed some large placards
-on the doors of the churches, and being curious to
-know what they were about, he went up to them, and
-immediately called his friends; 'Come here,' he said;
-'here are some curious things—letters of excommunication.'
-He was beginning to read them, when
-one of his companions cried out: 'Stop! for as soon as
-you have read them, you will thereby be excommunicate!'
-The worthy huguenot imagined that the best
-plan was to know nothing about such anathemas,
-and then to act as if the excommunication did not
-exist—which could not be done if they were read.
-Bonivard, a man of great good sense, profited by the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">{465}</a></span>
-opportunity to explain to his friends what these earthly
-excommunications were worth. 'If you have done
-what is wrong,' he told them, 'God himself excommunicates
-you; but if you have acted rightly, the
-excommunication of priests can do you no harm.
-There is only one tribunal which has power over the
-conscience, and that is heaven. The pope and the
-devil hurt only those who are afraid of them. Do
-therefore what is right, and fear nothing. The bolts
-which they may hurl at you will be spent in the air.'
-Then he added with a smile: 'If the pope or the metropolitan
-of Vienne excommunicate you, pope Berthold
-of Berne will give you absolution.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_763" id="Ref_763" href="#Foot_763">[763]</a></span>
- Bonivard's words
-were repeated in Geneva, and the papal excommunications
-lost credit every day.</p>
-
-<p>This became alarming: the episcopal officers informed
-the bishop; but the latter, who was enjoying
-himself in his Burgundian benefices, put aside everything
-that might disturb his meals and his repose. It
-was not the same with the duke and his ministers.
-That prince was not content with coveting the prelate's
-temporal power; looking upon La Baume as already
-dispossessed of his rights, he made himself bishop,
-nay almost pope, in his place. The cabinet of Turin
-thought that if the principles of civil liberty once
-combined with those of religious liberty, Geneva would
-attempt to reform Savoy by means of conversations,
-letters, books, and missionaries. Charles III. therefore
-sent a message to the council, which was read in
-the Two-Hundred on the 7th of February. 'I hear,'
-said the prince, 'that the Lutheran sect is making way
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">{466}</a></span>
-among you.... Make haste to prevent the ravages of
-that pestilence, and, to that intent, send on the 17th two
-men empowered by you to hear some very important
-things concerning <i>my authority in matters of faith</i>.'</p>
-
-<p>What would the Genevans answer? If a bishop is
-made prince, why should not a prince be made bishop?
-The confusion of the two provinces is a source of continual
-disturbance. Christianity cannot tolerate either
-Cæsars who are popes, or popes who are Cæsars; and
-yet ambition is always endeavouring to unite these two
-irreconcilable powers. The duke did not presume to
-abolish definitively the episcopal power and confer it
-on himself; but he wished to take advantage of the
-bishop's flight to acquire an influence which he would
-be able to retain when the episcopal authority was
-restored. He spoke, therefore, like a Roman pontiff
-... of his authority in matters of faith.</p>
-
-<p>'Really,' said the council, 'we have had enough and
-too much even of one pope, and we do not care to have
-two—one at Rome and the other at our very gates.'
-The citizens were so irritated at Charles's singular
-claim, that they did not return an answer in the usual
-form. 'We will not write to the duke,' said the
-syndics; 'we will delegate no one to him, seeing that
-we are not his subjects; but we will simply tell the
-bearer of his letter that <i>we are going on very well</i>,
-and that the duke, having no authority to correct us,
-ought to <i>mind his own business</i>.' Such is the minute
-recorded in the council register for this day. As for
-La Baume, the poor prelate, who did not trouble himself
-much either about pope or Lutheranism, wrote
-the same day to the Genevans, that he permitted
-them 'to eat milk-food during the coming Lent.' This
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">{467}</a></span>
-culinary permission was quite in his way, and it was
-the most important missive from the bishop at that
-time.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_764" id="Ref_764" href="#Foot_764">[764]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE DUKE REPRIMANDS THE CANONS.=</p>
-
-<p>When the episcopal council heard of the syndics'
-answer, they were in great commotion. They thought
-it rude and unbecoming, and trembled lest Charles
-should confound them with these arrogant burgesses.
-They therefore sent M. de Veigy, one of the most
-eminent canons, to the duke, in order to pacify him.
-The reverend father set off, and while on the road, he
-feared at one moment Charles's anger, and at another
-enjoyed in anticipation the courtesies which the ducal
-court could not fail to show him. But he had scarcely
-been presented to the duke, and made a profound bow,
-when Bishop de Belley, standing at the left of his
-highness, and commissioned to be the interpreter of
-his sentiments, addressed him abruptly, and, calling
-him traitor and huguenot, insulted him just as De la
-Thoy might have done. But this abuse was nothing
-in comparison with Charles's anger: unable to restrain
-himself, he burst out, and, giving utterance to the
-terrible schemes he had formed against Geneva,
-declared he would reduce that impracticable city to
-ashes, and ended by saying: 'If you do not come out
-of it, you will be burnt in it with all the rest.' The
-poor canon endeavoured to pacify his highness: 'Ah,
-my lord,' he said, 'I shall not remain there: all the
-canons now in the city are about to leave it!' And
-yet De Veigy was fond of Geneva, and thought that
-to reside in Annecy would be terribly dull. Accordingly,
-on his return to the city, he forgot his terror
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">{468}</a></span>
-and his promises, whereupon he received this short
-message from Charles III.: 'Ordered, under pain of
-death, to quit Geneva in six days.'—'He left on the
-3rd of March, and with great regret,' adds Balard.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_765" id="Ref_765" href="#Foot_765">[765]</a></span>
-Charles wished to put the canons in a place of safety,
-before he burnt the city.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_754" id="Foot_754" href="#Ref_754">[754]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Que qui en volisse contredire' (whatever any one may do to oppose
-it), he added.—<i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 124.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_755" id="Foot_755" href="#Ref_755">[755]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Il est d'un esprit si changeant.'—<i>Hist. de Genève</i>, MS. of the 17th
-century. Bibliothèque de Berne, <i>Hist. Helvét.</i> v. p. 12.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_756" id="Foot_756" href="#Ref_756">[756]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Letter from La Baume to Hugues. Galiffe, <i>Matériaux</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_757" id="Foot_757" href="#Ref_757">[757]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Galiffe, <i>Matériaux</i>, ii. pp. 424-475. <i>Mém. d'Archéologie</i>, ii. pp. 14, 15.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_758" id="Foot_758" href="#Ref_758">[758]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Mignet, <i>Réforme à Genève</i>, p. 34.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_759" id="Foot_759" href="#Ref_759">[759]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-James Fazy, <i>Hist. de la République de Genève</i>, p. 158.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_760" id="Foot_760" href="#Ref_760">[760]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 127. Roset MS. <i>Chronol.</i> liv. ii. ch. xx.
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 448. Gautier MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_761" id="Foot_761" href="#Ref_761">[761]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 24 et 29 décembre 1527. Bonivard,
-<i>Chroniq.</i> ii. pp. 473, 474. Gautier MS. <i>Journal de Balard</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_762" id="Foot_762" href="#Ref_762">[762]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 15 et 17 janvier 1528. <i>Journal de Balard</i>,
-p. 146. Gautier MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_763" id="Foot_763" href="#Ref_763">[763]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hominum anathemata a Bertholdo papa facile solvenda.'—Spanheim,
-<i>Geneva Restituta</i>, p. 35.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_764" id="Foot_764" href="#Ref_764">[764]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil du 7 février 1528. <i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 147.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_765" id="Foot_765" href="#Ref_765">[765]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil du 7 février et du 3 mars 1528. <i>Journal de
-Balard</i>, pp. 147-149.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">{469}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER VI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE KNIGHTS OF THE SPOON LEAGUE AGAINST GENEVA
- AT THE CASTLE OF BURSINEL.<br />
- (<span class="smc">March 1528.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=BONIVARD COMPLAINS OF GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE partisans of absolutism and the papacy rose up
-on every side against Geneva, as if the Reformation
-were already established there. It was not so,
-however. Although Geneva had come out of Romanism,
-it had not yet entered Reform: it was still in
-those uncertain and barren places, that land of negations
-and disputes which lies between the two. A few
-persons only were beginning to see that, in order to
-separate really from the pope, it was necessary, as
-Haller and Zwingle said, to obey Jesus Christ.
-Bonivard, a keen critic, was indulging in his reflections,
-in his large arm-chair, at the priory of St. Victor,
-and carefully studying the singular aspect Geneva at
-that time presented. 'A strange spectacle,' he said;
-'everybody wishes to command, and no one will obey.
-From tyranny we have fallen into the opposite and
-worse vice of anarchy.... There are as many tyrants
-as heads ... which engenders confusion. Everybody
-wishes to make his own profit or private pleasure out
-of the common weal; profit tends to avarice; and
-pleasure consists in taking vengeance on him whom
-you hate. Men are killed, but they are not the real
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">{470}</a></span>
-enemies of Geneva.... If you wound a bear, he will not
-spring upon the man who wounded him, but will tear
-the first poles or the first tree in his way.... And
-this, alas! is what they are doing among us. Having
-groaned under a tyrannical government, we have the
-love of licence instead of the love of liberty. We
-must be apprentices before we can be masters, and
-break many strings before we can play upon the lute.
-The huguenots have driven out the tyrant, but have
-not driven out tyranny. It is not liberty to do
-whatever we desire, if we do not desire what is
-right. O pride! thou wilt be the ruin of Geneva!
-Pride has always envy for its follower; and when
-pride would mount too high, the old crone catches
-her by the tail and pulls her back, so that she falls
-and breaks her neck.... The huguenot leagues are
-not sufficient; the Gospel must advance, in order
-that popery may recede.' It is Bonivard himself
-who has transmitted these wise reflections.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_766" id="Ref_766" href="#Foot_766">[766]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He was not the only person who entertained such
-thoughts. The affairs of the alliance often attracted
-Bernese to Geneva; and being convinced that the
-Reformation alone could save that city, they continued
-Ab Hofen's work. Being admitted into private
-families, they spoke against human traditions and
-extolled the Scriptures. 'God speaks to us of the
-Redeemer,' they said, 'and not of Lent.' But the
-Friburgers, thrusting themselves into these evangelical
-conferences, exclaimed: 'Obey the Church! If you
-separate from the Church, we will break off the
-alliance!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_767" id="Ref_767" href="#Foot_767">[767]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">{471}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=BONIVARD'S ANSWER TO THE HUGUENOTS.=</p>
-
-<p>The <i>bishopers</i> were with Friburg, the <i>commoners</i>
-with Berne. The latter were divided into three
-classes: there were politicians, to whom religion was
-only a means of obtaining liberty; serious and peaceful
-men, who called for true piety (Bonivard mentions
-Boutelier as one of these); and, lastly, the enemies of
-the priests, who saw the Reformation from a negative
-point of view, and regarded it essentially as a war
-against Roman superstitions. One day these sincere
-but impatient men said they could wait no longer,
-and went out to St. Victor to invite the prior to put
-himself at their head. They rang at the gate of the
-monastery, and the janitor went and told Bonivard,
-who ordered them to be admitted: 'We wish to put
-an end to all this papal ceremony,' they told him;
-'we desire to drive out all its ministers, priests, and
-monks ... all that papistical rabble; and then we
-mean to invite the ministers of the Gospel, who
-will introduce a true christian reformation among
-us.'</p>
-
-<p>The prior smiled as he heard these words: 'Gentlemen,'
-he said, in a sarcastic tone, 'I think your
-sentiments very praiseworthy, and confess that all
-ecclesiastics (of whom I am one) have great need to be
-reformed. But ought not those who wish to reform
-others to begin by reforming themselves? If you love
-the Gospel, as you say you do, you will live according
-to the Gospel. But if you wish to reform us
-without reforming yourselves, it is evident that you
-are not moved by love for the Gospel, but by hatred
-against us. And why should you hate us? It is not
-because our manners are contrary to yours, but because
-they are like them. Aristotle says in his <i>Ethics</i>,' continued
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">{472}</a></span>
-the learned prior, 'and experience confirms
-the statement, that animals which eat off the same
-food naturally hate each other. Two horses do not
-agree at the same manger, nor two dogs over the
-same bone. It is the same with us. We are unchaste,
-and so are you. We are drunkards, and so
-are you. We are gamblers and blasphemers, and so
-are you. Why then should you be so opposed to us?...
-We do not hinder you from indulging in your
-little pleasures; pray do the same by us. You desire
-to expel us, you say, and put Lutheran ministers
-in our place.... Gentlemen, think well of what you
-are about: you will not have had them two years
-before you will be sorry for it. These ministers will
-permit you to break the commandments of the pope,
-but they will forbid your breaking those of God.
-According to their doctrines, you must not gamble
-or indulge in debauchery, under severe penalty....
-Ah! how that would vex you!... Therefore,
-gentlemen, you must do one of two things: either
-leave us in our present condition; or, if you wish to
-reform us according to the Gospel, reform yourselves
-first.'</p>
-
-<p>These remarks were not quite so reasonable as they
-appeared to be. <i>It is the sick that have need of a physician</i>,
-and as these 'sons of Geneva' wished to invite
-the ministers of the Gospel, <i>in order to introduce a
-true christian reform</i>, Bonivard should have encouraged
-instead of opposing them. These worldly
-men might have had a real desire for the Gospel at
-the bottom of their hearts. Reprimanded by the
-prior, they withdrew. Bonivard watched them as
-they retired. 'They are going off with their tails
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">{473}</a></span>
-between their legs.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_768" id="Ref_768" href="#Foot_768">[768]</a></span>
-Certainly, I desire a reformation;
-but I do not like that those who are more qualified
-to deform than to reform should presume to be
-its instruments.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=DETERMINATION TO EAT MEAT IN LENT.=</p>
-
-<p>When they got home, these huguenots deliberated
-whether they would allow themselves to be stopped
-by Bonivard's irony; they resolved to follow out his
-precept—to reform themselves first; but, not knowing
-that reformation consists primarily in reestablishing
-faith and morality in the heart, they undertook simply
-to prune away certain superstitions. As the episcopal
-letter permitted them to take milk in Lent, De la
-Maison-Neuve and his friends said: 'We are permitted
-to take milk, why not meat?' Then repeating the
-lesson which the Bernese had taught them—Do not the
-Scriptures say, <i>Eat of all that is sold in the shambles</i>?—they
-resolved to eat meat every day. The council saw
-this with uneasiness, and forbade the new practice
-under pain of three days' imprisonment on bread and
-water and a fine of five sols.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_769" id="Ref_769" href="#Foot_769">[769]</a></span>
-But wishing to hold
-the balance even, they had hardly struck one side before
-they struck the other, and condemned the forty-four
-fugitive mamelukes to confiscation and death.</p>
-
-<p>This last sentence aroused the anger of all the adjacent
-country; the Sire de Pontverre, in particular,
-thought the time had come for drawing the sword,
-and immediately messengers were scouring the country
-between the Alps and the Jura. They climbed
-painfully up the rocky roads that led to the mountain
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">{474}</a></span>
-castles; they crossed the lake, everywhere summoning
-the gentlemen, the friends of the mamelukes. The
-knights did not need to be pressed; they put on their
-armour, mounted their coursers, left their homes, and
-proceeded towards the appointed rendezvous, the castle
-of Bursinel, near Rolle, on the fertile slope which,
-running out from the Jura, borders the lake opposite
-Mont Blanc. These rough gentlemen arrived from La
-Vaux, Gex, Chablais, Genevois, and Faucigny: one
-after another they alighted from their horses, crossed
-the courtyard, and entered the hall, which echoed with
-the clash of their arms; then, shaking hands, they sat
-down at a long table, where they began to feast. The
-audacity of the Genevans was the principal subject of
-conversation, 'and heaven knows how they of Geneva
-were picked to pieces,' says a contemporary.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_770" id="Ref_770" href="#Foot_770">[770]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Of all these nobles, the most hostile to Geneva was
-the Sire de Pontverre. Of athletic frame, herculean
-strength, and violent character, bold and energetic,
-he was, from his marked superiority, recognised as
-their chief by the gentlemen assembled at the castle
-of Bursinel. If these men despised the burgesses, the
-latter returned the compliment. 'They are holding
-a meeting of bandits and brigands at Bursinel,' said
-some of the Genevans. We must not, however, take
-these somewhat harsh words too literally. The depredations
-of these gentlemen doubtless undermined
-the social organisation, and it was time to put an end
-to these practices of the middle ages. Many of them
-were, however, good sons and husbands, good fathers,
-and even good landlords; but they had no mercy for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">{475}</a></span>
-Geneva. As they sat at table they said that the
-princes had succeeded in France and elsewhere in
-destroying the franchises of the municipal towns, and
-that this free city, the last that survived, deserved a
-similar fate much more than the others, since it was
-beginning to add a new vice to its former vices ...
-it was listening to Luther. 'A contest must decide,'
-they added, 'whether the future times shall belong to
-the knights or to the burgesses, to the Church or to
-heresy.' If Geneva were overthrown, they thought
-they would be masters of the future. Pontverre
-has been compared to the celebrated Roman who
-feared the Carthaginians, and, like him, never forgot
-to repeat at every meeting of the nobles: <i>Delenda
-Carthago</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_771" id="Ref_771" href="#Foot_771">[771]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE ORDER OF THE SPOON.=</p>
-
-<p>The dinner was drawing to an end; the servants of
-the lord of Bursinel had brought the best wines from
-the castle cellars; the libations were numerous, and
-the guests drank copiously. 'It chanced,' says Bonivard,
-'that some rice (<i>papet</i>) was brought in, with
-as many spoons as there were persons at table.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_772" id="Ref_772" href="#Foot_772">[772]</a></span>
-Pontverre rose, took up a spoon with the same hand
-that wielded the sword so vigorously, plunged it
-into the dish of rice, and, lifting it to his mouth,
-ate and said: 'Thus will I swallow Geneva and the
-Genevese.' In an instant all the gentlemen, 'heated
-with wine and anger,' took up their spoons, and exclaimed
-as they ate, 'that they would make but one
-mouthful of all the huguenots.' Pontverre did not
-stop at this: he took a little chain, hung the spoon
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">{476}</a></span>
-round his neck, and said: 'I am a <i>knight of the Spoon</i>,
-and this is my decoration.'—'We all belong to the
-same order,' said the others, similarly hanging the
-spoons on their breasts. They then grasped each
-other's hands, and swore to be faithful to the last.
-At length the party broke up; they mounted their
-horses, and returned to their mansions; and when
-their neighbours looked with surprise at what hung
-round their necks, and asked what the spoon meant,
-they answered: 'We intend to eat the Genevans with
-it; will you not join us?' And thus the fraternity
-was formed which had the conquest of Geneva for its
-object.</p>
-
-<p>The Spoon was taken up everywhere, as in the time
-of the crusades men took up the Cross: the decoration
-was characteristic of these loud-spoken free-living cavaliers.
-Meetings took place every week in the various
-castles of the neighbourhood. New members joined
-the order, and hung the spoon round their necks, saying:
-'Since the commonalty (the Genevans and Swiss)
-form alliances, surely the nobles may do so!' They
-drew up 'statutes and laws for their guidance, which
-were committed to writing, as in public matters.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_773" id="Ref_773" href="#Foot_773">[773]</a></span>
-Erelong the 'gentlemen of the Spoon,' as they called
-themselves, proceeded to perform their vow; they
-issued from their castles, plundered the estates of the
-Genevans, intercepted their provisions, and blockaded
-them closer and closer every day. When they came
-near the city, on the heights of Pregny, Lancy, and
-Cologny, they added derision to violence; they took
-their spoons and waved them in the air, as if they
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">{477}</a></span>
-wished to use them in swallowing the city which
-lay smiling at their feet.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=ALARM AT GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p>The alarm increased every day in Geneva; the
-citizens called the Swiss to their aid, fortified their
-city, and kept strict watch. Whenever any friends
-met together, the story of the famous dinner at Bursinel
-was repeated. The Genevans went so far, says a
-chronicle, as to be unwilling to make use of the innocent
-spoon, such a horror they felt at it. Many of
-those who read the Scriptures began to pray to God to
-save Geneva; and on the 23rd of March, the council
-entered the following words in their register: 'May
-we be delivered from the evils we endure, may we
-conquer and have peace!... May the Almighty be
-pleased to grant it to us!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_774" id="Ref_774" href="#Foot_774">[774]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Pontverre was not a mere adventurer; he possessed
-a mind capable of discerning the political defects of his
-party. Two men in Geneva especially occupied his
-thoughts at this time: they were the bishop and the
-prior. In his opinion, they ought to gain the first and
-punish the other.</p>
-
-<p>He began with Bonivard; no one was more detested
-by the feudal party than he was. That the head of a
-monastery should side with the huguenots seemed
-a terrible scandal. No one besides, at that time, advocated
-more boldly than the prior the principles opposed
-to absolute power; and this he showed erelong.</p>
-
-<p>At Cartigny, on the left bank of the Rhone, about
-two leagues from Geneva, he possessed a fief which depended
-on the dukes of Savoy: 'It is a mere pleasure-house,
-and not a fortress,' he said; and yet he was in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_478" id="Page_478">{478}</a></span>
-the habit of keeping a garrison there. The duke had
-seized it during his vassal's captivity, and to Bonivard's
-frequent demands for its restoration he replied 'that
-he dared not give it up for fear of being excommunicated
-by the pope.' Michaelmas having come,
-the time at which the rent was collected, the Savoy
-government forbade the tenants to pay it to the prior;
-the latter felt indignant, and the principles he then
-laid down deserve to be called to mind. 'The rights
-of a prince and his subjects are reciprocal,' he said.
-'If the subject owes obedience to his prince, the prince
-owes justice to his subject. If the prince may constrain
-his subject, when the latter refuses obedience in
-a case wherein it is lawfully due, the subject has also
-the right to refuse obedience to his prince, when the
-latter denies him justice. Let the subject then be
-without fear, and rest assured that God is for him.
-Men, perhaps, will not be on his side; but if he has
-strength to resist men, I can answer for God.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_775" id="Ref_775" href="#Foot_775">[775]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Bonivard, who was determined to obtain justice,
-laid before the council of Geneva the patents which
-established his rights, and prayed their help in support
-of his claim. His petition at first met with some
-little opposition in the general council. 'The city has
-enough to do already with its own affairs,' said many,
-'without undertaking the prior's;' but most of the
-huguenots were of a contrary opinion. 'If the duke
-has at St. Victor a lord after his fashion,' they said,
-'it might be a serious inconvenience to us. Besides,
-the energetic prior has always been firm in the service
-of the city.' This consideration prevailed and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_479" id="Page_479">{479}</a></span>
-general council decided that they would maintain
-Bonivard's rights by force of arms if necessary.</p>
-
-<p>The prior now made his preparations. 'Since I
-cannot have civil justice,' he said, 'I will have recourse
-to the law of nations, which authorises to repel
-force by force.' The petty sovereign of St. Victor, who
-counted ten monks for his subjects, who no longer
-possessed his uncle's culverins, and whose only warlike
-resources were a few arquebusiers, hired by a
-Bernese adventurer, besides four pounds of powder,
-determined to march against the puissant Duke of
-Savoy, prince of Piedmont, and even to brave that
-pope-king who once upon a time had only to frown to
-make all the world tremble. Perish St. Victor rather
-than principles!</p>
-
-<p class="side">=BONIVARD DEFENDS CARTIGNY.=</p>
-
-<p>Bonivard sent for a herald and told him: 'The
-Duke of Savoy has usurped my sovereignty; you will
-therefore proceed to Cartigny and make proclamation
-through all my lordship, in these terms: "No one in
-this place shall execute either ducal or papal letters
-under pain of the gallows.'" We see that Bonivard
-made a large use of his supreme power. The herald,
-duly escorted, made the terrible proclamation round
-the castle; and then a captain, a commissioner, and a
-few soldiers, sent by Bonivard, took possession of the
-domain in his name, <i>under the nose of the pope and the
-duke</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_776" id="Ref_776" href="#Foot_776">[776]</a></span>
-He was very proud of this exploit. 'The
-pope and the duke have not dared send men to prevent
-my captain from taking possession,' he said good-humouredly;
-for Bonivard, though sparkling with
-wit, was also a good-tempered man.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_480" id="Page_480">{480}</a></div>
-
-<p>The fear ascribed to the duke did not last long.
-The lands of Cartigny were near those of Pontverre,
-and the order of the Spoon was hardly organised when
-an expedition directed against the castle was the prelude
-to hostilities. A ducal provost, with some men-at-arms,
-appeared before the place on the 6th of March,
-1528. Bonivard had vainly told his captain to defend
-himself: the place was taken. The indignant prior
-exclaimed: 'My people allowed themselves to be surprised.'
-He believed, as the Genevans also did, that
-the duke had bribed the commandant: 'The captain
-of Cartigny, after eating the fig, has thrown away the
-basket,' said the huguenots in their meetings.</p>
-
-<p>The prior of St. Victor, being determined to recover
-his property from his highness's troops, came to an
-understanding with an ex-councillor of Berne, named
-Boschelbach, a man of no very respectable character,
-who had probably procured him the few soldiers of his
-former expedition, and who now, making greater exertions,
-raised for him a corps of twenty men. Bonivard
-put himself at the head of his forces, made them
-march regularly, ordered them to keep their matches
-lighted, and halted in front of the castle. The prior,
-who was a clever speaker, trusted more to his tongue
-than to his arms: he desired, therefore, first to explain
-his rights, and consequently the ex-councillor, attended
-by his servant Thiebault, went forward and demanded
-a parley on behalf of the prior. By way of answer
-the garrison fired, and Thiebault was shot dead.</p>
-
-<p>That night all Geneva was agitated. The excited
-and exasperated citizens ran armed up and down the
-streets, and talked of nothing but marching out to
-Cartigny to avenge Thiebault's death. 'Be calm,'
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_481" id="Page_481">{481}</a></span>
-said Boschelbach; 'I will make such a report to my
-lords of Berne that Monsieur of Savoy, who is the
-cause of all the mischief, shall suffer for it.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_777" id="Ref_777" href="#Foot_777">[777]</a></span>
-The syndics had not promised to attack Savoy, which
-would have been a serious affair, but only to defend
-Bonivard. In order, therefore, to keep their word,
-they stationed detachments of soldiers in the other
-estates belonging to St. Victor, with orders to protect
-them from every attack. Cartigny was quite lost to
-the prior; but he was prepared to endure even greater
-sacrifices. He had his faults, no doubt; and, in particular,
-he was too easy in forming intimacies with
-men far from estimable, such as Boschelbach; but he
-had noble aspirations. He knew that by continuing
-to follow the same line of conduct he would lose his
-priory, be thrown into prison, and perhaps put to
-death: 'But what does it matter,' he thought, 'if
-by such a sacrifice right is maintained and liberty
-triumphs?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_778" id="Ref_778" href="#Foot_778">[778]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=BISHOP AND DUKE RECONCILED.=</p>
-
-<p>The lord of Pontverre was occupied with a scheme
-far more important than Bonivard's destruction. He
-wished, as we have said, to win back the bishop. Possessing
-much political wisdom, seeing farther and more
-clearly than the duke or the prelate, he perceived that
-if the war against the new ideas was to succeed, it
-would be necessary for all the old powers to coalesce
-against them. Nothing, in his opinion, was more deplorable
-than the difference between Charles III. and
-Pierre de la Baume: he therefore undertook to reconcile
-them. He showed them that they had both the
-same enemies, and that nothing but their union would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_482" id="Page_482">{482}</a></span>
-put it in their power to crush the huguenots. He
-frightened the bishop by hinting to him that the Reformation
-would not only destroy Catholicism, but
-strip him of his dignities and his revenues. He further
-told him that heresy had crept unobserved into his
-own household and infected even his chamberlain,
-William de la Mouille, who at that time enjoyed his
-entire confidence.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_779" id="Ref_779" href="#Foot_779">[779]</a></span>
-La Baume, wishing to profit immediately
-by Pontverre's information, hastened to
-write to La Mouille: 'I will permit no opportunity
-for breeding in my diocese any wicked and accursed
-sect—such as I am told already prevails there. <i>You
-have been too slow in informing me of it.</i>... Tell them
-boldly that I will not put up with them.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_780" id="Ref_780" href="#Foot_780">[780]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The prelate's great difficulty was to become reconciled
-with the duke. Having the fullest confidence
-in his talent for intrigue, he thought that he
-could return into friendly relations with his highness
-without breaking altogether with Hugues and the
-Genevans. 'He is a fine jockey,' said Bonivard; 'he
-wants to ride one and lead the other by the bridle!'
-The bishop began his manœuvres. 'I quitted Geneva,'
-he informed the duke, 'in order that I might not be
-forced to do anything displeasing to you.' It will be
-remembered, on the contrary, that he had run away
-to escape from Charles III., who wanted to 'snap him
-up;' but that prince, satisfied with seeing La Baume
-place himself again under his guidance, pretended to
-believe him, and cancelled the sequestration of his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_483" id="Page_483">{483}</a></span>
-revenues. Being thus reconciled, the bishop and the
-duke set to work to stifle the Reformation. 'Good,'
-said Bonivard; 'Pilate and Herod were made friends
-together, for before they were at enmity between
-themselves.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=BISHOP HATEFUL TO THE CITY.=</p>
-
-<p>The bishop soon perceived that he could not be
-both with the duke and Geneva; and, every day
-drawing nearer to Savoy, he turned against his own
-subjects and his own flock. And hence one of the
-most enlightened statesmen Geneva ever possessed
-said in the seventeenth century, to a peer of Great
-Britain who had put some questions to him on the
-history of the republic: 'From that time the bishop
-became very hateful to the city, which could not but
-regard him as a declared enemy.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_781" id="Ref_781" href="#Foot_781">[781]</a></span>
-It was the bishop who tore the contract that had subsisted between
-Geneva and himself.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_766" id="Foot_766" href="#Ref_766">[766]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Police</i>, &amp;c. pp. 398-400; <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 473. Gautier MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_767" id="Foot_767" href="#Ref_767">[767]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_768" id="Foot_768" href="#Ref_768">[768]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'La queue entre les jambes.'—Bonivard, <i>Advis des difformes Réformateurs</i>,
-pp. 149-151.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_769" id="Foot_769" href="#Ref_769">[769]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 11 et 26 février 1528. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq</i>.
-ii. p. 479.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_770" id="Foot_770" href="#Ref_770">[770]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Dieu sait comme ceux de Genève étaient déchiquetés.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_771" id="Foot_771" href="#Ref_771">[771]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ne taschait, fors à la ruine de Genève.'—Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p.
-482.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_772" id="Foot_772" href="#Ref_772">[772]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_773" id="Foot_773" href="#Ref_773">[773]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 483.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_774" id="Foot_774" href="#Ref_774">[774]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 14, 23, 24 mars. <i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 156.
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. pp. 482, 486, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_775" id="Foot_775" href="#Ref_775">[775]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 477.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_776" id="Foot_776" href="#Ref_776">[776]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'A la barbe du pape et du duc.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_777" id="Foot_777" href="#Ref_777">[777]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'En portera la pâte au four.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_778" id="Foot_778" href="#Ref_778">[778]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. pp. 475, 480, 502. Gautier MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_779" id="Foot_779" href="#Ref_779">[779]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See nineteen letters from the bishop to William de la Mouille, his
-chamberlain, printed in Galiffe, <i>Matériaux pour l'Histoire de Genève</i>, ii.
-pp. 461-485.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_780" id="Foot_780" href="#Ref_780">[780]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Galiffe, ii. p. 477.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_781" id="Foot_781" href="#Ref_781">[781]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Memoir to Lord Townshend on the History of Geneva</i>, by Mr.
-Secretary Chouet. Berne MSS. vi. 57.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_484" id="Page_484">{484}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER VII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">INTRIGUES OF THE DUKE AND THE BISHOP.<br />
- (<span class="smc">Spring and Summer 1528.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE first measure Charles exacted from his new
-ally was to revoke the civil rights he had conceded
-to the citizens. The bishop consented. In
-order to deprive the secular magistrate of his temporal
-privileges, he resolved to employ spiritual weapons.
-Priests, bishops, and popes have always found their
-use very profitable in political matters; princes of
-great power have been known to tremble before the
-documents launched into the world by the high-priest
-of the Vatican. The bishop, therefore, caused an
-order to be posted on the church doors, forbidding the
-magistrates to try civil causes under pain of excommunication
-and a fine of one hundred pounds of silver.
-It seems that the bishop had thought it prudent to
-attack the purses of those who were not to be frightened
-by his <i>pastorals</i>. 'Remove these letters,' said
-the syndics to the episcopal secretary, 'and carry
-them back to the bishop, for they are contrary to our
-franchises.' At the same time they said to the judges:
-'You will continue to administer justice, notwithstanding
-the excommunication.' This, be it remarked, occurred
-at Geneva in the beginning of the sixteenth
-century.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_485" id="Page_485">{485}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=THE BISHOP AND THE SYNDICS.=</p>
-
-<p>When informed of these bold orders, the bishop-prince
-roused himself.... One might have fancied that
-the spirit of Hildebrand and Boniface had suddenly
-animated the weak La Baume. 'What! under the
-pretence of maintaining your liberties,' he wrote to the
-Genevans, 'you wish to usurp our sovereignty!...
-Beware what you do, for if you persevere, we will
-with God's help inflict such a punishment that it shall
-serve for an example to others.... The morsel you
-desire to swallow is harder to digest than you appear
-to believe.... We command you to resign the administration
-of justice; to receive the vidame whom the
-duke shall be pleased to send you; to permit him to
-exercise his power, as was done in the time of the
-most illustrious princes his grace's predecessors; and
-finally to remit to his highness and us the whole case
-of the fugitives. If within a fortnight you do not
-desist from all opposition to our authority, we will
-declare you our enemies, and will employ all our
-resources and those of our relations and friends to
-punish you for the outrage you are committing against
-us, and we will strive to ruin you totally, whatever
-may be the place to which you flee.'</p>
-
-<p>Great was the commotion in the city at hearing such
-words addressed by the pastor of Geneva to his flock;
-for if the bishop made use of such threats, it was with
-the intention of establishing the authority of a foreign
-prince among them. The true huguenots, who wanted
-neither duke nor bishop, were silent under these circumstances,
-and allowed the episcopal party, of which
-Hugues was the chief, to act. Two ambassadors from
-the bishop having been introduced before the general
-council on the 14th of June, 1528, the premier syndic
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_486" id="Page_486">{486}</a></span>
-said to them: 'If the bishop desires to appoint a
-vidame to administer justice among us, we will accept
-him; but the dukes of Savoy have never had other
-than an unlawful authority in Geneva. We have no
-prince but the bishop. Has he forgotten the great
-misfortunes that have befallen the city in consequence
-of these Savoyard vidames?... Citizens perpetually
-threatened, many of them imprisoned and tortured,
-their heads cut off, their bodies quartered.... But God
-has helped us, and we will no longer live in such
-misery.... No!' continued the speaker with some emotion,
-'we will not renounce the independence which
-our charters secure to us.... Rather than lose it, we
-will sacrifice our lives and goods, our wives, and our
-children.... We will give up everything, to our last
-breath, to the last drop of our blood.'... Such words,
-uttered with warmth, always excite the masses; and,
-accordingly, as soon as the people heard them, they
-cried as with one voice: 'Yes! yes! that is the answer
-we will make.'</p>
-
-<p>This declaration was immediately sent into Switzerland;
-and, strange to say, such patriotic enthusiasm
-was received with ridicule by some persons in that
-noble country. Geneva was so small and so weak,
-that her determination to resist a prince so powerful
-as the duke seemed mere folly: the Swiss had forgotten
-that their ancestors, although few in number,
-had vanquished Austria and Burgundy. 'These
-Genevans <i>are all mad</i>,' said they. When they heard
-of this insult, the council of Geneva was content
-to enter in its registers the following simple and
-spirited declaration: 'Considering our ambassadors'
-report of what the Swiss say of us, it is ordered that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_487" id="Page_487">{487}</a></span>
-they be written to and told that we <i>are all in our
-right minds</i>.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_782" id="Ref_782" href="#Foot_782">[782]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On hearing of these proceedings, La Baume, who
-was at the Tour de May in Burgundy, flew into a
-violent passion. He paced up and down his room,
-abused his attendants, and uttered a thousand threats
-against Geneva. He included all the Genevans in the
-same proscription, and had no more regard for conservatives
-like Besançon Hugues than for reformers like
-Baudichon de la Maison-Neuve. He was angry with
-the citizens who disturbed him with their bold speeches
-in the midst of his peaceful retreat. 'In his opinion
-the chief virtue of a prelate was to keep a plentiful and
-dainty table, with good wines; and,' says a person who
-often dined with him, 'he had sometimes more than he
-could carry.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_783" id="Ref_783" href="#Foot_783">[783]</a></span>
-He was, moreover, liberal to women of
-doubtful character, very stately, and fond of great
-parade.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE BISHOP AND THE MESSENGER.=</p>
-
-<p>One day, as he was leaving the table where he had
-taken too much wine, he was told that a messenger
-from Geneva, bearing a letter from the council, desired
-to speak with him. 'Messieurs de Genève, remembering,'
-says Balard, 'that <i>dulce verbum frangit iram</i>,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_784" id="Ref_784" href="#Foot_784">[784]</a></span>
-wrote to him in friendly terms.' The messenger,
-Martin de Combes, having been admitted to the bishop,
-bowed low, and, courteously approaching, handed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_488" id="Page_488">{488}</a></span>
-him the letters of which he was the bearer. But the
-mere sight of a Genevan made the bishop's blood boil,
-and, losing all self-control, he said 'in great fury:'
-'Where do you come from?'—'From Geneva.'—'It
-is a lie,' said the bishop; and then, forgetting that
-he was contradicting himself, he added: 'You have
-changed the colour of your clothes at Geneva;' wishing
-apparently to accuse the Genevans of making a
-revolution or a reformation. 'Come hither,' he continued;
-'tell the folks in Geneva that they are all
-traitors—all of them, men, women, and children, little
-and big; that I will have justice done shortly, and
-that it will be something to talk about. Tell them
-never to write to me again.... Whenever I meet
-any persons from that city, I will have them put to
-death.... And as for you, get out of my sight instantly!'
-The poor messenger, who trembled like a leaf, did not
-wait to be told twice.</p>
-
-<p>La Baume, who had forgotten Plutarch's treatise,
-<i>De cohibenda ira</i>, could not recover from his emotion,
-and kept walking up and down the room with agitated
-step. Suddenly, remembering certain cutting expressions,
-uttered in Switzerland by Ami Girard, a distinguished,
-well-read, and determined huguenot, who
-was generally envoy from Geneva to Berne and Friburg,
-he said to his servants: 'Bring that man back.'
-Poor De Combes was brought back like a criminal
-whose rope has once broken, and who is about to be
-hanged again. 'Mind you tell those folks at Geneva
-all that I have ordered you,' exclaimed the bishop.
-'There is one of them (I know him well—it is Ami
-Girard) who said that I wish to bridle Geneva in order
-that Monsieur of Savoy may ride her.... I will be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_489" id="Page_489">{489}</a></span>
-revenged on him ... or I will die for it.... Out of
-my sight instantly. Be off to your huguenots.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALM OF THE GENEVESE.=</p>
-
-<p>De Combes retired without saying a word, and
-reported in Geneva the prelate's violent message. He
-had committed nothing to writing; but the whole scene
-remained graven in his memory. 'What!' exclaimed
-the huguenots, 'he said all that?' and then they made
-him tell his story over again. The murmurs now
-grew louder: the Genevans said that 'while in the
-first centuries the ministers of the Church had conciliated
-general esteem by their doctrine and character,
-modern priests looked for strength in alliances with
-the princes of this world; formerly the vocation of a
-bishop was martyrdom, but now it is eating and drinking,
-pomp, white horses, and ... bursts of anger.'
-All this was a deadly blow to the consideration due to
-the clergy. The council was, however, wiser than the
-prelate; they ordered that no answer should be returned
-him. This decision was indeed conformable
-to custom, as the report had been made to the syndics
-<i>viva voce</i>, and not by official letter. La Baume, at
-the time he gave audience to the envoy from Geneva,
-was too confused to hold a pen or to dictate anything
-rational to his secretary; but the magistrates of
-Geneva, on the other hand, were always men of rule
-and law.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_785" id="Ref_785" href="#Foot_785">[785]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>While the bishop was putting himself into a passion
-like a soldier, the Duke of Savoy was convoking a
-synod like a bishop. It was not enough for the evangelical
-doctrine to <i>infect</i> Geneva—it was invading his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_490" id="Page_490">{490}</a></span>
-states. It already numbered partisans in Savoy, and
-even the Alps had not proved a sufficient barrier
-against the new invasion. Some seeds of the Gospel,
-coming from Switzerland, had crossed the St. Bernard,
-in despite of the opposition of the most zealous prelate
-in Piedmont—we may even say in all Italy. This was
-Pierre Gazzini, Bishop of Aosta, who was afterwards
-to contend, in his own episcopal city, with the disciples
-of Calvin, and with Calvin himself. Gifted with a
-lofty intelligence, great energy of character, and ardent
-catholicism, Gazzini was determined to wage war to
-the death against the heretics, and it was in accordance
-with his advice that a synod had been convoked.
-When the assembly met on the 12th of July, 1528,
-Gazzini drew a deplorable picture of the position.
-'My lords,' he said, 'the news is distressing from
-every quarter. Switzers and Genevans are circulating
-<i>the accursed book</i>. Twelve gentlemen of Savoy adhere
-scrupulously to the doctrines of Luther. All our
-parishes between Geneva and Chambéry are infected
-by forbidden books. The people will no longer pay
-for masses or keep the fasts; men go about everywhere
-saying that the property of the abbots and prelates
-ought to be sold to feed the poor and miserable!'
-Gazzini did not confine himself to pointing out the
-disease; he sought for the cause. 'Geneva,' he said,
-'is the focus,' and he called for the most violent
-measures in order to destroy it.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_786" id="Ref_786" href="#Foot_786">[786]</a></span>
-The duke determined to employ every means to extinguish the fire,
-'which (they said) was continually tossing its burning
-flakes from Geneva into Savoy.'</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_491" id="Page_491">{491}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=SYNOD CONVOKED BY THE DUKE.=</p>
-
-<p>Charles III. had been ruminating for some time
-over a new idea. Seeing the difficulties that the
-annexation of Geneva to Savoy would meet with on
-the part of the Swiss, he had conceived another combination;
-that is, to make his second son, a child four
-years old, count or prince of Geneva. Circumstances
-were favourable to this scheme. Pierre de la Baume
-was designated successor to the Archbishop of Besançon;
-he, doubtless, would not want much pressing to
-give up his bishopric when he was offered an archbishopric.
-The duke therefore sent commissioners to
-the emperor and the pope to arrange the matter with
-them. Hugues, ever ready to sacrifice himself to save
-his country, started immediately, with three other
-citizens, for Berne and Friburg; but he found the
-confederates much cooled with regard to Geneva.
-'You are very proud,' said the avoyer of Berne to
-the envoys in full council, and, adds Hugues, 'they
-gave us a good scolding.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_787" id="Ref_787" href="#Foot_787">[787]</a></span>
-The duke had set every
-engine to work, and, covetous as he was, had distributed
-profusely his crowns of the sun. 'Ha!' said
-the Genevan, 'Monsieur of Savoy never before sent so
-much money here at one time,' and then sarcastically
-added, with reference to the lords of Berne: 'The <i>sun</i>
-has blinded them.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_788" id="Ref_788" href="#Foot_788">[788]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Genevans found themselves alone; the monarchical
-powers of Christendom—Piedmont, France,
-and the Empire—were rising against their dawning
-liberty; even the Swiss were forsaking them; but not
-one of them hesitated. Ami Girard and Robert Vandel,
-at that time ambassadors to Switzerland, quivered
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_492" id="Page_492">{492}</a></span>
-with indignation, and, filled with an energy that reminds
-us of old Rome, they wrote to their fellow-citizens:
-'Sooner than do what they ask you, set fire
-to the city, and <i>begin with our houses</i>.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_789" id="Ref_789" href="#Foot_789">[789]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The duke now prepared to support his pretensions
-by more energetic means. His agents traversed the
-districts round Geneva; they went from door to door,
-from house to house, and said to the peasants: 'Do
-not venture to carry provisions to Geneva.' Others
-went from castle to castle, and told the lords: 'Let
-every gentleman equip his followers with uniform and
-arms, and be ready at the sound of the alarm-bell.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=DUCAL INTRIGUES IN THE CONVENTS.=</p>
-
-<p>But the duke did not confine his intrigues to the
-outside of the city; he employed every means inside.
-Gentlemen of Savoy made visits, gave dinners, and
-tampered with certain private persons, promising them
-a great sum of money 'if they would do <i>their duty</i>.'
-The monks, feeling assured that their knell would ring
-erelong, redoubled their efforts to secure the triumph
-of Savoy in Geneva. Three of them, Chappuis, superior
-of the Dominicans, a man deep in the confidence of
-his highness, who had lodged in his monastery, with
-Gringalet and Levrat, simple monks, held frequent conferences
-in the convent of Plainpalais, in the prior's
-chamber, round a table on which lay some little silver
-keys; by their side were lists containing the names of
-the principal Genevese ecclesiastics and laymen from
-whom Chappuis believed he might hope for support.
-The three monks took up the keys, looked at them
-complacently, and then placed them against certain
-names. The duke, knowing that intrigue and vanity
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_493" id="Page_493">{493}</a></span>
-are the original sins of monks, had sent the prior these
-keys (the arms of Faucigny, a province hostile to
-Geneva): 'Procure for us friends in the convents and
-the city,' he had told them; 'and for that purpose distribute
-these keys with discretion. Whoever wears
-them will belong to us.' It was a mysterious decoration,
-by means of which the duke hoped to gain partisans
-for the annexation. Chappuis and Levrat began
-to tamper with the laity of the city, while Gringalet
-undertook to gain the monks. In spite of all the
-skill they employed, their manœuvres were not always
-crowned with success. One day Gringalet went up to
-two monks, Bernard and Nicholas, and showed them
-the talisman; but they looked coldly on such <i>toys</i>, manifesting
-no desire to possess them. The ducal monk,
-perceiving that the keys had no virtue, said to his
-colleagues: 'If we do not succeed in our scheme; if
-Savoy and the papacy do not triumph in Geneva, we
-will abandon the ungrateful city; we will transfer the
-property of our convent to some other place, and leave
-nothing but the bare walls behind!' Bernard and
-Nicholas, who inclined to the side of light, were
-alarmed, and, judging it to be a matter of high importance,
-denounced the plot to the council: 'This,
-then, is the use of monks,' said the syndics. 'They
-are traitors, ready to deliver the city to the foreigner.
-We will put all to rights.' They ordered the two
-monks to say nothing, and when night came the
-council proceeded to the Dominican monastery. The
-beadles knocked at the gate; the porter opened it, and
-looked with astonishment at the noble company. The
-syndics ordered all the convent to assemble. The
-monks were greatly alarmed: Chappuis, Gringalet, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_494" id="Page_494">{494}</a></span>
-Levrat trembled, having no doubt that they had been
-betrayed. They made haste to hide the little keys, and
-then proceeded anxiously to the common hall, where
-the brethren had already assembled: 'We have heard of
-your intrigues,' said the premier syndic; 'we know
-why you are distributing in Geneva the keys of those
-Turks (<i>Turcanorum</i>), the Faucignerans.... You had
-better say your prayers and not meddle with politics.
-You pretend to renounce the world, reverend brethren,
-and then do nothing else but intrigue for the things of
-this world. You intend, we hear, to carry away your
-property, your relics, and your jewels; gently ... we
-will spare you that trouble; we will take care of them
-in the grotto of St. Pierre, and put your persons in a
-place of safety.'... The council ordered an inventory
-of the goods of the convent to be drawn up, and
-generously left the monks three chalices for the celebration
-of mass. They banished Chappuis, Gringalet,
-and Levrat, and placed the other brethren under the
-surveillance of two deputies of the council. The
-monks had their wings clipped, and the Reformation
-was beginning.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_790" id="Ref_790" href="#Foot_790">[790]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_782" id="Foot_782" href="#Ref_782">[782]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 23 et 30 avril; 24 mai; 2, 9, 14 juin;
-7 août. <i>Journal de Balard</i>, pp. 160-170. La Baume's letters, <i>Archéologie</i>,
-ii. p. 15. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 493. Gautier MS. Bonivard, <i>Ancienne
-et nouvelle Police de Genève</i>, p. 384.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_783" id="Foot_783" href="#Ref_783">[783]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Il s'en donnait jusqu'à <i>passer trente et un</i>.' This proverbial
-expression refers, possibly, to the months whose days never exceed
-thirty-one.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_784" id="Foot_784" href="#Ref_784">[784]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'A soft answer turneth away wrath.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_785" id="Foot_785" href="#Ref_785">[785]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil du 25 août. <i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 178.
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 495.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_786" id="Foot_786" href="#Ref_786">[786]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Gazzini, <i>Mémoire au Saint Père</i>. Archives of Turin, Roman Correspondence.
-Gaberel, <i>Hist. de l'Eglise de Genève</i>, i. p. 95.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_787" id="Foot_787" href="#Ref_787">[787]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ils nous lavèrent bien la tête.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_788" id="Foot_788" href="#Ref_788">[788]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Letter of B. Hugues. Galiffe, <i>Matériaux</i>, ii. pp. 525, 526.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_789" id="Foot_789" href="#Ref_789">[789]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Letters of Vandel and Girard. Galiffe, <i>Matériaux</i>, ii. p. 533.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_790" id="Foot_790" href="#Ref_790">[790]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 10, 11 et 20 octobre 1528. <i>Journal de
-Balard</i>, p. 183.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_495" id="Page_495">{495}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">DEATH OF PONTVERRE.<br />
- (<span class="smc">October 1528 to January 1529.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=PONTVERRE MOWS FOR BONIVARD.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CHAPPUIS, Gringalet, and Levrat filled the places
-through which they passed with their complaints,
-and all the bigots looked upon them as martyrs.
-The knights of the Spoon, being informed of the fate
-with which monastic institutions were threatened in
-Geneva, resolved to avenge religion and do all the
-injury they could to the audacious burgesses. Pontverre
-had already opened the campaign by a little
-scene of pillage, which is of no importance except to
-show the manners of the age. Wishing to spoil and
-plunder the Genevans <i>under their noses</i>, he had ordered
-his tenants to sharpen their scythes. One day in
-the beginning of June, the peasants shouldered their
-scythes; Pontverre put himself at their head, his men-at-arms
-surrounded them, and all marched towards
-the meadows of the Genevans on the left bank of the
-Arve, about a quarter of an hour's walk from the city.
-The mowers arrived, whetted their instruments, and
-then proceeded to cut down the new grass. At last
-they came to a meadow which belonged to Bonivard:
-to rob the prior was a <i>dainty thing</i> for Pontverre.
-Meanwhile the Genevans, having heard of what was
-going on, had hurried to the spot, and discovered by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_496" id="Page_496">{496}</a></span>
-the side of the mowers a body of men whose arms
-flashed in the rays of the sun. Bonivard easily recognised
-the seigneur of Ternier. The huguenots could
-hardly contain themselves. The chief of the knights
-of the Spoon, having charged his people not to leave a
-blade of grass standing, approached the bridge of Arve
-which separates the two countries, and, calling out to
-the Genevans assembled on the right bank, began to
-insult and defy them. 'Come, come, cheer up!' he said;
-'why don't you cross the bridge and fetch the hay we
-have cut for you?' The citizens loaded their arms,
-and the two bands began to fire at each other with their
-arquebuses. 'Let us take him at his word,' said some
-of the huguenots; 'let us go over the bridge and drive
-away the robbers.' Already several young men were
-preparing to cross the river; but Bonivard did not
-think a few loads of hay worth the risk of a battle
-that might not end well for Geneva. 'I dissuaded
-them,' says he, 'and led them back to the city.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_791" id="Ref_791" href="#Foot_791">[791]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Genevans, seeing the danger with which they
-were threatened by the knights, energetically prepared
-for resistance, and solicited aid from Berne and Friburg.
-Two <i>enseignes</i>, that is, eight hundred men,
-principally from Gessenay, arrived in Geneva and were
-quartered among the inhabitants, but especially on
-the churchmen and in the convents. The duke, who
-attached great importance to the Swiss alliance, and
-feared to come into collision with their men-at-arms,
-now permitted provisions to be carried to the market
-of Geneva, and, the semblance of peace having been
-restored, the allied troops quitted the city on the 30th
-of October, 1528.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_497" id="Page_497">{497}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=THE MEETING AT NYON.=</p>
-
-<p>Pontverre's humour was not so pacific. One of the
-last representatives of feudal society, he saw that its
-elements were on the verge of dissolution, and its
-institutions about to disappear. Power, which had
-long ago passed from the towns to the country, was
-now returning from the country to the towns; Geneva,
-in particular, seemed as if it would nullify all the
-seigneurs in its neighbourhood. And, further still,
-the Church which puts forward creeds in an absolute
-manner, so that no person has the right to examine
-them, was attacked by the religious revolution beginning
-in Geneva. Pontverre desired to preserve the
-ancient order of things, and, with that object, to take
-and (if necessary) destroy that troublesome city. He
-therefore, as prior of the order, convened a general assembly
-of the knights of the Spoon at Nyon, in order
-to arrange, in concert with the duke, the requisite
-measures for capturing the city. The bailiwick of
-Ternier, the lordship of Pontverre, was situated about
-a league from Geneva, between the verdant flanks of
-the Salève and the smiling shores of the Rhone. It
-would have been easy, therefore, for that chief to
-cross the river between Berney and Peney, and thus
-get on the right bank of the lake; but he thought it
-more daring and heroic to traverse Geneva. They
-represented to him, but to no purpose, the danger to
-which he would expose himself, for if he was always
-quick to provoke the Genevans, they were equally
-quick to reply. Pontverre would listen to nothing.
-There was a treaty by which Savoyard gentlemen had
-the right of free passage through the city; and, armed
-with a sword, he feared nobody. It was in the month
-of December, when, presenting himself at daybreak
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_498" id="Page_498">{498}</a></span>
-at the Corraterie gate, Pontverre passed in; he rode
-quietly through the city, looking to the right and to
-the left at the shops which were still closed, and did
-not meet a single huguenot. On arriving at the Swiss
-gate, by which he had to leave the city, he found it
-shut. He summoned the gate-keeper, who, as it appears,
-was not yet up. The horse pawed the ground,
-the rider shouted, and the porter loitered: he ran out
-at last and lowered the chain. The impatient Pontverre
-paid him by a slap in the face, and said: 'Rascal,
-is this the way you make gentlemen wait?' He then
-added with violent oaths: 'You will not be wanted
-much longer. It will not be long before we pull down
-your gates and trample them under foot, as we have
-done before.' He then set spurs to his horse and
-galloped away. The porter, exasperated by the blow
-he had received, made his report, and the Genevans,
-who were irritable folk, became very angry about it.
-'It is not enough,' they said, 'for these Savoyards
-to do us all sorts of injury outside the walls, but they
-must come and brave us within. Wait a little! We
-will pay them off, and chastise this insolent fellow.'
-The council, while striving to restrain the people,
-ordered sentinels to be stationed everywhere.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_792" id="Ref_792" href="#Foot_792">[792]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=CONFERENCE AT NYON.=</p>
-
-<p>The gentry of the district who had taken part in the
-meeting at Bursinel, had immediately begun to canvass
-their neighbours, and a great number of persons,
-incensed against Geneva, had taken the Spoon, as in
-the time of the crusades men took the Cross. The
-second meeting, therefore, promised to be more numerously
-attended than the first. From all quarters, from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_499" id="Page_499">{499}</a></span>
-Gex and Vaud and Savoy, the knights arrived at
-Nyon, a central situation for these districts, where
-they usually held their councils of war. Climbing the
-hill, they entered the castle, from whose windows the
-lake, its shores, and the snowy Alps of Savoy were
-visible in all their magnificence. Having taken their
-places in the great hall, they began their deliberations.
-These unpolished gentlemen, descended from the chevaliers
-of the middle ages, who thought it enough to build
-a tower upon a rock and to pass their lives in crushing
-the weak and plundering the innocent, still preserved
-something of the nature of their ancestors. Pontverre,
-who was their president, had no difficulty in carrying
-them with him. Feudalism and even catholicism
-exercised great influence over him, and gave to his
-words an energy and deep conviction which it was
-hard to resist. He pointed out to these lords that the
-authority of the prince and of the pope, religious and
-monarchical order, the throne and the altar, were
-equally threatened by an insolent bourgeoisie. He
-showed them how monstrous it was that lawyers, that
-men of low birth and no merit, and that even shopkeepers
-should presume to take the place of the bishop
-and the duke. 'We must make haste,' he said, 'to
-disperse and crush the seeds of rebellion, or you will
-see them spreading far and wide.' The knights of the
-castle of Nyon were unanimous. The right of resistance
-had been the characteristic of the feudal
-system; and never had the exercise of that right been
-more necessary. One lord exercised it in the middle
-ages against another lord, his neighbour. But what
-were these isolated adversaries compared with that
-universal and invisible enemy which threatened the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_500" id="Page_500">{500}</a></span>
-old society in all its parts, and which, to be surer of
-triumph, was inaugurating a new religion? In the
-valley of the Leman, Geneva was the stronghold of
-this new and terrible adversary. 'Down with Geneva!
-Rome and Savoy for ever!' was the cry that rose from
-every heart. It was agreed that all the gentlemen
-and their followers should meet at a certain time and
-place, armed with sword and lance, in order to seize
-upon the city and put an end to its liberties.</p>
-
-<p>Pontverre, delighted at seeing the success of his
-appeal, sat silent, and appeared for a time lost in deep
-meditation. He had a subtle mind, he did not fear to
-resort to stratagem, and hoped that an assault would
-not be necessary. With the greatest secresy he had
-gained friends who occupied a house in the Corraterie,
-the back door of which opened to the outside of the
-city. It would seem that this house belonged to the
-hospital of the Pont du Rhone, situated between that
-bridge and the Mint, and placed under the patronage
-of the canons of the cathedral.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_793" id="Ref_793" href="#Foot_793">[793]</a></span>
-The council rose.
-Pontverre was particularly intimate with the Sire de
-Beaufort, governor of Chillon, one of the most valiant
-knights of the assembly. Taking him aside, and enjoining
-secresy, he said: 'We have a gate in Geneva at
-our orders. No one knows of it; but do not fear. I will
-undertake that you shall all enter.'—'Pontverre did
-indeed enter,' said Bonivard, some time after, when
-he heard of this remark; 'he went in, but he did not
-come out.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_794" id="Ref_794" href="#Foot_794">[794]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=PONTVERRE'S INSOLENCE.=</p>
-
-<p>The knights mounted their horses, and each one
-rode off to his castle to prepare for the great enterprise.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_501" id="Page_501">{501}</a></span>
-Pontverre did the same; but, always daring,
-and taking a delight in braving the people of Geneva,
-he resolved to pass through the city again. His
-friends reminded him that the citizens were now on
-their guard; that he had offended them some days
-before; that if he attempted such an imprudent act,
-he was a dead man; and that his life was necessary
-to their enterprise. It was all to no purpose. 'His
-hour was come,' says the chronicler of St. Victor,
-'and it pleased God so.'—'Fear not,' answered the
-daring soldier to his brothers in arms; 'I will pass
-through by night, and wrap my face up in my cloak,
-so that no one can recognise me. Besides, if they
-attack me, I have my sword.' One of his friends, the
-Sire de Simon, resolved to accompany him, and some
-armed attendants followed them. The knights who
-remained behind, watched him as he galloped off
-towards Geneva, and wondered anxiously what would
-happen.</p>
-
-<p>Pontverre, checking the speed of his horse, reflected
-on the work he was about to undertake. He
-thought it worthy of the name he bore, and of the
-memory of his ancestors. By lending his sword to
-the Duke of Savoy and to the pope, he would make
-absolutism in the Church and in the State triumphant
-in Geneva; at one blow he would crush in that restless
-city both independence and the Reformation.
-He reached Geneva between four and five o'clock in
-the afternoon of Saturday, the 2nd of January, 1529,
-and night had set in. Pontverre hid his face in his
-cloak, presented himself with his escort at the Pâquis
-gate, and passed through. He entered the streets.
-The commander of an army which purposed capturing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_502" id="Page_502">{502}</a></span>
-and destroying Geneva, was traversing, like an ordinary
-traveller, the city he was about to surround
-with his forces, besiege, and perhaps burn.... Such
-impudent assurance has perhaps never been witnessed
-in modern times. He was hardly inside the city,
-when, no longer able to contain himself (for pride
-and anger prevailed over discretion), he put aside
-all precaution, threw off his cloak, and, drawing
-his sword, 'uttered threats and insults out of his
-haughtiness and insolence.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_795" id="Ref_795" href="#Foot_795">[795]</a></span>
-He went even further
-than this: the streets of Geneva, and the presence of
-the detested huguenots whom he saw moving about,
-made his wrath boil over; and striking one of the
-citizens on the head with his sword, he exclaimed with
-a round oath: 'We must kill these traitors!' The
-assaulted citizen turned round, and others ran up:
-this took place in the Rue de Coutance, which has
-witnessed many other fights since then, even in
-very recent times.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_796" id="Ref_796" href="#Foot_796">[796]</a></span>
-The huguenots surrounded the
-horseman, and, recognising him, called out: 'It is
-Pontverre! it is Pontverre!' The crowd increased
-and blocked up the bridge over the Rhone, which
-the chief of the knights of the Spoon would have to
-cross.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=FIGHT ON THE BRIDGE.=</p>
-
-<p>For several days past the citizens had been talking
-in Geneva about the conference at Nyon; they said
-that these gentlemen of the Spoon were planning
-some new attack, that they were going once more to
-plunder and kill, and that this time they would probably
-try to carry fire and sword into Geneva itself.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_503" id="Page_503">{503}</a></span>
-The irritation was excessive among the people; some
-of the citizens, meeting in the public places or in
-their own houses, were talking about the gentlemen
-assembled at Nyon, and many jokes were made upon
-them. 'These gentlemen!' said one huguenot. 'Call
-them rob-men (<i>gens-pille-hommes</i>),' said a second; 'or
-kill-men (<i>gens-tue-hommes</i>),' added a third; and despite
-the serious state of affairs, they all began to laugh.
-On a sudden, here before them, in their very city, was
-the leader of the enterprise, the man who never ceased
-harassing them: he had drawn his sword and struck
-one of the citizens. The latter drew in their turn,
-and just as the bold cavalier had crossed the suburb
-of St. Gervais, and was coming upon the bridge, they
-surrounded him, and one of them struck him in the
-face. The representative of feudalism was fighting
-almost alone with the representatives of the bourgeoisie.
-The old power and the new were struggling
-on the Rhone bridge. And while the blue waters
-were flowing beneath, as they had ever done; while
-the old waters were running on to be lost in the sea,
-and the new ones were coming, loosened from the
-Alpine glaciers by the beams of the sun,—on the bridge
-above there were other ancient things passing away,
-and other new ones appearing in their place. Amid
-the flashing of swords and the shock of arms, amid
-the indignant shouts of the citizens and the oaths of
-the knight, a great transformation was going on;
-society was passing over to the system of freedom
-and abandoning the system of feudalism.</p>
-
-<p>The Sire de Pontverre, seeing the number of his
-enemies increasing, spurred his horse, dashed through
-the crowd, and reached the Corraterie gate, by which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_504" id="Page_504">{504}</a></span>
-he desired to leave the city, and which led to the
-Black Friars' monastery. But the Genevans had got
-there before him.... The gate, alas! was shut. In
-this extremity, Pontverre did not falter. Close at
-hand was the house, dependent on the hospital, the
-back gate of which led outside the city, and by which
-he designed introducing the Savoyards by night.
-Thanks to his horse, he was a little in advance of his
-pursuers; he lost not a moment, he turned back, and
-reached the house in question. To get at the door it
-was necessary to go up several steps. The Genevans
-were now rushing after him in a crowd, shouting:
-'Pontverre! Pontverre!'... The latter faced his
-enemies, and, without dismounting, backed his horse
-up the steps, at the same time using his sword against
-his pursuers. At this moment the syndic Ami
-Girard arrived; he found the Sire de Simon, and
-the other horsemen who had accompanied their chief,
-beset on all sides. The syndic begged that they
-might not be hurt; and as the horsemen surrendered
-their arms, they were lodged in a place of
-safety. Pontverre dismounted on reaching the top
-of the steps, and, hoping to escape by the door we
-have mentioned, rushed into the house. His face
-was covered with blood, for, says an eye-witness, 'he
-had a sword-cut on his nose;' his eyes were wild;
-he heard the feet of the huguenots close behind him.
-Had he no time to reach the door, or did he find it
-shut? We cannot tell. Seeing that he could not
-escape, he appears to have lost his presence of mind.
-Had he still been himself, he would no doubt have
-faced his enemies and sold his life dearly, but, for the
-first time in his life, he became frightened; he dashed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_505" id="Page_505">{505}</a></span>
-into one of the apartments, threw himself on the
-floor, and crept hastily under a bed: a child might
-have done the same. What a hiding-place for the
-most valiant knight whom the Alps and the Jura had
-seen perhaps for centuries!</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE DEATH-STRUGGLE.=</p>
-
-<p>At this moment, the Genevans who were pursuing
-him rushed into the house and began to search it;
-they entered the room where the man lay hid who had
-threatened to swallow Geneva as if it were a spoonful
-of rice. At their head was Ami Bandière, one of the
-huguenots who had been compelled to flee to Berne
-at the same time as Hugues and the leaders of the
-party—the man, it will be remembered, whose father
-and children had appeared before the council in
-1526, when it was necessary to defend the huguenots
-who had taken refuge in Switzerland. Bandière, an
-upright, determined, and violent man, an enthusiast
-for liberty, noticed the bed; he thought that the
-proud gentleman might possibly be hidden beneath
-it. 'They poked their swords underneath,' says
-Bonivard, 'and the wretched man hidden there received
-a stab.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_797" id="Ref_797" href="#Foot_797">[797]</a></span>
-This was too much: the Sire de
-Pontverre was aroused: being an active and powerful
-man, he rushed out of his hiding-place in a fury, and,
-springing to his feet, seized Bandière with his vigorous
-arms, threw him on the bed, and stabbed him in
-the thigh with a dagger. The shouts now grew
-louder. If he had surrendered no harm would have
-been done him; but Bandière's friends, excited by
-the blood of their brother, were eager to avenge him.
-They rushed upon Pontverre. Alone in the middle
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_506" id="Page_506">{506}</a></span>
-of the room, this athletic man received them boldly:
-he swung his sword round him, now striking with the
-edge, and now with the point; but a citizen, inflamed
-by anger, aimed a violent blow at him, and the captain-general
-of the knights of the Spoon fell dead. At
-this moment the syndic Ami Girard entered, exclaiming:
-'Stop! stop!' but it was too late.</p>
-
-<p>Thus died François de Ternier, lord of Pontverre,
-whose ancestors had always been enemies of Geneva,
-'and who himself had been the worst,' says one of his
-contemporaries. He fell a martyr to feudalism, say
-some; a victim to his own insolence, say others. His
-sole idea had been to ruin Geneva, to disperse its inhabitants,
-to throw down its walls; and now he lay
-dead a few yards from the place where, in 1519, he was
-present at the head of his troopers to take part in the
-murder of Berthelier, and in the very place by which
-he had arranged to enter and destroy the city by fire
-and sword.—'A memorable instance of divine justice,'
-said some of the citizens; 'a striking deliverance for
-Geneva; a terrible lesson for its enemies!' There is
-a great difference, it must be observed, between the
-martyrs of liberty and right, and those of feudalism
-and the papacy. Arbitrary power perfidiously seized
-the greatest citizens, the Bertheliers and Lévriers, in
-the midst of an inoffensive life, and put them to death
-by the vile hand of the common headsman, after a
-sham trial, which was a disgraceful mockery of justice;
-but it was only when provoked by the champions
-of feudalism, and at the risk of their own lives,
-that the men of liberty struck their adversaries. Pontverre
-died in a contest in which he had been the first
-to draw the sword.</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_507" id="Page_507">{507}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=HONOURS TO THE DEAD.=</p>
-
-<p>As the Genevans wished to show every mark of respect
-to their dead enemy, the council ordered that he
-should be buried with the usual rites by the Franciscans
-in a chapel of the convent of Rive, which had
-been founded by his family, and where some of his
-ancestors had been laid. After this ceremony had taken
-place according to the forms of the Roman ritual, an
-inquest was made into the cause of this tragical death,
-'to do justice therein, if there should be need.' All
-the cool-headed people in Geneva were seriously
-grieved: 'Alas!' said they, 'what a pity that he
-would not live in peace, for he was a virtuous cavalier,
-except that he was so pugnacious! It would
-have been better to make him prisoner; it would have
-been the means of obtaining a perpetual treaty!' The
-officers of justice found letters on his person which
-had reference to the plot hatched against Geneva, and
-in which the knights of the Spoon were ordered to
-assemble 'with swords and spears' against the city.
-It was made evident that he had been the chief of the
-bands which pillaged and killed without mercy the
-citizens and inhabitants of the country, and that he
-was to blame, having first wounded Bandière: the
-magistrates, therefore, came to the conclusion that
-there were no grounds for bringing any one to trial.
-The Sire de Simon and the other companions of the
-famous captain were conducted uninjured to the frontier
-of Savoy.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_798" id="Ref_798" href="#Foot_798">[798]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_508" id="Page_508">{508}</a></div>
-
-<p>One would have thought that, as the head of the
-league against Geneva had fallen, the league itself
-would have been weakened; but, on the contrary,
-Pontverre's death added fuel to the rage of the
-brethren of the Spoon. Disorder and violence increased
-around the city, and the very next day, Sunday,
-the 3rd of January, the gentry, wishing to avenge
-their chief, kept the field everywhere. 'We will kill all
-the Genevans we can find,' said they.—'They fell upon
-the first they met, committing violence and murder.'
-It seemed as if Pontverre's soul had revived, and was
-impelling his former colleagues to offer sacrifices without
-number to his shade. An early attack was expected;
-the alarm spread through Geneva, and the
-council met. 'François de Ternier's death,' said one
-of the members, 'has thrown oil upon the fire instead
-of extinguishing it. Alone, we cannot resist the attack
-of Savoy and of the knights. Let us make haste to
-inform Berne and Friburg.'—'It is impossible,' said
-another councillor; 'all the gentlemen of Vaud are in
-arms; no one can cross the province. Our envoys
-would be stopped at Versoy, Coppet, Nyon, and Rolle;
-and whoever is taken will be put to death to avenge
-the fall of the illustrious chief.'</p>
-
-<p>But a free people always finds citizens ready to
-sacrifice themselves. Two men stood up: they were
-two of the bravest huguenots, Jean Lullin and Robert
-Vandel. 'We will go,' they said. They embraced their
-relatives, and got into a boat, hoping to reach some
-place on the lake where they could land without danger.
-But they had hardly left the shore when they were
-recognised and pursued by some of the enemies' boats,
-well manned and armed. As soon as the two Genevans
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_509" id="Page_509">{509}</a></span>
-observed them, they saw their danger, and, catching
-up the spare oars, assisted the boatmen with their
-vigorous arms, and rowed off as fast as they could.
-They kept gaining on the Savoyard boats; they passed
-unmolested within sight of several harbours occupied
-by their enemies, and at last reached Ouchy, dripping
-with perspiration. The people of Lausanne, who were
-well disposed towards the Genevans, assisted them.
-They got to Friburg, 'by subtle means,' probably in
-disguise, and told their old friends of the increasing
-dangers to which the city was exposed, especially
-since the death of Pontverre.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_799" id="Ref_799" href="#Foot_799">[799]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE SIRE DE VIRY.=</p>
-
-<p>The place of the latter was now filled by the Sire
-de Viry, whose castle, like Pontverre's, was situated
-between Mont Salève and the lake (between Chancy
-and Léluiset), and whose family had always supplied
-Savoy with fanatical partisans. Viry was furious at
-the escape of Lullin and Vandel; and, accordingly, on
-the next day, the servants of these two Genevans,
-who had been ordered to take their masters' horses to
-Lausanne, having passed through Coppet, were thrown
-into prison by his orders. He did not stop at this.
-'The gentlemen assaulted every Genevan they met
-with their daggers and battle-axes, striking them on
-the loins, the shoulders, and other parts, and many
-died thereof.'—'All the territory of Monseigneur of
-Savoy is in arms,' said people at Geneva in the beginning
-of March 1529, 'and no one can leave the city
-except at great risk.'</p>
-
-<p>The ducal party, desirous of defying the Genevans
-in every way, resolved to send them, not a written but
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_510" id="Page_510">{510}</a></span>
-a living message, which would show them the fate
-that awaited them. On the 14th of March, the people
-who were leaving the church of Our Lady of Grace,
-saw a strange figure coming over the bridge of Arve.
-He had at his back a wooden plank reaching from his
-feet to above his head, to which he was fastened; while
-his outstretched arms were tied to a cross piece which
-was placed on a level with his shoulders. The gentlemen
-had thought it a pretty jest to crucify a Genevan,
-without doing him any great injury, and they left his
-feet at liberty, so that he could return home thus
-singularly arrayed. 'What is that?' asked the people,
-stopping at the foot of the bridge. They thought they
-recognised an inhabitant of the city. 'They have
-made a cross of him front and back,' said the spectators.
-The man came over the bridge, approached his
-fellow-citizens, and told them his story. 'I had gone
-to the village of Troinex on business, when the enemy
-caught me, trussed me up in this manner, and compelled
-me to return in this condition to Geneva.' The
-people hardly knew whether to laugh or be angry;
-however, they unbound their crucified fellow-citizen,
-and all returned together to the city.</p>
-
-<p>This was only a little joke of the young ones among
-the knights; the Sire de Viry and his colleagues had
-more serious thoughts. The attack upon Geneva, resolved
-upon at the castle of Nyon, was to be put into
-execution. The lords issued with their armed retainers
-from all the castles in the great valley, and on
-the 24th of March some peasants from the banks of
-the Arve came and told the syndics that there was a
-great concourse of gentlemen and soldiers at Gaillard;
-that these armed men intended on the following night
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_511" id="Page_511">{511}</a></span>
-to secretly scale the walls of the city, and that there
-was a strong guard upon all the roads to detain everybody
-who ventured out of Geneva. At that time the
-whole garrison consisted but of fifty soldiers, 'keeping
-watch and ward by turns,' as Bonivard informs
-us. How was it possible to resist with such a few
-men? Yet two powers kept the walls: the energy of
-the citizens and the providence of God.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE DAY OF THE LADDERS.=</p>
-
-<p>At midnight on Holy Thursday (25th of March),
-the knights of the Spoon, with about four thousand
-Savoyard troops and the fugitive mamelukes, moved
-forward as secretly as possible to take Geneva by
-surprise. The citizens, accustomed to false alarms,
-had not paid much attention to the warning they had
-received. At the head of the band that was to lead
-the assault were a certain number of men carrying long
-ladders which had been made at Chillon. The men-at-arms
-who followed them wore white shirts over
-their armour in order to be recognised in the darkness;
-they had even sent to their friends in Geneva
-certain tokens which the latter were to fasten to the
-ends of their spears in order that the assailants might
-know them in the confusion. The city clocks had
-struck two when a few Savoyards arrived at the foot
-of the wall: not a sound was heard, the night was dark,
-and everything promised complete success. Meanwhile
-the main body had halted a quarter of a league
-from the city, and hesitated to make the attack.
-Pontverre was no longer among them, and Viry had
-not inherited his influence. 'At the moment of execution,
-a spirit of fear fell upon the Savoyards,' says a
-chronicler; 'God took away their courage, so that they
-were not able to come near.'—'We are not strong
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_512" id="Page_512">{512}</a></span>
-enough to carry out our enterprise,' said one.—'If we
-fail,' said another, 'Messieurs of the Swiss League will
-not fail us.' They consequently withdrew, and, in
-order to conceal their disgrace, said that the duke or
-the bishop had forbidden them to advance. Might not
-the duke, influenced by the cantons, have really given
-them the order to retreat at the last moment? That
-alone appears to explain this retrograde movement.
-However, the Genevans ascribed their deliverance to a
-higher cause; they entered on the registers of the
-council the following simple words which we copy:
-'The gentlemen (<i>gentils</i>) had undertaken to attack the
-city, <i>which God has preserved hitherto</i>.' The 25th of
-March was called <i>the day of the ladders</i>.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_800" id="Ref_800" href="#Foot_800">[800]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_791" id="Foot_791" href="#Ref_791">[791]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 507. Gautier MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_792" id="Foot_792" href="#Ref_792">[792]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 517.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_793" id="Foot_793" href="#Ref_793">[793]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Mém. d'Archéologie</i>, iii. p. 201.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_794" id="Foot_794" href="#Ref_794">[794]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 522.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_795" id="Foot_795" href="#Ref_795">[795]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Balard.</i> <i>Mém. d'Archéologie</i>, x. p. 189.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_796" id="Foot_796" href="#Ref_796">[796]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-July and December 1862, between radicals and liberals.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_797" id="Foot_797" href="#Ref_797">[797]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'A belles épées nues on fourgonna dessous, et le malheureux qui y
-était caché reçut un coup d'estoc.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_798" id="Foot_798" href="#Ref_798">[798]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil <i>ad annum</i>. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. pp. 520-525.
-Spon, <i>Hist. de Genève</i>, i. p. 425. Savyon MS. Balard, <i>Mém. d'Archéologie</i>,
-x. p. 189. <i>Le Levain du Calvinisme ou Commencement de l'Hérésie
-de Genève</i>, par Révérende Sœur Jeanne de Jussie, publié en 1853, par
-M. G. Revilliod, p. 11.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_799" id="Foot_799" href="#Ref_799">[799]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 2, 3 et 6 janvier 1529. <i>Journal de Balard</i>,
-p. 189. Spon, <i>Hist. de Genève</i>, ii. pp. 422-426. Gautier MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_800" id="Foot_800" href="#Ref_800">[800]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil du 25 mars 1529. <i>Journal de Balard</i>, pp. 216,
-219, 221, 222. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 533. La Sœur de Jussie, p. 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_513" id="Page_513">{513}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER IX.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE REFORMATION BEGINS TO FERMENT IN GENEVA, AND THE
- OPPOSITION WITHOUT.<br />
- (<span class="smc">April 1529 to January 1530.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=SUPERSTITIONS IN GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHILE the men of the old times were taking
-fright and retreating, the men of the new
-times were taking courage and advancing. They
-sat down at the firesides of the burgesses of Geneva,
-and, leading the way to religious conversation, gradually
-scattered new ideas in the city and new seed
-in men's hearts. Of these <i>Lutherans</i>, as they were
-called, some were Genevans, others Bernese; and the
-witty Bonivard occasionally joined in this familiar
-talk. Some of them, truly pious men, told their listeners
-that they ought to look for salvation to the
-cross alone, and that, just as the sun transforms the
-earth and causes it to produce fruit, so the light of
-the Gospel would transform their hearts and lead
-them to perform new works. Others, who were
-sarcastic and simply negative men, confined themselves
-to pointing out the abuses of Rome and of its
-clergy. They said openly what hitherto they had
-dared to utter only in secret. If they saw a cordelier
-passing, with ruddy face, long beard, brown frock,
-and disgusting aspect, they pointed at him and said:
-'These monks creep not only into the consciences of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_514" id="Page_514">{514}</a></span>
-the citizens, but into their houses, and defile the city
-by their scandals and adultery.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_801" id="Ref_801" href="#Foot_801">[801]</a></span>
-Our grated windows
-and bolted doors can hardly keep out their unbridled
-vices, and protect the chastity of our wives and
-daughters.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_802" id="Ref_802" href="#Foot_802">[802]</a></span>
-God has given them up to the lusts of
-their hearts.'</p>
-
-<p>Such conversations as these were continually taking
-place among the Genevans and the Bernese during
-the interval between the reformation of Berne and
-that of Geneva. When a Genevan invited a Switzer
-to his house, the former would volunteer, after dinner,
-to show his guest the curiosities of the city. 'We
-will first go and have a look at the church of St.
-Pierre,' said he. 'See what a fine cathedral it is;
-admire these pillars, these arches, that vaulted roof;
-but there are other things besides. Here is a shrine
-containing an invaluable treasure—the arm of St.
-Anthony.... On holidays it is brought out for the
-adoration of the people, who kiss the relic with holy
-reverence. But,' added the Genevan, in a whisper
-to his companion, 'this arm some people affirm to be
-only one of the members of a stag. Come with me to
-the high altar; you see the box in which the brains of
-St. Peter are preserved!... To doubt this is a frightful
-heresy, and not to adore them abominable impiety;
-but ... between you and me ... these brains of the
-apostle are only pumice-stone.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_803" id="Ref_803" href="#Foot_803">[803]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=MONKISH TRICKS.=</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes Swiss and Genevans crossed the river
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_515" id="Page_515">{515}</a></span>
-and climbed the street leading to the ancient church
-of St. Gervais. 'What are those old women about,
-putting their ears to that hole?' asked one of them.
-A number of priests and women had collected there.
-'The bodies of St. Gervais, St. Nazaire, St. Celsus,
-and St. Pantaleon are buried under this altar,' said
-the priests to the women. 'These holy bodies desire
-to quit their vault; come and listen at this hole, and
-you will hear them.' The simple women approached,
-and heard a noise like that of men talking together.
-'We can hear them,' they said.—'Alas!' continued
-the priests, 'in order to raise the body of a saint, we
-require bishops, ceremonies, silver utensils, and we
-have nothing!' As they wished to deliver these holy
-personages, these good women immediately cast their
-offerings into the church box ... and the priests
-gathered them up. 'Do you know,' said a huguenot,
-'incredulous people affirm that the noise which proceeds,
-as the priests say, from the conversation of
-St. Pantaleon and his friends, is caused by certain
-pipes, cleverly arranged, which, immediately the hole
-is opened and the air flows in, give out the sounds
-that are heard?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_804" id="Ref_804" href="#Foot_804">[804]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>'Have you ever seen souls out of purgatory?
-Nothing is easier at Geneva,' said a huguenot after
-supper. 'It is quite dark; let us go to the cemetery,
-and I will show them to you.... Here we are.... Do
-you see those little flames creeping slowly here and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_516" id="Page_516">{516}</a></span>
-there among the scattered bones?... They are souls
-(the priests tell us) which, having left their place of
-anguish, crawl slowly about the cemetery at night,
-and entreat their relatives to pay the priests for
-masses and prayers to free them from purgatorial
-fires.... Wait a little ... there is one coming near
-us ... I will deliver it.' He stooped, and, picking
-it up, showed it to his companions: 'Ha! ha! upon
-my word, these souls are curiously made ... they
-are crabs, and the priests have fastened little wax
-tapers to their backs.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_805" id="Ref_805" href="#Foot_805">[805]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>'That is one of the tricks of our clergy,' said a
-learned huguenot. (Bonivard often took part in these
-conversations.) 'They are buffoons in their repasts,
-fools in all difficult discussions, snails in work, harpies
-in exaction, leopards in friendship, bulls in pride,
-minotaurs in devouring, and foxes in cunning.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_806" id="Ref_806" href="#Foot_806">[806]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Genevans went further still. One day—it was
-Tuesday, the 4th of January, 1530—when several
-huguenots had met together, and the relics and
-impositions of the priests had formed the subject of
-conversation, some of them, living in St. Gervais,
-indignant at the frauds of the clergy, who metamorphosed
-the bodies of saints into mines of gold,
-determined to protest against these abuses. They
-went out of the house in a body, marched up and down
-the different streets, and, stopping at certain places,
-assembled the people in the usual manner, when, surrounded
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_517" id="Page_517">{517}</a></span>
-by a large crowd, they held (says the council
-register) 'an auction of an unusual sort, by way of
-derision.' Perhaps they offered the bodies to the
-highest bidder; but, in any case, they themselves were
-sent to prison.</p>
-
-<p>This scene had greatly amused the inhabitants of
-the suburb. Old superstitions were giving way in
-Geneva and falling to the ground amid the applause
-of the people. The huguenots claimed the right of
-free inquiry, and desired that the human understanding
-should have some authority in the world. These
-experiments of liberty, which alarmed the Church,
-delighted the citizens. The inhabitants of St. Gervais,
-animated with generous sentiments, went in great
-numbers to the hôtel-de-ville. 'We desire that the
-prisoners be set at liberty,' said they to the syndics,
-'and we offer to be bail for them.' The magistrates
-still clung to the old order of things.—'I ought to
-reprimand you severely for your disorders,' said the
-premier syndic. 'We will have no tumult or sedition
-here. Let the relatives of the prisoners come before
-the council to-morrow, and we will hear them.' On
-the 9th of January, the Two-Hundred resolved to
-pardon the prisoners, and to tell them that this folly,
-if they ever committed another like it, should count
-double against them.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_807" id="Ref_807" href="#Foot_807">[807]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=A NEGATIVE REFORM.=</p>
-
-<p>The beginning of the Reformation at Geneva had a
-negative character. Men everywhere in the sixteenth
-century felt the need of thinking and judging....
-The Genevans, more than others, wished to reform
-the abuses which successive usurpations had introduced
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_518" id="Page_518">{518}</a></span>
-into the State: how could they fail to demand
-a reform of the abuses introduced into the Church?
-Not only isolated grievances and local annoyances,
-but popery itself, would be struck down by a reform.
-This course, natural as it seemed, was not the best,
-however. The external, that is to say, government,
-rites, and ceremonies, are not essentials in christianity;
-but the internal, namely, faith in the teaching of the
-Word of God, change of heart, and a new life—these
-are essential. When we wish to reform a vicious man,
-it is not enough to take off his filthy clothes and
-wash the dirt from his face: his will must be transformed.
-At Wittemberg the Reformation began in
-the person of Luther with the internal; at Geneva it
-began in the huguenots with the external. This
-would have been a great disadvantage, if religion at
-Geneva had not become, under the influence of Calvin,
-as internal as in Germany. The Genevese reform
-would have perished if it had preserved the character
-it assumed at first. But the tendency we have
-pointed out was a useful preparation for that change
-which realises the grand announcement of Christ:
-'<i>The kingdom of God is within you</i>.'</p>
-
-<p>The bishop, who was still in Burgundy, desired
-neither internal nor external reform. He was alarmed
-at what was taking place at Geneva, and, finding
-himself unable alone to check the torrent which
-threatened to sweep away both mitre and principality,
-he complained to the duke, the emperor, and
-even the syndics. On the 8th of August, a messenger
-from the prelate appeared before the council, and
-ordered them, in his name, 'to desist from what they
-had begun, and to send ambassadors to Charles V., who
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_519" id="Page_519">{519}</a></span>
-would put everything to rights.' In October, the
-bishop, annoyed that they paid no attention to his
-complaints, made fresh demands, in a severe and
-threatening tone. He gave them to understand that
-he would destroy Geneva rather than permit any
-abuses to be reformed. His letters were read in the
-council, and their contents communicated to the
-people. Threatened with the anger of the duke, the
-pope, and the emperor, and reduced to the greatest
-weakness, what would they do? 'Geneva,' they said,
-'is in danger of being destroyed.... But God watches
-over us.... Better have war and liberty than peace
-and servitude. We do not put our trust in princes,
-and to God alone be the honour and glory.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_808" id="Ref_808" href="#Foot_808">[808]</a></span>
-With such confidence nations never perish.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE GENEVANS TRUST IN GOD.=</p>
-
-<p>Geneva required it much. Her enemies said that
-violent revolutions were at the gate; that they had
-begun in Saxony, where at least they had not touched
-the political authority; while, on the contrary, in this
-city of the Alps, civil revolution was advancing side by
-side with religious revolution. The Swiss were beginning
-to be tired of a city so weak and yet so obstinate,
-which had not strength to defend itself and too much
-pride to submit. Excited and influenced by the
-Duke of Savoy, they determined to propose a revocation
-of the alliance. This news spread consternation
-through the city. 'Alas!' said the huguenots, 'if the
-sheep give up the dogs, the wolves will soon scatter
-them;' and, without waiting to receive notice of this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_520" id="Page_520">{520}</a></span>
-fatal determination, the patriots stretched out their
-hands towards that Switzerland from which the duke
-wished to separate them, and exclaimed: 'We will
-die sooner!'... But, at the same time, the few
-mamelukes who still remained in the city, thinking
-that the end was at hand, made haste to join the ducal
-army.</p>
-
-<p>The end seemed to be really approaching. On the
-1st of May, an imposing embassy from the five cantons
-of Zurich, Basle, Soleure, Berne, and Friburg, arrived
-at Geneva, and was soon followed by delegates from
-Savoy. The Genevans saw with astonishment the
-Swiss and the Savoyards walking together in the
-streets, lavishing marks of courtesy on each other, and
-looking at the huguenots with a haughty air. What!
-the descendants of William Tell shaking hands with
-their oppressors! The thoughts of the citizens became
-confused: they asked each other if there could be
-any fellowship between liberty and despotism.... They
-were forced to drain the cup to the dregs. On the
-22nd of May the embassy appeared before the council.
-Their spokesman was Sebastian de Diesbach, a haughty
-Bernese, eminent magistrate, distinguished diplomatist,
-and celebrated soldier. He refused to call the
-Genevans his co-burghers, bluntly demanded the
-revocation of the alliance, and proposed a peace which
-would have sacrificed the independence of the citizens
-to the duke. At the same time he gave them to know
-that the Swiss were not singular in their opinion,
-and that the great powers of Europe were making a
-general arrangement. In truth, Francis I., changing
-his policy, supported the demands of his uncle the
-duke, and declared that, in case of refusal, he would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_521" id="Page_521">{521}</a></span>
-unite the armies of France with those of Savoy.
-Charles V. was quite ready to repay himself for his
-inability to destroy the protestants of Germany, by
-indulging in the pleasure of crushing this haughty
-little city. Even the King of Hungary sent an ambassador
-to Geneva in the Savoy interest. Would
-this little corner of the world presume to remain
-free when Europe was resolved to crush it under its
-iron heel?<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_809" id="Ref_809" href="#Foot_809">[809]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>While the powerful princes around Geneva were
-oscillating between two opinions—so that at times it
-was hard to say whether Charles was for the pope or
-against him, and whether Francis was for the protestants
-or against them—the Genevans, those men
-of iron, had but one idea, liberty ... liberty both in
-State and Church. The huguenots showed themselves
-determined, and kept a bold front in the presence
-of the ambassadors. 'Take care, gentlemen,' said De
-Lussey, De Mezere, and others; 'we shall first exercise
-strict justice against the city, and, if that is not sufficient,
-strict war; while, if you restore to the duke his
-old privileges, he will forgive everything, and guarantee
-your liberties.'—'Yes,' added the Swiss, 'under
-a penalty of ten thousand crowns if he does the
-contrary.' ... But, 'marvellous sight,' says a contemporary,
-'the more the ambassadors threatened and
-frightened, the more the Genevans stood firm and
-constant, and exclaimed: "We will die sooner!"'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=SWISS PROPOSE TO BREAK THE ALLIANCE.=</p>
-
-<p>On the 23rd of May the Sire de Diesbach proposed
-the revocation of the alliance to the Council of Two
-Hundred; and on the following day, the council-general
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_522" id="Page_522">{522}</a></span>
-having been summoned, the premier syndic,
-without losing time in endless explanations, plainly
-answered the deputies of the cantons: 'Most honoured
-lords, as the alliance with the League was not concluded
-hastily (<i>à la chaude</i>), we hope in God and in
-the oath you made to us that it will never be broken.
-As for us, we are determined to keep ours.' The
-magistrate then turned towards the people and said:
-'I propose that whosoever speaks of annulling the
-alliance with the Swiss shall have his head cut off
-without mercy, and that whosoever gets information
-of any intrigue going on against the alliance, and does
-not reveal it, shall receive the strappado thrice.' The
-general council carried this resolution unanimously.</p>
-
-<p>Diesbach and his colleagues were confounded, and
-looked at one another with astonishment. 'Did not
-Monsieur of Savoy assure us,' they said, 'that, except
-some twenty-five or thirty citizens, all the people were
-favourable to him?'—'And I too know,' said a
-stranger, whose name has not been handed down to
-us, 'that if the alliance had been broken, the duke
-would have entered Geneva and put thirty-two citizens
-to death.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_810" id="Ref_810" href="#Foot_810">[810]</a></span>
-'Come with us,' said the most respected
-men in Geneva; and, laying their charters
-before the ambassadors, they proved by these documents
-that they were free to contract an alliance with
-the cantons. The delegates from Berne, Friburg,
-Zurich, Basle, and Soleure ordered their horses to be
-got ready. Some huguenots assembled in the street,
-and shouted out, just as the Bernese lords were getting
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_523" id="Page_523">{523}</a></span>
-into their saddles: 'We would sooner destroy the city,
-sooner sacrifice our wives, our children, and ourselves,
-than consent to revoke the alliance.' When Diesbach
-made a report of his mission at Berne, he found means
-to gloss over his defeat a little: 'There were a thousand
-people at the general council,' he said with some
-exaggeration; 'only <i>one</i> person [he meant the president]
-protested against the rupture of the alliance;
-upon which <i>all the rest joined in with him</i>!'... Did
-he not know that it was quite regular for a proposition
-to be made by <i>one</i> person, and to be carried by a
-whole nation?<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_811" id="Ref_811" href="#Foot_811">[811]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=FIRMNESS OF THE GENEVANS.=</p>
-
-<p>A new spirit, unknown to their ancestors, now
-began to animate many of the Genevans. Ab Hofen's
-mission had not been without effect. Besides a goodly
-number of persons, who were called indeed 'by the
-name of Luther,' but whose sole idea of reform was not
-to fast in Lent and not to cross themselves during divine
-worship, there were others who desired to receive the
-Word of God and to follow it. The Romish clergy
-understood this well. 'If these Genevans cling so
-much to the Swiss,' said the priests at their meetings,
-'it is in order that they may profess <i>heresy</i> freely. If
-they succeed, we shall perhaps see Savoy, Aosta, and
-other countries of Italy reforming themselves likewise.'</p>
-
-<p>The duke, being determined to extinguish these
-threatening flames, resolved to claim the influence of
-the pope, with his treasures and even his soldiers; for
-the <i>vicar</i> of Him who forbade the sword to be drawn
-possesses an army. Besides, Clement VII. was one of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_524" id="Page_524">{524}</a></span>
-the cleverest politicians of the age, and his advice
-might be useful. As Pietro Gazzini, Bishop of Aosta,
-was then at Rome, the court of Turin commissioned
-that zealous ultramontanist to inform the pope of what
-was going on at Geneva. Gazzini begged an audience
-of Clement, and having been introduced by the master
-of the ceremonies on the 11th of July, 1529, he
-approached the pope, who was seated on the throne,
-and, kneeling down, kissed his feet. When he arose,
-he described all the acts committed by the Lutherans
-at Geneva and in the <i>valleys of Savoy</i>. 'O holy
-father,' said he, 'the dangers of the Church are imminent,
-and we are filled with the liveliest fears. It is
-from Upper Burgundy and the country of Neufchatel
-that this accursed sect has come to Geneva. And
-now, alas! what mischief it has done there!...
-Already the bishop dares not remain in his diocese;
-already Lent is abolished, and the heretics eat meat
-every day; and, worse still, they read forbidden books
-(the New Testament), and the Genevans set such
-store by them that they refuse to give them up, even
-for money. These miserable heretics are doing extreme
-mischief, and not at Geneva only; Aosta and
-Savoy would have been perverted long since, had not
-his highness beheaded twelve gentlemen who were
-propagating these dangerous doctrines. But this
-wholesome severity is not enough to stop the evil.
-Although his highness has forbidden, under pain of
-death, any one to speak of this sect and its abominable
-dogmas, there is no lack of <i>wicked babblers</i> who go
-about circulating these accursed doctrines all over his
-territories. They say that his highness is not their
-king; and, making a pretence of the great expenses of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_525" id="Page_525">{525}</a></span>
-the war, they vehemently call upon us to sell the
-little ecclesiastical property we possess.... The duke,
-my lord and master, is everywhere destroying this
-sect. <i>He is the barrier that closes Italy against it</i>, and
-in this way he renders your holiness the most signal
-service; but we need your help.' Gazzini closed his
-address with a demand for a subsidy.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=BISHOP OF AOSTA AND THE POPE.=</p>
-
-<p>Clement had listened with great attention; he
-understood the mischief and the danger which the
-Bishop of Aosta had pointed out, and the dignitaries
-and other priests around him seemed still more
-affected. Thoroughly versed in philosophical and
-theological questions, endowed with a perspicacity that
-penetrated to the very heart of the most difficult
-matters, the pope saw how great the danger would be
-if <i>heresy</i> should find in the south, at Geneva, a centre
-that might become far more <i>pernicious</i> than even
-Wittemberg; he felt also the necessity of having a
-prince, a zealous catholic, to guard the French and
-Italian slopes of the Alps. This pontiff, perhaps the
-most unlucky of all the popes, saw the Reformation
-spreading under his eyes over Europe without having
-the power to stop it, and whatever he did to oppose
-it served but to propagate it more widely still. Now,
-however, he met with a sympathising heart. He wished
-to prevent Geneva from being reformed, and to save a
-fortress from being delivered up to the enemy; while
-a powerful prince offered to carry out the necessary
-measures. Clement therefore received Gazzini's overtures
-very graciously; and yet he was ill at ease. In
-the Piedmontese ambassador's speech there was a
-word, one word only, that embarrassed him—the subsidy:
-in fact, he had not recovered from the sack of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_526" id="Page_526">{526}</a></span>
-Rome. Clement VII. replied: 'I look upon his
-highness as my dearest son, and I thank him for his
-zeal; but as for money, it is impossible for me to give
-him any, considering the emptiness of the treasury.'
-Then, appealing to the wants of the Church and the
-duty of princes, who ought to be ready to sacrifice for
-it their wealth, their subjects, and their lives, the pope
-added: '<i>I pray the duke to keep his eye particularly
-upon Geneva. That city is becoming far too Lutheran,
-and it must be put down at any risk.</i>'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_812" id="Ref_812" href="#Foot_812">[812]</a></span>
-Gazzini, having
-been attended to the gates of the palace by the
-pontifical officers, regretted his failure in the matter
-of the subsidy. His chief object, however, had been
-attained: the papacy was warned; it would watch
-Geneva as a general watches the enemy.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=INTERFERENCE OF THE EMPEROR.=</p>
-
-<p>As the pope was won, it next became necessary to
-influence the emperor. That was an easier task for
-the duke, as Charles V. was his brother-in-law, and
-the empress and the Duchess of Savoy, who were
-sisters, and strongly attached to Rome, could write
-to each other on the subject. The protest drawn up
-at Spires by the evangelical princes, in April 1529,
-had irritated that monarch exceedingly; and he
-therefore prepared, in accordance with the oath he
-had sworn at Barcelona, to apply 'a suitable antidote
-against the pestilent malady under which christendom
-was suffering.' When Geneva was mentioned to him,
-his first thought was that it was a long way off; yet,
-as it was an imperial city, he determined to include
-it in the plan of his campaign, and resolved immediately
-to take a preliminary step to restore it to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_527" id="Page_527">{527}</a></span>
-papacy. On the 16th of July, 1529, the emperor
-dictated to his secretary the following letter, addressed
-to the syndics of Geneva:—</p>
-
-<div class="top">
-<div class="left1">'<span class="smc">Faithful Friends</span>,</div>
-</div>
-
-<p style="text-indent:2em">'We have been informed that several preachers
-hold private and public meetings in your city and in
-the frontier countries, that they propagate the errors
-of Luther, and that you tolerate these proceedings.
-These practices cause the Church most serious damage,
-and the pontifical majesty, as well as the imperial
-dignity, is grievously insulted by your conduct.
-Wherefore we order you to arrest the said preachers,
-and punish them according to the tenor of the severest
-edicts. By this means you will extirpate impiety
-from your country, and will do an act agreeable to
-God and conformable to our express will.</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right1">'<span class="smc">Carolus</span>, Imp.'<span
- class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_813" id="Ref_813"
- href="#Foot_813">[813]</a></span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This letter, which savoured so strongly of the
-absolute monarch, excited much astonishment in
-Geneva. The citizens did not deny that the emperor
-might claim a certain authority over them, since
-theirs was an imperial city. They have resisted the
-bishop-prince, they have resisted the duke: will they
-also resist this powerful sovereign? His demand was
-clear, and some of them said that to oppose so great a
-prince would be the height of madness, in a little city
-of merchants. But the Genevans did not hesitate,
-and, without any bravado, returned the emperor this
-simple message: 'Sire, we intend to live, as in past
-times, according to God and the law of Jesus Christ.'</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_528" id="Page_528">{528}</a></div>
-
-<p>Upon this, Charles promised to assist the duke with
-an armed force. The pope, too, changed his mind,
-in spite of his refusal to Gazzini, and found <i>in the
-emptiness of his treasury</i> a subsidy of four thousand
-Spanish livres. The two mightiest personages in
-christendom united against this little city their influence,
-their excommunications, their cunning, their
-wealth, and their soldiers; and everything was got
-ready for the meditated attack.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_801" id="Foot_801" href="#Ref_801">[801]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Et in domos et toros grassabantur.'—<i>Geneva Restituda</i>, p. 21.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_802" id="Foot_802" href="#Ref_802">[802]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Vix ac ne vix tot admissariorum prurentium ardores arceri
-poterant.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_803" id="Foot_803" href="#Ref_803">[803]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Pro cerebro Petri pumex repertus.'—Ibid. See also Calvin's
-<i>Inventaire des Reliques</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_804" id="Foot_804" href="#Ref_804">[804]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Reperti tubi, tanta arte inter se commissi, ut excitatum ab
-adstantibus sonum statim exciperent.'—<i>Geneva Restituta</i>, p. 26. Registres
-du Conseil du 8 décembre 1535. Froment, <i>Actes et Gestes merveilleux
-de la Cité de Genève nouvellement convertie à l'Evangile</i>, publiés par M. G.
-Revilliod, p. 49.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_805" id="Foot_805" href="#Ref_805">[805]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Sed his spectris, propius vestigatis, animæ crustosæ et testaceæ
-deprehensæ ... ellychniis succensis dorsorum crustæ alligatis.'—<i>Geneva
-Restituta</i>, p. 27. Froment, <i>Actes et Gestes de Genève</i>, p. 150.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_806" id="Foot_806" href="#Ref_806">[806]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In exactionibus harpias, ad superbiendum tauros, ad consumendum
-minotauros.'—<i>Geneva Restituta</i>, p. 28.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_807" id="Foot_807" href="#Ref_807">[807]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Leur serait comptée pour deux.'—Registres du Conseil des 4 et 9
-janvier 1530.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_808" id="Foot_808" href="#Ref_808">[808]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Melius est bellum cum libertate quam pacifica servitus. Nolite
-confidere in principibus; soli Deo honor et gloria!'—<i>Journal de Balard</i>,
-pp. 226, 264, 267. Registres du Conseil des 17 avril, 8 août, 17 octobre,
-14 novembre, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_809" id="Foot_809" href="#Ref_809">[809]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil de Genève du 23 mai 1529. <i>Journal de Balard</i>,
-p. 229.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_810" id="Foot_810" href="#Ref_810">[810]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 23 et 24 mai 1529. <i>Journal de Balard</i>, pp.
-331-336. Gautier MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_811" id="Foot_811" href="#Ref_811">[811]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 23 et 24 mai 1529. <i>Journal de Balard</i>,
-pp. 331-336. Gautier MS. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 535. Galiffe fils,
-<i>Besançon Hugues</i>, p. 364.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_812" id="Foot_812" href="#Ref_812">[812]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Archives de Turin, Correspondance romaine; Dépêches du 12 juillet
-1529 et du 23 décembre 1530. Gaberel, <i>Pièces Justificatives</i>, p. 31.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_813" id="Foot_813" href="#Ref_813">[813]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Archives de Turin, première catégorie, p. 11, nᵒ 63. Gaberel, i.
-p. 101.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_529" id="Page_529">{529}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER X.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">VARIOUS MOVEMENTS IN GENEVA, AND BONIVARD CARRIED
- PRISONER TO CHILLON.<br />
- (<span class="smc">March to May 1530.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=THE FISCAL'S COMPLAINTS.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE courage of the defenders of catholicism in
-Geneva was revived by the news they received
-from without; and the emperor, the pope, and the
-duke declaring themselves ready to do their duty, the
-episcopal officers prepared to do theirs also. But one
-circumstance might paralyse all their efforts: 'God,
-of his goodness, began at this time,' says a manuscript,
-'to implant a knowledge of the truth, of his holy
-Gospel, and of the Reformation in the hearts of some
-individuals in Geneva, by the intercourse they had with
-the people of Berne.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_814" id="Ref_814" href="#Foot_814">[814]</a></span>
-These huguenots boldly professed
-the protestant ideas they had imbibed, and,
-though possessing no very enlightened faith, felt a
-pleasure in attacking with sarcasm and ridicule the
-priests and their followers. Curés and friars waited
-every day upon the episcopal vicar, and complained
-bitterly of these <i>Lutherans</i>, as they called them, who,
-in their own houses, or in the public places, and even
-in the churches, as they walked up and down the aisles,
-spoke aloud of the necessity of a reformation.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_815" id="Ref_815" href="#Foot_815">[815]</a></span>
-On
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_530" id="Page_530">{530}</a></span>
-the 22nd of March, the vicar, eager to do his duty
-in the absence of the bishop, sent for the procurator-fiscal,
-and consulted with him on the defence of the
-faith. The procurator appeared before the council.
-'Heresy is boldly raising its head,' he said; 'the
-people eat meat in Lent, according to the practice of
-the Lutheran sect. Instead of devoutly listening to
-the mass, they promenade (<i>passagiare</i>) the church
-during divine service.... If we do not put a stop to
-this evil, the city will be ruined.... I command you,
-in behalf of my lord the bishop, to punish these rebels
-severely.' The Berne manuscript adds, 'He made
-great complaints, accompanied with reproaches and
-threats.' The Duke of Savoy supported him by advising
-the council to take precautions against the
-Lutheran errors that were making their way into
-the city. The magistrates were fully inclined to
-check religious innovation: 'We must compel everybody,'
-they said, 'to listen to the mass with respect.'
-The huguenots pointed out the danger of
-attending in any degree to the duke's wishes, for in
-that case he would fancy himself the sovereign of
-Geneva. What was to be done? A man of some
-wit proposed a singular and hitherto unheard-of
-penalty for suppressing heresy, which was adopted
-and published in spite of the opposition of the most
-determined huguenots: 'Ordered, that whoever eats
-meat in Lent, or walks about the churches, shall be
-condemned to build <i>three toises of the wall</i> of St.
-Gervais.' The city was building this wall as a means
-of defence against the duke.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_816" id="Ref_816" href="#Foot_816">[816]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE HUGUENOTS SENTENCED.=</p>
-
-<p>This decree raised a storm against the Roman
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_531" id="Page_531">{531}</a></span>
-clergy. There have been at all times estimable men
-among the catholic priests, and even christians who,
-with great self-sacrifice, have dedicated themselves to
-the alleviation of human misery. The party spirit
-that represents a whole class of men as hypocrites,
-fanatics, and debauchees, is opposed to justice as well
-as to charity. It must be confessed, however, that
-there were not at this time in Geneva many of those
-pious and zealous priests who have been found in the
-Roman-catholic Church since it was awakened by the
-Reformation. 'What!' exclaimed the members of
-council who inclined towards protestantism, and saw
-their friends condemned, 'the Church forbids us to
-eat food which God created for our use, and permits
-priests to gratify an insatiable lewdness, against which
-God has pronounced a severe condemnation!... Ha!
-ha! Messieurs du clergé, you wish us to eat nothing
-but fish, and you live in habitual intercourse with
-harlots.... Hypocrites! you strain at the gnat and
-swallow the camel.' At the same time these citizens
-exposed the irregularities of the priests and monks,
-pointed out their resorts for debauchery, and described
-the scandals occasioned by their lusts. This description,
-which every one knew to be true, made a deep
-impression. The good catholics who were on the
-council saw the injury done to religion by the immorality
-of the clergy; while certain practical men
-were inclined to consider the great movement then
-going on in the Church as essentially a reform of
-morals. 'The Lutheran sect increases and prospers,'
-said a catholic councillor, 'because of the scandal of
-the priests, who live openly with women of evil life.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_817" id="Ref_817" href="#Foot_817">[817]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_532" id="Page_532">{532}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=PRIESTS SENTENCED.=</p>
-
-<p>The council sent for the vicar-general: 'We have a
-great complaint to make,' they told him. 'No remedy
-has been applied to the depravity and scandalous conduct
-of the ecclesiastics, who are the cause of all kinds
-of irregularity. Exert your authority without waiting
-until the secular power is compelled to interfere.'
-It would appear that, as the vicar held out no great
-hopes of amendment, the council were of opinion that,
-after condemning the laymen who walked about in the
-churches, they ought also to condemn the priests who
-were caught in disorderly houses. One councillor
-imagined it would be but fair to yoke, so to say, these
-two different kinds of delinquents to the same car. A
-second resolution was therefore adopted by the council,
-which, never losing sight of the necessity of protecting
-the city against Savoy, ordered 'that the priests
-should forthwith forsake their evil ways under penalty
-of building three toises of the wall of St. Gervais, in
-company with the others.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_818" id="Ref_818" href="#Foot_818">[818]</a></span>
-Thus the forerunners of
-protestantism and the profligate priests were ordered
-to labour together at the same task in the fosses of
-St. Gervais. The latter were indignant at being placed
-in the same rank with the former, and thought their
-dignity compromised by the singular decree which
-forced them to supply the heretics with mortar. It
-would appear, however, that the two orders were not
-very strictly observed, that wicked ecclesiastics continued
-to gratify their appetites, and that the wall
-advanced but slowly. 'The canons, priests, and friars
-are incorrigible,' said the people; 'they are jovial
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_533" id="Page_533">{533}</a></span>
-fellows, fond of drinking, and rear their bastard children
-openly. How can the Church be scandalised at
-such a course of life, when even the popes set the
-example?'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_819" id="Ref_819" href="#Foot_819">[819]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Although this decree of the council showed great
-impartiality and a certain amount of good sense, we
-cannot put in the same rank the two classes whom it
-affected. The huguenots, seeing that the Holy Scriptures
-call that a <i>doctrine of devils</i> which commands men
-'<i>to abstain from meats which God hath created to be
-received with thanksgiving</i>,'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_820" id="Ref_820" href="#Foot_820">[820]</a></span>
-did what the Word of
-God directs, while the evil priests indulged in the most
-scandalous disorders. Negative protestantism, however,
-is not true piety; and hence it was that the
-evangelical christians of Zurich and Berne, taking
-advantage of the frequent journeys the Genevans made
-to these two cities on public or private business, were
-constantly urging them to receive the true essence of
-the Gospel. In the visits they made to each other, in
-their friendly walks on the shore of the lake of Zurich
-or on the hills which overlook the Aar, these pious
-reformers of German Switzerland said to the huguenots:
-'<i>The kingdom of God is not meat and drink; but
-righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost.</i><span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_821" id="Ref_821" href="#Foot_821">[821]</a></span>
-Jesus Christ, the eternal Son of God, but born as a
-man, has become our Redeemer by his death and by
-his resurrection. He alone satisfies completely the
-religious wants of mankind. Unite yourselves to Him
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_534" id="Page_534">{534}</a></span>
-by faith, and you will experience in yourselves that
-the pure religion of the Gospel is not only the first
-among all religions professed by men, but, as coming
-from God, is perfect.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=PLAN FOR PREACHING AT ST. VICTOR.=</p>
-
-<p>The four Vandels, without entirely breaking with
-Rome, had been for more than three years among the
-most decided of the so-called Lutheran party. Hugues
-Vandel was sent into Switzerland as ambassador (this
-is the name usually given to the envoys in the official
-documents of the period). At Zurich, 'the Zwinglians
-gave him a hearty welcome;' the friends of Haller did
-the same at Berne, where he happened to be in June
-1530. All of the evangelicals in these two cities
-were earnest in their wishes to see a vital christianity
-displace the few negative reforms in Geneva. 'The
-majority in the city of Geneva would like to be evangelical,'
-answered Vandel; 'but they want to be shown
-the way, and no one would dare preach the Gospel in
-the churches for fear of Friburg.' What is to be done?
-thought he. Day and night he tried to find the means
-of having the Gospel preached to his fellow-citizens;
-at last a bright idea suddenly occurred to him; he
-spoke about it to the Zwinglians at Zurich, and to
-Berthold Haller at Berne; he wrote about it to Farel,
-to Christopher Fabry, and also to his brother Robert
-at Geneva. His idea was this: It will be remembered
-that St. Victor was a little independent principality at
-the gates of the city. 'Suppose it were made over to
-my lords of Berne,' said Vandel; 'they would like to
-have a bailiff there and <i>a preacher who would be our
-great comfort</i>.' It is true that the church of St. Victor
-was old, and would probably 'tumble down' erelong,
-but Berne would be able to rebuild it. All the evangelicals
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_535" id="Page_535">{535}</a></span>
-of Geneva, forsaking the mass in the city churches,
-and crossing St. Antoine, would go in crowds to hear
-Christ preached in the church of Bonivard.... Thus
-that Renaissance of which the prior was the representative,
-would be truly for Geneva the gate of the Reformation.
-An event which had just taken place may
-have suggested this idea to Vandel. It was a scheme
-suggested by the pope, and carried out by the duke.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_822" id="Ref_822" href="#Foot_822">[822]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Bonivard, deprived of his benefice at the time of
-Berthelier's death, had recovered his priory but not his
-revenue. Endowed, as he was, with resolution and
-invention rather than perseverance, holding that the
-detention of his property by the duke was an injustice,
-desiring to be restored to full possession of his little
-principality, and not a little ashamed of having to
-tell his servant that he had nothing in his purse when
-the latter came and asked for money to purchase the
-necessaries of life—Bonivard had girded on his sword,
-taken a musquetoon, mounted his horse, and, thus
-equipped and accompanied by a few men-at-arms, had
-made several raids into the duke's territory to levy his
-rents. But he had to deal both with the duke and
-the pope. He had been replaced in his priory by
-the bishop and the council, but without the consent
-of the courts of Rome and Turin, which had illegally despoiled
-him of it. Consequently a pontifical proctor,
-attended by an escort, made his appearance to prevent
-the prior from recovering his property. Bonivard, who
-was naturally impetuous, looked upon this man as a
-robber come to plunder him; he therefore rushed forward,
-caught up his arms, and discharged his musquetoon
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_536" id="Page_536">{536}</a></span>
-at the Roman official. The latter, who was terrified,
-rode off as fast as he could; for Bonivard with his firelock
-had wounded the horse.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_823" id="Ref_823" href="#Foot_823">[823]</a></span>
-Both pope and duke
-were loud in their complaints, and Clement even issued
-a brief against him. In consequence of this, the council
-of Geneva forbade Bonivard to indulge in these military
-freaks; and as he had no means of living, the
-magistrates granted him four crowns and a half a
-month, to pay his expenses and those of his servant,
-until he was in a better position. 'Alas!' said the
-prior, 'four crowns a month! ... it is so little, that I
-can hardly keep myself and my page.' However, he
-remained patient, but he was not left in peace.</p>
-
-<p>The Roman proctor, taking up the matter again,
-claimed the priory, in the name of Clement, on behalf
-of the priest who had been invested with it after the
-death of the traitor Montheron. Bonivard, desiring
-to place his benefice beyond the reach of fresh attacks,
-annexed it to the hospital of Geneva, which was to receive
-the revenues for him as prior. But the duke had
-other views. More than four hundred persons, carrying
-arms, and assembling by night before the hôtel-de-ville,
-had demanded justice on certain monks of St.
-Victor, who were accused of plotting to betray the
-convent to the partisans of Savoy. Besançon Hugues
-and Thomas Vandel, the procurator-fiscal, were the
-bearers of this request, and Bonivard had the monks
-shut up in prison. When the duke was informed of
-the annexation of the priory to the hospital of Geneva,
-his anger was increased, for he had a great desire to
-possess St. Victor's, which would give him a footing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_537" id="Page_537">{537}</a></span>
-close to the gates of the city. His agents therefore
-solicited the prior 'daily' to revoke this act, and promised
-him 'seas and mountains' if he would consent;
-but Bonivard shook his head, saying: 'I do not trust
-him!' Charles now determined to get rid of a man
-who was an obstacle in his path in all his enterprises
-against Geneva.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_824" id="Ref_824" href="#Foot_824">[824]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=BONIVARD'S FILIAL AFFECTION.=</p>
-
-<p>The prior, usually so cheerful, had been for some
-time dejected and thoughtful. It was not only his
-priory, his poverty, and his enemies that threw a
-shade over his countenance, formerly so animated:
-his mother was seriously ill. To Bonivard filial piety
-was the most natural of obligations, the first and
-sweetest form of gratitude. He thought: 'How
-correctly Plato writes that there are no Penates
-more sacred, there is no worship more acceptable to
-the gods, than that of a father or mother bending under
-the weight of years.' His Genevese friends, who went
-daily to St. Victor's, observed his sadness, and asked
-him the reason. 'Alas!' he said, 'I should like to see
-my aged mother once more before she dies. I have
-not seen her these five years, and she is on the brink of
-the grave.' To one of them who inquired where she
-was, he replied: 'At Seyssel, in our ancestral house.'
-Seyssel was in the states of Savoy, and Charles would
-not fail to have the prior seized if he ventured to
-appear there.</p>
-
-<p>Bonivard fancied, however, he could see the means
-of gratifying his dearest wishes. He determined
-to take advantage of the solicitations addressed to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_538" id="Page_538">{538}</a></span>
-him by Charles to ask for a safe-conduct. 'I will go
-and see my mother and brother at Seyssel,' he said,
-'and ask their advice. We will consult together
-on this business.' The duke sent Bonivard the required
-passport, stipulating, however, that it should
-be available for the month of April only. Charles,
-delighted at seeing Bonivard quit the neighbourhood
-of Geneva and venture into the middle of his territories,
-determined that if this journey did not give him
-the priory, it should at least give him the prior.... Bonivard's
-friends, whose judgment was not influenced
-by filial affection, were justly alarmed when they
-heard of his approaching departure, and tried to detain
-him; he could think of nothing, however, but seeing
-his mother before she died. He accordingly departed,
-passed the Fort de l'Ecluse, the Perte du Rhone, and
-reached the little town where the 'ancient dame,' as
-he called her, resided. The mother, who loved the
-name, the talents, the glory, and the person of her
-son, clasped him in her arms with fond affection; but
-her joy soon gave way to fear, for she knew Charles's
-perfidy, she remembered Lévrier's story ... and trembled
-for her child.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_825" id="Ref_825" href="#Foot_825">[825]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=BONIVARD'S VISIT TO HIS MOTHER.=</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Bonivard's enemies in Geneva had not
-delayed to take advantage of his departure. Some of
-them were mamelukes. To embroil him with the
-huguenots seemed likely to be of service to their cause;
-and they therefore began to report in the city that he
-had gone to surrender St. Victor's to the duke, and that
-he was betraying the people and revealing their secrets.
-The intimate friends of the prior indignantly contradicted
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_539" id="Page_539">{539}</a></span>
-the calumny; but his enemies continued repeating
-it, and, as the most ardent men are often
-the most credulous, a few huguenots gave credit to
-these assertions. Bonivard wrote to the council of
-Geneva, complaining of the injury done him, and reminded
-them that there was not a man in the city
-more devoted to its independence than himself.</p>
-
-<p>What should he do? He was exceedingly embarrassed.
-Should he return to Geneva? He feared the
-anger of those among the huguenots in whose eyes it
-was a crime to go to Savoy. Should he remain at
-Seyssel? As soon as the month of April was ended,
-he would be seized by the duke. His mother conjured
-him to put himself out of the reach of his enemies,
-both duke and Genevans....</p>
-
- <p class="center small">'Et qui refuserait une mère qui prie?...</p>
-
-<p>He determined to go to Friburg. The council of
-Geneva had indeed told him not to disquiet himself
-about the foolish stories of his enemies, and added:
-'Let him come, if he pleases, and he will be treated
-well.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_826" id="Ref_826" href="#Foot_826">[826]</a></span>
-This was not a very pressing invitation, and
-Besançon Hugues, the most influential man in the
-city, was against him. Hugues, a catholic and episcopalian,
-might very well have no great liking for the
-prior of a monastery who was coming round entirely
-to the new ideas. It seems, however, that these catholic
-prejudices were mixed up with some human weaknesses.
-'Bonivard,' says a manuscript, 'often had
-disputes with Besançon Hugues, who hoped to obtain
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_540" id="Page_540">{540}</a></span>
-for his son the investiture of the priory of St. Victor.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_827" id="Ref_827" href="#Foot_827">[827]</a></span>
-The prior was not ignorant of this hostile disposition.
-'Alas!' he said, 'a councillor, and he not one of the
-least, is exciting the council and the people against
-me.' On the other hand, he could not make up his
-mind to turn thoroughly to the side of the Reformation;
-he still remained in the neutral ground of
-Erasmus, and indulged in jests against the huguenots,
-which indisposed them towards him. He belonged
-neither to one party nor to the other, and offended
-both. He was not anxious, therefore, to return to
-Geneva just now, fearing that his enemies would be
-stronger than his friends. The month of April being
-ended, he begged the duke to prolong his safe-conduct
-during the month of May, and it was granted. Bonivard
-now took leave of his aged mother, whom he left
-full of anguish about the fate of her son. She never
-saw him again.</p>
-
-<p>The Count of Chalans, president of the council of
-Savoy, and friend of the Bishop of Aosta, was, though
-a layman, as bigoted to Roman-catholicism as Gazzini
-was, as a priest. At that time he was holding a
-<i>journée</i> or diet at Romont, between Lausanne and
-Friburg. The avoyer of Friburg, who was Bonivard's
-friend, happening to be at Romont, Bonivard repaired
-thither; and, related as he was to the nobility of Savoy,
-he presented his homage to the count, who received
-him kindly. Bonivard skilfully sounded De Chalans
-on what he might have to fear; for once already, and
-not far from that place, he had been seized and thrown
-into a ducal prison. The count pledged his honour,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_541" id="Page_541">{541}</a></span>
-both verbally and in writing, that he would run no
-danger in the duke's territories during the month of
-May, and, he added, even during the month of June.
-Bonivard, thus set at ease, began to reflect on his position.
-It was a strange thing for a man, so enlightened
-as he was on the abuses of popery and monasticism,
-to be at the head of a monastic body. Moreover,
-in addition to the pope and the duke, he had a new
-adversary against him. 'I fear the duke on the one
-hand,' he said, 'and on the other the madness of the
-people of Geneva, to whom I dare not return without
-the strongest pledges.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=DETERMINES TO GIVE UP THE PRIORY.=</p>
-
-<p>Bonivard, having weighed everything, determined
-upon a great sacrifice. He started for Lausanne, and
-proposed to the Bishop of Montfaucon to resign to him
-the priory of St. Victor, on condition of receiving a
-pension of four hundred crowns. The bishop accepted
-the proposal, provided Geneva and Savoy would
-consent. Bonivard thought this an easy matter, and
-as René de Chalans was then holding another <i>journée</i>
-at Moudon, he determined to go thither to arrange the
-great affair. He arrived on the 25th of May. The
-count received him courteously, and appeared to enter
-into his ideas; but at the same time this lord and certain
-officers of Savoy held several private conferences,
-the result of which was that they sent a messenger
-to Lausanne. Bonivard was invited to sup with the
-president, who gave him the seat of honour. There
-was a large party, the repast was very animated, and
-the prior, whose gaiety was easily revived, amused all
-the company by his wit. There was, however, one
-officer at his highness's table who annoyed him considerably:
-it was the Sire de Bellegarde, Lévrier's
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_542" id="Page_542">{542}</a></span>
-murderer. This wretch, as if he desired to efface that
-disagreeable impression, was most obliging and attentive.
-At last they left the table. There were so many
-gentlemen assembled in the little town of Moudon,
-that all the bed-rooms were occupied—so at least it
-was stated. Upon this, Bellegarde, in a jovial tone,
-said to Bonivard: 'Well, then, my friend, I will share
-my room with you.' Bonivard accepted the offer, but
-not without some uneasiness. The next morning he
-prepared to set out for Lausanne in order to arrange
-his business with the bishop. 'I am afraid that you
-will lose your way, and that something may happen to
-you,' said Bellegarde. 'I will send a servant on horseback
-along with you.' The confiding Bonivard departed
-with the sergeant of his highness's steward.</p>
-
-<p>Bellegarde varied his treachery. He had kidnapped
-Lévrier as he was leaving the cathedral, and had conveyed
-him in person to the castle where he was to meet
-his death. This time he preferred to keep out of sight,
-and for that reason a message had been despatched
-to Lausanne. After watching over Bonivard during
-the night, lest he should escape, as Hugues had escaped
-from Châtelaine, Bellegarde took leave of him, giving
-him a very courteous embrace, and strongly recommending
-him to the care of the sergeant. The road
-from Moudon to Lausanne runs for about five leagues
-through the Jorat hills, which at that period were wild
-and lonely. Gloomy thoughts sprang up from time
-to time to disturb Bonivard. He remembered how
-Lévrier had been seized by Bellegarde at the gates of
-St. Pierre.... If a similar fate awaited him!... His
-confidence soon revived, and he went on.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=BONIVARD TREACHEROUSLY KIDNAPPED.=</p>
-
-<p>It was a fine day in May, this Thursday, the 26th.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_543" id="Page_543">{543}</a></span>
-Early in the morning Messire de Beaufort, captain of
-Chillon, and the Sire du Rosey, bailli of Thonon,
-having received their instructions from Moudon, had
-quitted Lausanne, followed by twelve to fifteen well-armed
-horsemen. On reaching the heights of the
-Jorat, near the convent of St. Catherine, they hid
-themselves in a wood of black pines, which still remains;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_828" id="Ref_828" href="#Foot_828">[828]</a></span>
-and there both leaders and soldiers waited
-silently for the unfortunate Bonivard. He was provided,
-indeed, with a safe-conduct from the duke; but
-John Huss's had been violated, and why should they
-observe that of the prior of St. Victor? 'No faith
-ought to be kept with heretics,' had been said at Constance,
-and was repeated now at Moudon. Erelong
-De Beaufort and Du Rosey heard the tramp of two
-horses; they gave a signal to their followers to be
-ready, and peered out from among the trees where
-they lay hid to see if their victim was really coming.
-At last the guide on horseback appeared, then came
-Bonivard on his mule; De Bellegarde's servant led
-him straight to the appointed place. Just as the unlucky
-prior, wavering between confidence and fear, was
-passing the spot where Beaufort, Du Rosey, and their
-fifteen companions were posted, the latter rushed from
-the wood and sprang upon Bonivard. He put his hand
-to his sword, and clapped spurs to his mule in order to
-escape, calling out to his guide: 'Spur! spur!' But,
-instead of galloping forwards, the sergeant turned
-suddenly upon the man he should have protected,
-caught hold of him, and 'with a knife which he had
-ready' cut Bonivard's sword-belt. All this took
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_544" id="Page_544">{544}</a></span>
-place in the twinkling of an eye. 'Whereupon these
-honest people fell upon me,' said the prior when he
-told the story in after years, 'and made me prisoner
-in the name of Monseigneur.' He made all the resistance
-he could; produced his papers, and showed that
-they were all in order; but his safe-conduct was of
-no avail with the agents of Bellegarde and De
-Chalans. Taking some cord from a bag they had
-brought with them, they tied Bonivard's arms, and
-bound him to his mule, as they had once bound Lévrier,
-and in this way passing through Lausanne, near which
-the outrage had been committed, they turned to the left.
-The prior crossed Vaux, Vevey, Clarens, and Montreux;
-but these districts, which are among the most beautiful
-in Switzerland, could not for an instant rouse
-him from his deep dejection. 'They took me, bound
-and pinioned, to Chillon,' he says in his <i>Chronicles</i>,
-'and there I remained six long years.... It was my
-second passion.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_829" id="Ref_829" href="#Foot_829">[829]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE PRISONER OF CHILLON.=</p>
-
-<p>Nine years before, almost day for day (May 1521),
-Luther had also been seized in a wood for the purpose
-of being taken to a castle; but he had been carried off
-by friends, while <i>the prisoner of Chillon</i> was perfidiously
-taken by enemies. Bonivard, a reformer of a negative
-and rather philosophical character, was much inferior
-to Luther, the positive and evangelical reformer;
-but Bonivard's imprisonment far exceeded in severity
-that of the Saxon doctor. At first, indeed, the prior
-of St. Victor was confined in a room and treated respectfully;
-but Charles the Good, after visiting him
-and holding some conversation with him, ordered, as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_545" id="Page_545">{545}</a></span>
-he left the castle, that the prisoner should be treated
-harshly. He was transferred to one of those damp
-and gloomy dungeons cut out of the rock, which lie
-below the level of the lake. It is probable that the
-duke gave this cruel order because the prisoner, true
-to light and liberty, had refused to bend before him.
-Bonivard's seizure was a severe blow to his mother,
-to his friends, and even to the magistrates of Geneva,
-who, on hearing of it, saw all the duke's perfidy and
-the prior's innocence, and restored to him their affection
-and esteem. For some time it was uncertain
-whether Bonivard was alive or dead; all that people
-knew was that he had been seized, in defiance of the
-safe-conduct, on the hills above Lausanne. However,
-John Lullin and the other envoys of Geneva present
-at the <i>journée</i> held at Payerne at Christmas 1530,
-being better informed, did all in their power to obtain
-the liberation of a man who had done such good service
-to liberty; but the agents of Savoy pretended
-ignorance of the place of his imprisonment.</p>
-
-<p>A brilliant existence was thus suddenly interrupted.
-What humour, what originality, what striking language,
-what invention, what witty conversations were
-abruptly cut short! Bonivard never recovered from
-these six years of the strictest captivity. When he
-came out of Chillon he was a different man from
-what he was when he entered it. He was like a bird
-which, while giving utterance to the sweetest song,
-is caught by a gust of wind and beaten to the ground;
-ever after it miserably drags its wings, and utters
-none but harsh unpleasing sounds. St. Victor wanted
-the <i>one thing needful</i>; he was not one of those of whom
-it is said: <i>their youth is renewed like the eagle's</i>. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_546" id="Page_546">{546}</a></span>
-brightness of the Reformation eclipsed him. The latter
-part of his life was as sad as his early part had been
-brilliant. It would have been better for his fame had
-he been put to death in the castle-yard of Chillon, as
-Lévrier had been in that of Bonne.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_814" id="Foot_814" href="#Ref_814">[814]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Berne MS. <i>Hist. Helvet.</i> v. p. 12.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_815" id="Foot_815" href="#Ref_815">[815]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Michel Roset, <i>Chroniq.</i> MS. liv. ii. ch. xiv.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_816" id="Foot_816" href="#Ref_816">[816]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 22 et 29 mars. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p.
-551. Berne MS. <i>Hist. Helvet.</i> v. p. 12.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_817" id="Foot_817" href="#Ref_817">[817]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 551.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_818" id="Foot_818" href="#Ref_818">[818]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quod presbyteri ab inde debeant relinquere eorum lupanaria,
-lubricitates et meretrices, sub simili pœna (facere in muris Sancti
-Gervasii tres teysias muri.)'—Registres du Conseil du 1ᵉʳ avril.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_819" id="Foot_819" href="#Ref_819">[819]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Galiffe, <i>Matériaux pour l'Histoire de Genève</i>, ii. p. vii. The note
-contains a long list of the illegitimate children of popes, archbishops,
-inquisitors, and other churchmen.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_820" id="Foot_820" href="#Ref_820">[820]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-1 Timothy iv. 1-3.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_821" id="Foot_821" href="#Ref_821">[821]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Romans xiv. 17.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_822" id="Foot_822" href="#Ref_822">[822]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Lettre de Vandel du 23 juin 1530. Galiffe fils, <i>Besançon Hugues</i>,
-note to page 395.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_823" id="Foot_823" href="#Ref_823">[823]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Procuratorem prosequentem scopettis invasisse, et equum super quo
-fugiebat vulnerasse.'—Brief of Clement VII., dated January 24, 1528.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_824" id="Foot_824" href="#Ref_824">[824]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. pp. 485, 547, 572. <i>Mém. d'Archéologie</i>, tom.
-v. p. 162.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_825" id="Foot_825" href="#Ref_825">[825]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. pp. 572,573. <i>Mém. d'Archéologie</i>, iv. p. 171.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_826" id="Foot_826" href="#Ref_826">[826]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Fuit lecta missiva Domini Sancti Victoris. Rescribatur ei ut
-veniat, si velit, et illum bene tractabimus.'—Council Register, May 2,
-1530.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_827" id="Foot_827" href="#Ref_827">[827]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Gautier MS. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 573.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_828" id="Foot_828" href="#Ref_828">[828]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The convent of St. Catherine occupied the site of the <i>Chalet à
-Gobet</i>, an inn situated on the road from Lausanne to Berne.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_829" id="Foot_829" href="#Ref_829">[829]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ce fut ma seconde passion.'—Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_547" id="Page_547">{547}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XI.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE ATTACK OF 1530.<br />
- (<span class="smc">August, September, and October.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=ARREST OF THE FISCAL MANDOLLA.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">BONIVARD'S arrest was not an isolated act, but
-the first skirmish of a general engagement. The
-duke and the bishop were reconciled, and their only
-thought was how they could reduce Geneva by force of
-arms. A singular resolution for a pastor! Fortunately
-for him, the Genevans gave him a pretext calculated
-in some measure to justify his warlike cure of souls.</p>
-
-<p>The iniquitous conduct of the Duke of Savoy towards
-Bonivard refuted the unjust accusations brought
-against him, and the Genevans at once manifested their
-sympathy with the unhappy prisoner of Chillon. They
-were indignant at the duke's violation of the safe-conduct
-that he himself had given. 'You see his bad
-faith,' they said. Thinking that when the innocent
-were put in prison, it was time to punish the guilty,
-they determined to have their revenge.</p>
-
-<p>There was at Geneva a man named Mandolla, a
-procurator-fiscal and thorough-going partisan of the
-duke and the bishop. 'He was a bastard priest of
-evil name and fame,' say the chronicles of the times,
-'who indulged in exactions, and in plundering and
-arbitrarily imprisoning those who displeased him.' The
-vicar-general, Messire de Gingins, abbot of Bonmont,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_548" id="Page_548">{548}</a></span>
-an upright and benevolent man, often remonstrated
-with him, but Mandolla answered him with insolence.
-Nor was this all; for, having the temporal authority
-under his jurisdiction, he was continually intriguing
-to deliver up Geneva to the duke. The citizens,
-irritated at these encroachments on their rights, addressed
-several strong remonstrances to the abbot of
-Bonmont against the foreign priest who was trying to
-rob them of their independence. It was a serious accusation:
-Mandolla's conscience told him it was just; he
-took the alarm, and, wishing to escape justice, hastily
-quitted Geneva, and fled for refuge to the castle of
-Peney.</p>
-
-<p>The Genevans now complained louder than ever.
-'Remove this thorn from the city,' said they to the
-vicar-general. The abbot acknowledged the justice
-of their demand, and the council, the guardians of
-the rights of the city, came to his assistance; for
-they recollected how, at the election of the syndics in
-1526, that man had intrigued to carry the list which
-contained the name of the infamous Cartelier. Some
-armed men were sent to the castle of Peney, where
-they seized Mandolla, bound him to a horse, as Lévrier
-and Bonivard had been bound, and on the 24th of
-June he was brought back to Geneva, surrounded by
-guards who led him to prison. A procurator-fiscal
-treated like a criminal! it was a thing unprecedented.
-The people stopped in the streets as he passed, and
-looked at him with astonishment. The unhappy Mandolla's
-mind was in a state of great confusion. He
-wondered if they would avenge on him the deaths of
-Lévrier and Berthelier and the captivity of Bonivard.
-He felt that he was guilty, but trusted in his powerful
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_549" id="Page_549">{549}</a></span>
-protectors. His friends did not, indeed, lose a moment,
-but wrote to the bishop, who was at Arbois.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE BISHOP PLOTS AGAINST GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p>Mandolla had hardly been three days in prison,
-when 'a severe and threatening letter' from the
-bishop arrived at Geneva. The prelate was indignant
-that the citizens should dare lay hands upon a clerk,
-who was one of his officers, and especially on that
-fiscal who, as Bonivard says, <i>brought the water to his
-mill</i>. 'Not content with the unseasonable innovations
-you have made in our jurisdiction,' he wrote to the
-syndics on the 27th of June, 'you have caused our
-procurator to be arrested in the discharge of his functions....
-And you do not like to be called traitors!...
-We condemn the outrage as much as if you had done
-it to our own person. Set our fiscal at liberty, without
-any damage to his person; make amends for the
-outrage you have committed; otherwise we shall employ
-all the means God has placed in our hands to
-obtain vengeance.' The council were greatly astonished
-on reading this letter: 'The bishop forgets,' they said,
-'that this is a case simply of robbery and treason.
-How long has it been the custom to threaten with the
-vengeance of God and man the magistrates who prosecute
-a thief?'—'My lord,' answered the magistrates,
-'Mandolla you well know to be a traitor and a robber.'
-And, giving no heed to the episcopal summons, they
-drew up an indictment against the fiscal. When this
-was told to La Baume, he could not contain himself.
-His twofold title of prince and bishop filled him with
-pride, and he could not bear the thought that these
-citizens of Geneva disregarded his orders.</p>
-
-<p>This affair only served to hasten the execution of
-his plans. His mind was full of bitterness on account
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_550" id="Page_550">{550}</a></span>
-of the heresy he had discovered in the city, and he
-thought but of punishing those whom he looked upon
-as traitors. It did not occur to the bishop that Geneva,
-after undergoing a great transformation, was one day
-to become the most active focus of the Reform. But,
-without foreseeing such a future, he thought that if
-the Reformation were established there, as at Zurich
-and Berne, the provinces of Savoy, and others besides,
-would erelong fall a prey to the contagion. He made
-up his mind to oppose it in every way, and it must be
-confessed that he had a right to do so; but two things
-are to be regretted: the unholy mixing up of the
-catholic cause with that of a traitor and thief, and the
-means that the prelate employed.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE BISHOP APPEALS TO THE KNIGHTS.=</p>
-
-<p>These means he sought in violence. In order to
-punish the huguenots he must have allies. Where
-could he look for them except among the knights
-of the Spoon? As prince and bishop of Geneva, he
-would give a shape to this fraternity, and organise it
-against his own episcopal city. He forthwith entered
-into communication with its principal leaders: John
-de Viry, sire of Alamogne; John Mestral, sire of
-Aruffens; John de Beaufort, baron of Rolle; Francis,
-sire of St. Saphorin; the sire of Genthod, a village
-situated between Geneva and Versoix; and especially
-Michael, baron of La Sarraz, whom the bishop called
-'his dearly beloved cousin.' Without waiting for
-these powerful lords to attack the city, he began to
-carry on a little war himself. He put into prison
-two Genevan cattle-dealers, who chanced to be in
-the territory of St. Claude; ordered the Genevan
-<i>goats and cows</i> to be seized, which were grazing on
-the hills of Gex; and posted armed men on all the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_551" id="Page_551">{551}</a></span>
-roads leading from Geneva to Lyons, with instructions
-to stop his <i>subjects</i> and their friends, and to seize their
-goods.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_830" id="Ref_830" href="#Foot_830">[830]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After this little war, the bishop turned his thoughts
-to the great one. At first he wished to set in
-motion his own vassals, friends, and allies on the
-western slopes of the Jura. 'Brother,' said he to the
-Baron of St. Sorlin, 'call out our Burgundians.' His
-negotiations with La Sarraz, Viry, and others having
-succeeded, he issued a general appeal to the knights
-of the Spoon. 'Gentlemen and neighbours of my
-episcopal city,' he said, 'I have been informed of your
-friendly disposition to aid me in punishing my rebellious
-subjects of Geneva. And now, knowing that it
-will be a meritorious work before God and the world
-to do justice upon such evil-doers, I pray and require
-you to be pleased to help me in this matter.' Many
-of these gentlemen crossed the Jura to come to an
-arrangement with him, and filled Arbois with their
-indignation.</p>
-
-<p>The 20th of August was an important day at the
-residence of the prince-bishop; he had determined to
-make war upon his flock, and this moment had been
-chosen for the declaration. Pierre de la Baume was
-not so cruel as his predecessor, the bastard of Savoy;
-but his irritation was now at its height. If he chanced
-to meet any Genevans who addressed him in respectful
-language, he would smile graciously upon them, but 'it
-was all grimace,' says the pseudo-Bonivard.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_831" id="Ref_831" href="#Foot_831">[831]</a></span>
-When
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_552" id="Page_552">{552}</a></span>
-they had quitted him, La Baume once more indulged
-in angry and threatening words. The convents, the
-commandery of Malta, and the college of the canons
-of Arbois were still more violent in their complaints.
-On the 20th of August a meeting took place at the
-priory. The knights of the Spoon, who had found
-the wine of Arbois excellent, arrived with their
-swords, their coats of mail, and their cloaks. The
-bishop, proud of having such defenders, invited them
-near the chair where he was seated, and graciously
-handed them their commissions to make war upon his
-subjects. 'We, Pierre de la Baume,' they ran, 'bishop
-and prince of Geneva, having regard to the insolence,
-rebellion, treason, and conspiracies that some of our
-subjects of Geneva are daily committing against us
-and our authority ... imprisoning our subjects and
-our officers without orders, assuming our rights of
-principality, and threatening to do worse; ... being
-resolved <i>to maintain our Church in her authority and
-to uphold our holy faith</i>, have commissioned and
-required our friends and relatives to aid us in punishing
-the rebels, and, if need be, to proceed by force of
-arms.' (Here follow the names of these friends, the
-Baron of La Sarraz, and the other lords mentioned
-above.) The prelate ended the document by a declaration
-that these gentlemen 'had full authority from
-him, and that, in confirmation, he had written these
-letters with his own hand at Arbois, on this 20th of
-August in the year 1530.' He had signed the
-papers: <i>Bishop of Geneva</i>. The gentlemen thanked
-the prelate, promised to do all in their power, and,
-quitting Franche-Comté, returned to their castles to
-make ready for the campaign, repeating to one another,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_553" id="Page_553">{553}</a></span>
-as they rode along, that it was very necessary to
-maintain <i>the authority of the Roman Church</i> in Geneva,
-and to uphold <i>the holy faith</i>, and seeming very proud
-that such was the object of the crusade they were
-about to undertake.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_832" id="Ref_832" href="#Foot_832">[832]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=LUTHERANS IMPRISONED.=</p>
-
-<p>The bishop's alarm was not without foundation.
-The huguenots, even those most inclined to protestantism,
-did not possess much evangelical light; they were
-struck rather with the superstitions of Rome than with
-their own sins and the grace of God. There were
-nevertheless some Genevans and a few foreigners
-living in Geneva, who displayed great zeal, and
-replied to the bishop's violence by going about from
-place to place seeking to enlighten souls. The gentlemen
-of Savoy, who had just made an alliance with
-the bishop, had seen this with their own eyes. 'They
-enter the cottages, and even venture into our castles,'
-said the knights, 'everywhere preaching what they
-call the Word of God.' The peasants listened rather
-favourably to the addresses of these evangelists; but,
-says Balard, 'the gentlemen could not be prevented
-from taking vengeance on such excesses.' When any
-of these daring pioneers of the Reformation arrived at a
-castle, or even at the village or town which depended
-on it, the lord, exasperated that the heretics should
-dare come and preach their doctrines to his servants
-and vassals, seized them and threw them into his
-dungeons.</p>
-
-<p>Some envoys from Friburg who were going to Chambéry,
-having halted on the road at the castle of one of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_554" id="Page_554">{554}</a></span>
-their friends, heard of these doings; it happened, too,
-that some of these huguenot prisoners (they may have
-come from Berne) were confined in the place at which
-they were stopping. As the Friburgers, although good
-catholics, were not in favour of employing brute force
-in matters of religion, they found means to touch the
-hearts of their persecutors, and succeeded in having
-these fervent evangelists set at liberty. They then
-continued their journey to Chambéry. But the duke
-had hardly given them audience before he said to
-them with bitterness: 'I have to complain, gentlemen,
-that you go about in search of prisoners in my
-country, and that the people of Geneva are trying to
-make my people as bad as themselves.... I will not
-put up with such disorders.... I cannot prevent my
-nobles from taking vengeance.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_833" id="Ref_833" href="#Foot_833">[833]</a></span>
-But the Genevans
-were equally unwilling to submit to the ill-treatment
-to which some of their number had been exposed, and
-accordingly Robert Vandel and John Lullin were despatched
-in all haste to Berne and Friburg to urge on
-the arrival of these noble auxiliaries. It is probable,
-however, that certain serious rumours which were
-beginning to circulate in Geneva were the principal
-cause of their mission.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_834" id="Ref_834" href="#Foot_834">[834]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was the autumn of 1530, and as the chiefs of
-German catholicism had assembled at Augsburg to
-deliberate upon the means of destroying protestantism
-in the empire, the duke and the bishop, the two great
-enemies of Geneva, appointed a meeting at Gex, at the
-foot of the Jura, to deliberate on the means of expelling
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_555" id="Page_555">{555}</a></span>
-both liberty and the Gospel from the city of the Leman.
-'Lutheranism is making considerable progress
-in Geneva,' said the bishop to the duke; 'attack the
-city; for my part I will employ in this work the
-revenues of my see and of my abbeys, and even all my
-patrimony.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_835" id="Ref_835" href="#Foot_835">[835]</a></span>
-The duke might have had reasons for
-delaying the war. His brother-in-law the emperor,
-and the other catholic princes assembled at Augsburg,
-thought they could not be ready before the spring,
-and desired that protestantism should then be attacked
-on all points at once. But passion prevailed with
-Charles III. Aspiring to the sovereignty of Geneva, it
-was important for him to play the principal part in the
-attack against that city; and when once Geneva was
-taken, he would prove to all the world that, in accordance
-with the system of the cardinals, it would be
-necessary to establish there some ruler more powerful
-than a bishop, in order to prevent future revolts.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_836" id="Ref_836" href="#Foot_836">[836]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=LA SARRAZ HEADS THE KNIGHTS.=</p>
-
-<p>The Baron of La Sarraz was already at work; he
-was a man fitted to succeed Pontverre. Prejudiced
-like him against Geneva, liberty, and the Reformation,
-he was less noble, less virtuous, and less headstrong
-than that unhappy gentleman, but surpassed him in
-genius and in ability. He had sworn that either he or
-Geneva should give way and perish.... The oath was
-accomplished, but not in the manner he had anticipated.
-The knights of the Spoon, summoned by the bishop,
-excited by La Sarraz, supported by the fugitive mamelukes,
-and approved of by the duke, took the field immediately.
-They intercepted the provisions intended
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_556" id="Page_556">{556}</a></span>
-for Geneva, and sharp skirmishes occurred every day.
-If any citizen went beyond the walls to look after his
-farm or attend to his business, the knights would fall
-upon him and beat him, shut him up in one of their
-castle dungeons, and sometimes kill him. But all this
-was a mere prelude. The bishop came to an understanding
-with the Baron of La Sarraz, through his
-cousin, M. de Ranzonière. Another conference took
-place at Arbois towards the middle of September 1530.
-After a long conversation about the heresy and independence
-of Geneva, and the strange changes and singular
-perils to which that city and the surrounding
-provinces were exposed, they decided upon a general
-attack.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_837" id="Ref_837" href="#Foot_837">[837]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the 20th of September, the men-at-arms of the
-knights of the Spoon, the Burgundians of the bishop,
-and the ducal troops, made arrangements to surprise
-Geneva. On the 24th of September, some well-disposed
-people came and told the citizens that the Duke
-of Nemours was at Montluel in Bresse, three leagues
-from Lyons, with a large army. It was the Count of
-Genevois, younger brother of the Duke of Savoy, whom
-his sister, the mother of Francis I., had created Duke
-of Nemours in 1515. He was, as we have already
-remarked, an able man, and, even while courting the
-Genevans, desired nothing better than to destroy their
-city. His sister, Louisa of Savoy, whose hostile disposition
-towards the Gospel we have seen, thought it a
-very laudable thing to crush a place in which the protestants,
-persecuted by her in France, might find an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_557" id="Page_557">{557}</a></span>
-asylum. The six captains of Geneva, on hearing this
-alarming intelligence, assembled their troops and addressed
-them in a touching proclamation. This was
-on Sunday, the 25th of September. 'We have been
-informed,' they said, 'that our enemies will attack us
-very shortly. We pray you therefore to forgive one
-another, and be ready to die in the defence of your
-rights.' The citizens unanimously replied to these
-noble words: 'We are willing to do so.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_838" id="Ref_838" href="#Foot_838">[838]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=TROOPS MARCH AGAINST GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p>The next day, Monday, the 26th of September, a
-man of Granson, coming from Burgundy, confirmed the
-news of the danger impending over the city. 'Everything
-is in motion on our side,' he told them. 'M. de
-St. Sorlin has declared that <i>God and the world</i> are enraged
-against Geneva (it was the favourite expression
-of his family); companies of arquebusiers are about
-to cross the Jura; the gentlemen of the Spoon are
-approaching with a large number of armed men, and
-the day after the feast of St. Michael they will enter
-Geneva by force, to kill the men, women, and children,
-and plunder the city.' The man of Granson, at the
-request of the syndics, hurried off to carry the news
-to Berne and Friburg.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_839" id="Ref_839" href="#Foot_839">[839]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was a singular thing, this expedition against
-Geneva in behalf of the <i>holy faith</i>, for there was not a
-church in the city where mass was not sung, and not
-one where the Gospel was preached. It was still a
-catholic city; but, we must confess, it contained little
-really worthy of the name, except old walls, old ceremonies,
-and old priests. Mass was performed, but the
-huguenots, instead of listening to it, walked up and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_558" id="Page_558">{558}</a></span>
-down the aisles. The Reformation was everywhere
-in Geneva, and yet it was nowhere. The bishop, the
-duke, and even the emperor, who were not very acute
-judges, confounded liberty with the Gospel; and seeing
-that liberty was in Geneva, they doubted not that the
-Gospel was there also.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=GENEVA BLOCKADED.=</p>
-
-<p>On Friday, the 30th of September, the enemy's
-army debouched on all sides of Geneva. The six
-captains of Geneva and their six hundred men got
-their arms ready. At this moment envoys arrived
-from Friburg, wishing to see, hear, and advise the
-councils. They had hardly entered the city, when
-the troops of Savoy, Burgundy, and Vaud were seen
-preparing to blockade it. A Friburg herald left immediately,
-to carry the news to his lords; but at
-Versoix the ducal soldiers were on their guard; the
-messenger was seized and conducted to the knight of
-the Spoon who commanded in the castle. It was to
-no purpose that he declared himself to be a Friburger:
-'You wear neither the arms nor the colours
-of Friburg,' was the reply; 'go back to Geneva.' And
-as the herald insisted upon passing (he had had good
-reasons for not putting on his uniform), the knights
-maltreated him and drove him before them close up to
-the drawbridge of Geneva, insulting him from time to
-time in a very offensive manner. The night was
-then approaching; the steps of the horses and the
-shouts of the horsemen could be heard in the city; it
-was believed that the assault was about to be made,
-and some citizens ran off to ring the tocsin. The
-alarm continued through the night.</p>
-
-<p>The enemy had pitched their camp at Saconnex, on
-the right bank of the Rhone and the lake, about half
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_559" id="Page_559">{559}</a></span>
-a league from Geneva, in the direction of Gex and the
-Jura. On Saturday, the 1st of October, they sallied
-forth early in the morning, pillaged the houses round
-the city, set fire to several farms, and returned to
-their camp: this was a petty prelude to the meditated
-attack. At this moment a second herald, coming from
-Friburg, was brought in. He had been stopped at
-Versoix, for nobody could pass that post in either
-direction. The Friburgers, uneasy at receiving no news
-from Geneva, had sent this man to learn whether their
-friends were really in danger or not. 'What is your
-business?' asked the officers. The herald, who had
-learnt the story of his colleague, had recourse to a
-stratagem which the usages of war justify, but
-christian truth condemns. 'I am ordered,' he said,
-'to go and tell our ambassadors that they must return
-immediately; and that if Monsieur of Savoy needs the
-help of my lords of Friburg, they will assist him.'
-The Savoyards, delighted at the mission of the
-Friburger, hastened to set him at liberty; he went on
-to Geneva, and told the whole affair to the ambassadors
-of his canton. The latter, extremely pleased
-at his dexterity, asked him if he could once more make
-his way through the triple barrier that the cavaliers
-had raised between Geneva and Friburg. He was to
-report that the state of affairs was as bad as could
-be; and that Geneva, attacked by superior forces,
-was on the point of falling. 'We have no time to
-write,' they added, for they feared their letters
-would be intercepted; 'but we give you our rings as
-a token. Go speedily, and tell the lords of the two
-cities (Berne and Friburg), that if they wish to
-succour the city of Geneva, <i>they must do so now or</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_560" id="Page_560">{560}</a></span>
-<i>never</i>.' Prompt help from the Swiss could alone
-preserve the liberties of Geneva. The cunning
-Friburger departed; but even should he succeed in
-making his way through the Savoyard troops lying
-between Friburg and Geneva, what might not happen
-before a Swiss army could arrive?<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_840" id="Ref_840" href="#Foot_840">[840]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The next day, Sunday, the 2nd of October, the
-episcopal army was put in motion; it surrounded the
-city; a part of the Savoyard troops occupied the
-suburb of St. Leger and the monasteries of St. Victor
-and Our Lady of Grace; another part was drawn up
-opposite the Corraterie. The Genevans could no
-longer restrain themselves: the gates of the Corraterie
-were thrown open, and a number of the more intrepid
-sallied out upon the Savoyards, who received them
-with their arquebuses: one citizen was shot dead, and
-the others returned into the city. Erelong similar
-skirmishes took place on every side, and the trainbands
-of Geneva, firing upon the enemy from the
-wall, killed several of them. Masters of the suburbs,
-the Savoyard army waited until night to make the
-assault. <i>Death and plunder</i> was the pass-word given
-by the leaders.</p>
-
-<p>The situation of Geneva became more critical every
-hour. In the evening, just as the bell was ringing
-for vespers, there was a gleam of light in the stormy
-sky. Ambassadors arrived from Berne; they had passed
-through the enemy's lines, doubtless in consequence
-of their diplomatic character. They immediately
-visited their Friburg colleagues, who made known to
-them all their fears: 'Yet a few hours more,' they
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_561" id="Page_561">{561}</a></span>
-said, 'and Romish despotism will perhaps triumph
-over the Genevese liberties.' The Swiss did not lose
-a moment, but despatched a herald, post-haste, to
-demand immediate support. A part of the defenders
-of Geneva went to their homes to take some slight
-repose.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=NIGHT ASSAULT.=</p>
-
-<p>The night closed in, but a bright moon permitted
-every movement to be observed which took place
-without the city. At midnight the moon set: darkness
-and silence for some time reigned upon the walls.
-This was the hour fixed for the assault. The bands
-of Savoy and Burgundy and the knights of the Spoon
-moved forward without noise, and soon reached the
-ditch, in readiness to attack the city. It was easy for
-them to break in the gates and to scale the walls. The
-sentries on the ramparts listened, and tried to make out
-the movements of the enemy. The Genevans were all
-determined to sacrifice their lives, but they were too
-few to defend their homes against such an army.
-They had to fear enemies still more formidable. It
-was asserted that the governor of the Low Countries,
-the pope, the Dukes of Lorraine and Gueldres,
-and the King of France were all pushing forward
-troops against the city. The alarm had been given
-in the courts of Europe by a recent act of the
-Landgrave of Hesse. He was negotiating a treaty
-with the cantons of Zurich and Basle, by the terms of
-which each of the contracting parties was bound to
-support the others in case of violence against the cause
-of the Gospel. 'Might not Philip do the same with
-Berne and Geneva?' said some. 'Might not the latter
-city become an asylum of the Reformation in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_562" id="Page_562">{562}</a></span>
-south, for the populations of the Latin tongue?...
-No time must be lost in destroying it.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_841" id="Ref_841" href="#Foot_841">[841]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>People were talking of these things at Augsburg.
-The protestant princes and doctors had quitted that
-city, where the famous diet had just ended: a month
-had been given them to become reconciled with Rome.
-But Charles V., who did not reckon much upon this
-<i>entente cordiale</i> between the pope and Luther, had
-declared that he would terminate the controversy
-with the sword, and had given orders to raise a
-powerful army to crush both protestants and protestantism:
-that, however, was not to be done before
-the spring of next year. One day, when the emperor
-was conversing about Geneva with Duke Frederick and
-other catholic princes,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_842" id="Ref_842" href="#Foot_842">[842]</a></span>
-despatches were brought him
-announcing the march of different armed bodies
-against Geneva. Charles always displayed a prudence
-and reserve in his plans, which proceeded as much from
-nature as from habit. As his faculties had been
-developed slowly, he had accustomed himself to
-ponder upon everything with close attention; he had
-decided in particular that not a shot ought to be fired
-in Europe against the protestants before the spring of
-1531, and had instructed his brother-in-law of Savoy
-to that effect. Accordingly, when he learnt, in October,
-that an attack was preparing against Geneva, he
-gave utterance to his vexation. 'Ha!' he exclaimed,
-'the Duke of Savoy is beginning this business too
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_563" id="Page_563">{563}</a></span>
-soon!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_843" id="Ref_843" href="#Foot_843">[843]</a></span>
-'These words give cause for reflection,'
-said the deputies of Nuremberg, who reported them
-to their senate. After Geneva, their own turn would
-come, no doubt.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=MYSTERIOUS RETREAT OF THE SAVOYARDS.=</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, about one o'clock on a pitch-dark night,
-the troops of the duke, the bishop, and the knights of
-the Spoon had come up close to the ditch. But,
-strange to say, they remained inactive. They neither
-broke down the gates nor mounted the walls: on the
-contrary, 'the nearer they approached,' says Balard,
-who was in the city, '<i>the more their hearts failed them.</i>'
-Besides the knights of Vaud and the leaders of
-the Burgundian bands, there were in the besieging
-army a certain number of officers holding their commissions
-immediately from his highness the duke.
-On a sudden these Savoyard captains drew back; they
-moved away, and left the others at the edge of the
-ditch. This unexpected defection surprised every
-one: the soldiers asked what it meant.... The troops
-fell into disorder, a panic soon ran through their
-ranks, and in a moment there was a general flight,
-their only exploit being the plundering of the suburbs.</p>
-
-<p>The officers of Savoy, as they retired, said that
-the duke 'had commanded them to withdraw under
-pain of death.' He had indeed received the emperor's
-orders not to begin the war before the spring; but he
-could not resolve to arrange his plans in harmony
-with those of his illustrious ally. Always anxious
-to make himself master of Geneva, he had let things
-take their course. A more pressing message from the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_564" id="Page_564">{564}</a></span>
-emperor had arrived. The duke, much vexed, had
-communicated it with a bad grace to his captains.
-Had it only reached them at the moment they were
-making the attack? or did they hesitate at the very
-time when, blinded by hatred, they were about to
-escalade the walls in defiance of the orders of the puissant
-emperor? Had their courage failed them at the
-last step? This seems the most probable conclusion.
-There is, however, a certain mystery in the whole
-incident which it is difficult to penetrate. Geneva,
-alone in the presence of a gallant and numerous army,
-was defended during this memorable night by an unknown
-and invisible power. The Genevans believed
-it to be the hand of the Almighty. Did they not
-read in Scripture that a city, inhabited by the people
-of God, having been compassed by horses, and chariots,
-and a great host, the mountain round about was
-miraculously filled with horses and chariots of fire in
-far greater numbers?<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_844" id="Ref_844" href="#Foot_844">[844]</a></span>
-None of these indeed had been
-seen upon the Alps, but the arm of the Lord had
-put the enemy to the rout. 'The bark of God's miracles'
-had been once more saved in the midst of the breakers.
-The citizens reiterated in their homes, in the streets,
-and in the council, the expression of their gratitude.
-'Ah!' said syndic Balard, 'the faint heart, the sudden
-discouragement of those who had conspired against
-the city, came from the grace and pity of God!'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_845" id="Ref_845" href="#Foot_845">[845]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The citizens wished to open the gates and follow in
-pursuit of the enemy; but the ambassadors of Berne
-and Friburg restrained them. The flight was so extraordinary
-that these warlike diplomatists feared that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_565" id="Page_565">{565}</a></span>
-it was a stratagem. 'You do not know,' they said,
-'how great is the cunning of the enemy. Wait until
-you receive help from our masters, which we hope
-will soon arrive.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=FIFTEEN THOUSAND SWISS ARRIVE.=</p>
-
-<p>In fact, fifteen thousand of those soldiers who were
-the terror of Europe were then entering the Pays de
-Vaud with ten pieces of cannon and colours flying,
-and were marching to Geneva. Some of the citizens
-regretted the arrival of these troops, who came (they
-said) when they were not wanted, and who would be
-an expense to the city; but the more far-sighted
-thought their presence still necessary. The enemies
-of the new order of things still threatened Geneva on
-every side, and were even in Geneva, always ready to
-renew the attack. It was necessary to put a stop to the
-violence of these feudal lords and the intrigues of
-the monks; it was necessary to free the country once
-for all from the robbers who spread desolation all
-around; and the Swiss army was looked upon as
-called to accomplish this work. This was also what
-the Bernese and Friburgers said, and they spared no
-pains to deliver the inhabitants of the shores of the
-Leman from their continual alarms. They did no
-harm to the peasants, except that they 'lived upon
-the good man;'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_846" id="Ref_846" href="#Foot_846">[846]</a></span>
-but they captured, plundered, and
-burnt the castles of the knights of the Spoon. The
-garrisons fled at their approach, carrying away baggage,
-treasures, and artillery across the lake to Thonon:
-boats were continually passing from one shore to the
-other. The priests and friars were not looked upon
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_566" id="Page_566">{566}</a></span>
-with very friendly eyes by the <i>Lutherans</i>, and here
-and there they had their gowns torn; but not one of
-them was wounded. One hundred and twenty Genevans,
-encouraged by this news, put to flight at Meyrin
-eight hundred soldiers of Savoy and Gex.</p>
-
-<p>At noon on Monday, the 10th of October, the Swiss
-army, with the avoyer D'Erlach at its head, marched
-into Geneva. But where could they put fifteen
-thousand soldiers in that little city? The citizens
-received a great number; a part were quartered in
-the convents. 'Come, fathers, make room,' said the
-quartermasters to the Dominicans. The monks gave
-up their dormitories very unwillingly; but that did not
-matter: six companies, '<i>all Lutherans</i>,' were lodged
-in the convent, and two hundred horses were turned
-loose in their burial-ground to feed upon the grass.
-The Augustine and Franciscan monasteries, as well as
-the houses of the canons and other churchmen, were
-also filled with troops. These men carried on the
-controversy in their own fashion—that is, in a military
-and not an evangelical manner. A great number
-of them had to bivouac in the open air. The
-Bernese artillerymen, who were posted round the
-Oratory, situated between the city and Plainpalais,
-felt cold during the night. They first began to examine
-the chapel, and then entered it, and took away
-the altar and the wooden images, with which they
-made a good fire. They were not, however, yet at
-their ease: these rough Helvetians, having no desire to
-lie down or to remain standing all night, broke up a
-large cross, and with the fragments made seats on which
-they sat round the fire. Some Friburgers, observing
-what they considered to be a sacrilege, went up to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_567" id="Page_567">{567}</a></span>
-Bernese and reprimanded them sharply, asking them
-why they did not go and look for wood somewhere else.
-'The wood from the churches is usually very dry,'
-coolly answered the artillerymen. These catholic
-Friburgers were no doubt superstitious; but perhaps
-the Bernese were not very pious, and most of them,
-while destroying the <i>idols</i> without, left those standing
-that were within.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE NUNS OF ST. CLAIRE.=</p>
-
-<p>The Genevans anxiously looked about for quarters
-for their guests, being unwilling to leave these confederates
-without shelter, who had quitted everything
-for them. As the city was not large enough, the
-country was laid under contribution. At the extremity
-of a fine promontory which stretches from the
-southern shore into the lake, at Belle Rive, about a
-league from the city, stood a convent of Cistercian
-nuns, staunch partisans of the duke, and who were suspected
-of intriguing in his favour, and of having been
-greatly delighted when the Savoyard army had beleaguered
-the city not long before. 'Come with us,' said
-certain young huguenots to a Swiss company bivouacking
-in the open air; 'we will provide you comfortable
-quarters, situated in a beautiful locality.' They marched
-off immediately. The nuns, whose hearts palpitated
-with fear, were on the watch, and, looking from their
-windows, they saw a body of soldiers advancing by the
-lake. Hastily throwing off their conventual dress,
-they disguised themselves and took refuge in the neighbouring
-cottages. At last the troop arrived. Were
-the Genevans and Bernese irritated by this flight, or
-did they intend to follow the custom of burning the
-houses of those who plotted against the State? We
-cannot tell; but, be that as it may, they set fire to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_568" id="Page_568">{568}</a></span>
-convent, not, however, to the church, and the house
-itself suffered but little, for the nuns returned to it
-soon after. When the flames were seen from Geneva,
-they occasioned much excitement; but nothing could
-equal that of the sisters of St. Claire.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_847" id="Ref_847" href="#Foot_847">[847]</a></span>
-The poor
-nuns, huddling together in their garden, looked at the
-fire with terror, and exclaimed: 'It is a sword of
-sorrow to us, like that which pierced the Virgin.'
-They ran backwards and forwards, they entered the
-church, they returned to the garden, and fell down at
-the foot of the altar, and then, looking again at the
-flames, devoutly crossed themselves. 'We must depart,'
-they said, and immediately the best scholars
-among them drew up, as well as their emotion permitted,
-a humble petition addressed to the syndics.
-'Fathers and dear protectors,' said they, 'on our
-bended knees and with uplifted hands, we, being
-greatly alarmed, entreat you by the honour of our
-Redeemer, of his virgin mother, of Monsieur St. Pierre,
-and Madame St. Claire, and all the saints of paradise,
-to be pleased to allow us to go out from your city in
-safety.' Three of the most devout members of the
-council went to the convent to comfort them. 'Fear
-nothing,' they said, 'for the city has not the least
-intention of becoming Lutheran.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_848" id="Ref_848" href="#Foot_848">[848]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A certain consideration was shown towards the
-sisters, by requiring them to find quarters for only
-twenty-five soldiers, all Friburgers, 'good catholics,'
-says one of the nuns, 'and hearing mass willingly.'
-But alas! the mass did not make them more merciful.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_569" id="Page_569">{569}</a></span>
-'They were as thievish as the others,' says the same
-nun. Shortly after their arrival they threatened to
-break down the doors and the walls, if the nuns did
-not supply them with as much to eat and drink as
-they wanted. It is true that the sisters put the soldiers
-upon spare diet, giving them only a few peas.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_849" id="Ref_849" href="#Foot_849">[849]</a></span>
-This little garrison, however, was of advantage to the church
-of St. Claire: it was the only place in Geneva where
-the Roman worship was performed. The Friburgers,
-at the request of the sisters, took post at the door, and
-prevented the <i>heretics</i> from entering, but gave admission
-<i>by order</i> to all the priests and monks of Geneva
-who showed themselves. The latter came dressed as
-laymen, carrying their robes under their arms; they
-went into the vestry, put on their clerical costume,
-entered the chapel, drew up round the altar, and
-chanted mass <i>in pontificalibus</i>. When the service was
-over, the nuns congratulated each other: 'What glory
-Madame St. Claire has over Madame Magdalen, Monsieur
-St. Gervais, and even M. St. Pierre!' It was a
-great consolation and indescribable honour to them.</p>
-
-<p>The mass, however, was not to have all its own
-way in Geneva. The Bernese desired to have the
-Word of God preached; consequently, on Tuesday, the
-11th of October, they proceeded to the cathedral with
-their evangelical almoner, and ordered the doors to
-be opened. Some of them went into the tower and
-rang the episcopal bells, after which the almoner went
-up into the pulpit, read a portion of Scripture, and
-preached a sermon. A great number of Genevans had
-gone to the church and watched this new worship
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_570" id="Page_570">{570}</a></span>
-from a distance. They did not fully understand it;
-but they saw that the reading of God's Word, its explanation,
-and prayer were the essential parts, and they
-liked that better than the Roman form. From that
-time, the evangelical service was repeated daily, and
-'no other bell, little or big, rang in Geneva.' The
-priests consoled themselves by thinking that 'the
-accursed minister preached in German.' The <i>German</i>,
-however, went further: he had brought with him some
-copies of the Holy Scriptures in French, and French
-translations of several of the writings of Zwingle,
-Luther, and other reformers; and when the Genevans
-who had heard him without understanding him went
-to pay him a visit, he gave them these books, after
-shaking hands with them, and in this way prepared
-their minds for the work of the Reformation.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CASTLES TAKEN AND BURNT.=</p>
-
-<p>While these books might be producing some internal
-good, the Genevans were anxious for another reform.
-They wished to purge the country of the outrages, robberies,
-and murders which the nobility in the neighbourhood
-of Geneva, still more than those in the Pays de
-Vaud, had made the peaceful burghers endure so long.
-This also was a reform, though different from that of
-Luther and Farel. 'Come along with us,' they said to
-the terrible bands of Friburg and Berne, 'and we will
-lead you to these brigands' nests.' The Swiss troops,
-guided by the Genevans, appeared successively before
-the castles of Gaillard, Vilette, Confignon, Sacconex,
-and others. They captured and set fire to many of
-these haunts, where the noble robbers had so often
-hidden their plunder and their prey. The terror of
-the partisans of the old order of things now became
-extreme. The sisters of St. Claire thought that everything
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_571" id="Page_571">{571}</a></span>
-was on fire round Geneva. 'Look!' said they,
-standing on the highest part of their garden, 'look!
-although the weather is fair, the sky is darkened by
-the smoke.' They fancied it was the last day. 'Of a
-surety,' they added, 'the elements are about to be dissolved.'
-The desolation was still greater in the country.
-The captain-general had issued an order forbidding all
-marauding, but the soldiers rarely attended to it. The
-peasantry were seen running away like sheep before
-the wolf; the gentlemen hid themselves in the woods
-or the mountains; and several noble dames, who had
-taken refuge in miserable huts, 'were brought to bed
-there very wretchedly.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_850" id="Ref_850" href="#Foot_850">[850]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Although certain accusations have been brought
-against them, the nuns of St. Claire were sincere in
-their devotion, and moral in their conduct; and while
-the dissolute friars kept silence, these superstitious
-but virtuous women appeared to stand alone by the
-side of popery in its agony. Desiring to appease the
-wrath of heaven, they made daily processions in their
-garden, barefooted in the white frost, chanting low
-the litanies of the Virgin and the saints 'to obtain
-mercy.' They passed all the night in vigils, 'praying
-to God in behalf of his holy faith and the poor world.'
-After matins they lighted the tapers, and scourged
-themselves; then bending to the earth, they exclaimed:
-<i>Ave, benigne Jesu!</i> 'hail, gentle Jesus!'
-Sister Jeanne affirms that by these means they worked
-miracles. Indeed, one of the <i>mahometists</i> (huguenots),
-having flung a consecrated wafer into a cemetery, it
-could not be found again: 'the angels had carried it
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_572" id="Page_572">{572}</a></span>
-away and put it in some unknown place.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_851" id="Ref_851" href="#Foot_851">[851]</a></span>
-It was not very miraculous that so small an object could not
-be found among the grass and between the graves of
-a cemetery. A miracle more real was worked.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke of Nemours, brother of the Duke of
-Savoy, who, as we have seen, had come from France
-with his men-at-arms to attack Geneva, laid aside his
-warlike humour when he found the Swiss in the city,
-and, wishing to conciliate the Genevans, repeated to all
-who came near him that he had never intended to do
-them any harm, and would punish severely everybody
-who was guilty of violence towards them. A
-truce was concluded at St. Julien. The definitive
-treaty of peace was referred to a Swiss diet to be held
-at Payerne. The bishop released the merchants, the
-cows, and the goats he had seized, and the Genevans
-set Mandolla at liberty; 'but,' adds Bonivard, 'I
-was not taken out of Chillon.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_852" id="Ref_852" href="#Foot_852">[852]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_830" id="Foot_830" href="#Ref_830">[830]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Balard</i>, pp. 274-280. Registres du Conseil des 23 juin;
-5, 8, 19 juillet; 9 août. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 576. Galiffe fils,
-<i>Besançon Hugues</i>, pp. 398, 399. Gautier MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_831" id="Foot_831" href="#Ref_831">[831]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-MS. <i>Hist. of Geneva</i> in the Berne library, erroneously ascribed to
-Bonivard.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_832" id="Foot_832" href="#Ref_832">[832]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Balard</i>, pp. 274-280. Registres du Conseil des 23 juin;
-5, 8, 19 juillet; 9 août. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 576. Galiffe fils,
-<i>Besançon Hugues</i>, pp. 398, 399. Gautier MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_833" id="Foot_833" href="#Ref_833">[833]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 280.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_834" id="Foot_834" href="#Ref_834">[834]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Roset MS. <i>Chroniq.</i> liv. ii. ch. xlix. Registres du Conseil du 4
-juillet et du 12 août.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_835" id="Foot_835" href="#Ref_835">[835]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. pp. 577, 578. Besson, <i>Mémoires du Diocèse
-de Genève</i>, p. 62. Gautier MS.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_836" id="Foot_836" href="#Ref_836">[836]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See vol. i. p. 69.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_837" id="Foot_837" href="#Ref_837">[837]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Gautier MS. Besson, <i>Mémoires du Diocèse de Genève</i>. Galiffe fils,
-<i>Besançon Hugues</i>, p. 400. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. pp. 577, 578.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_838" id="Foot_838" href="#Ref_838">[838]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 286.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_839" id="Foot_839" href="#Ref_839">[839]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. p. 287.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_840" id="Foot_840" href="#Ref_840">[840]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Balard</i>, p. 289.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_841" id="Foot_841" href="#Ref_841">[841]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Sleidan, <i>Hist. de la Réformation</i>, liv. vii. <i>Journal de Balard</i>, p.
-289.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_842" id="Foot_842" href="#Ref_842">[842]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Als der Kayser mit Herzog Friedrichen und andern Fürsten des
-Krieges vor Genf zu reden worden.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 421.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_843" id="Foot_843" href="#Ref_843">[843]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hat der Kayser unter andern in Französisch geredet: Ey, der
-Herzog hat die Sache zu früh angefangen.'—<i>Corp. Ref.</i> ii. p. 421.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_844" id="Foot_844" href="#Ref_844">[844]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-2 Kings vi. 17.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_845" id="Foot_845" href="#Ref_845">[845]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Balard</i>, pp. 289, 290.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_846" id="Foot_846" href="#Ref_846">[846]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Ils vivaient sur le bon homme.' <i>Bon homme</i> was a term applied
-by the nobles to the peasantry. Hence the war of <i>Jacques Bon-homme</i>
-in France.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_847" id="Foot_847" href="#Ref_847">[847]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Their convent was in the upper part of the city where the palace of
-justice now stands, in the Bourg de Four.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_848" id="Foot_848" href="#Ref_848">[848]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-La Sœur J. de Jussie, pp. 11-14.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_849" id="Foot_849" href="#Ref_849">[849]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-La Sœur J. de Jussie, p. 18.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_850" id="Foot_850" href="#Ref_850">[850]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-La Sœur J. de Jussie, p. 21.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_851" id="Foot_851" href="#Ref_851">[851]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-La Sœur J. de Jussie, pp. 23-25.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_852" id="Foot_852" href="#Ref_852">[852]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. pp. 20-25. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. p. 586. Gautier MS.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_573" id="Page_573">{573}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">GENEVA RECLAIMED BY THE BISHOP AND AWAKENED BY THE
- GOSPEL.<br />
- (<span class="smc">November 1530 to October 1531.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=IMPERIAL LETTER TO GENEVA=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THUS had failed the attack of the bishop-prince
-against his city; and it was much to be feared
-that such an act, instead of restoring his power, would
-only accelerate his fall. Pierre de la Baume saw this,
-and resolved to employ other means to regain in
-Geneva the authority he had lost.</p>
-
-<p>The thought that the Helvetic league was to be
-the arbiter between Geneva and her bishop-prince
-oppressed him like a nightmare: he did not doubt
-that the diet would pronounce against him. A clever
-idea occurred to him. 'If,' said he, 'I could but
-have the emperor as arbiter, instead of the Swiss....
-Surely the monarch, who is preserving the papacy in
-Germany, will preserve it also at Geneva.' Charles V.
-and the catholic party were still at Augsburg; and
-the bishop would have desired to substitute a congress
-of princes for a diet of republicans. 'In truth,' said
-the emperor, when this petition was laid before him,
-'we should not like the rights of the most reverend
-father in God, the Bishop of Geneva, to be prejudiced....
-They are of imperial foundation; and it is our duty,
-therefore, to maintain them.' Charles had never been
-more irritated against the protestants than he was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_574" id="Page_574">{574}</a></span>
-now. It was the middle of November: the imperial
-<i>recess</i> had just been rejected by the evangelicals,
-because the emperor (they said) had not authority
-to command in matters of faith.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_853" id="Ref_853" href="#Foot_853">[853]</a></span>
-The deputies of
-Saxony and Hesse had left without waiting for the
-close of the diet. The imperialists assured the friends
-of the Bishop of Geneva that he could not have chosen
-a better time, and that his cause was gained. On the
-19th of November proclamation was to be made in
-Augsburg of the re-establishment 'of one and the
-same faith throughout the empire.' On the evening
-before, while this was being drawn up, the emperor
-called his secretary, and dictated to him the following
-letter, addressed to the people of Geneva:—</p>
-
-<div class="top">
-<div class="left1">'<span class="smc">Dear Liegemen</span>,</div>
-</div>
-
-<p style="text-indent:2em">'We have been informed that there is a question
-between you and our cousin, the Duke of Savoy,
-about matters touching the rights of our well-beloved
-cousin and counsellor, the Bishop of Geneva. We
-have desired to write to you about that, enjoining
-you very expressly to send to our imperial authority
-persons well informed on all points in dispute
-between the bishop and yourselves. We shall demand
-the same of the said lords, the duke and the bishop,
-our cousins, for the settlement of your differences,
-which will be for the welfare and tranquillity of both
-parties. You will thus learn the desire we have that
-<i>our subjects</i> should live in peace, friendship, and concord.</p>
-
-<p>'Dear liegemen, may God watch over you!</p>
-
-<p>'At Augsburg, 18th of November, 1530.</p>
-
-<div class="foot">
-<div class="right1">'<span class="smc">Charles</span>.'</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_575" id="Page_575">{575}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=ANSWER OF THE GENEVESE.=</p>
-
-<p>This letter from his imperial majesty created a great
-sensation in Geneva. It was known that Charles V.
-was preparing to reduce mighty princes, and every
-one perceived the danger that threatened the city.
-'What!' said the people, 'we are to send deputies to
-Augsburg, and perhaps to Austria, where they will
-meet those of the bishop and the duke ... and the
-emperor will be our judge!' The councils assembled
-frequently without coming to any decision as to the
-answer to be returned. First one and then another
-was commissioned to draw it up. Councillor
-Genoux produced a draft signed 'Your very humble
-subjects.'—'We are not subjects,' exclaimed the
-huguenots. At length they decided on writing as
-follows:—</p>
-
-<p>'Most serene, most invincible, very high and
-mighty Prince Charles, always august. For this
-long time past, we, in defence of the authority and
-franchises of our prince-bishop and city of Geneva,
-have suffered many vexations, great charges, expenses,
-and dangers, proceeding from the most illustrious
-duke. Quite recently we were surrounded by
-armed men, his subjects, and outrageously attacked.
-Nevertheless, by God's will and the kind succour of
-the magnificent lords of Berne and Friburg, we have
-been preserved from this assault—to relate which
-would be wearisome to your majesty.' The council
-added that, as the settlement which the emperor
-desired to undertake would be arranged at Payerne
-before the Swiss diet, they could not profit by his
-good intentions, and concluded by commending to him
-the city of Geneva, 'which, from desiring to observe
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_576" id="Page_576">{576}</a></span>
-its strict duty, would have been almost destroyed
-but for the grace of God.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_854" id="Ref_854" href="#Foot_854">[854]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Thus did the little city boldly decline the intervention
-of the great emperor. The duke and the bishop
-had hoped that Charles V., who was in their opinion
-called to destroy the Reformation in Germany, would
-begin by crushing it in Geneva. Accordingly, when
-the news of the Genevese refusal reached the ears of
-the duke and the bishop, their indignation knew no
-bounds. 'Since these rebels reject the peaceful
-mediation of the emperor,' they said, 'we must bring
-the matter to an end with the sword.' They once more
-resolved to take the necessary steps, but with as much
-secresy as possible, so that the Swiss should not be
-informed of them. The Duke of Nemours, who had
-not made use of his army, instructed ten thousand
-lansquenets who were at Montbéliard to move as
-quietly as they could behind the Jura, arrive at St.
-Claude, descend as far as Gex, and, two days before
-the opening of the diet of Payerne which the bishop
-so much dreaded, <i>suddenly take Geneva by storm, set
-it on fire</i>, and, leaving a heap of ashes behind them,
-retire rapidly into Burgundy before the Swiss could
-have time to arrive. At the same time messengers
-were sent to all the castles of the Pays de Vaud,
-inviting the gentlemen to hold themselves in readiness.
-On his side, the Duke of Savoy, who was then
-at Chambéry, made 'great preparation' of armed men
-and adventurers, both Italian and French. Everything,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_577" id="Page_577">{577}</a></span>
-he said, was to be completed with the greatest
-secresy.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=DECISION OF THE DIET OF PAYERNE.=</p>
-
-<p>But Charles was less discreet than his brother; he
-could not keep silence, but boasted of the clever <i>coup
-de main</i> that he was preparing. On the other hand,
-a man coming from Montbéliard to Berne reported
-that he had seen ten thousand soldiers reviewed in
-that town. At this intelligence, the energetic lords
-of Berne desired all the cantons to hold themselves
-in readiness to succour Geneva, and threatened the
-gentry of the Pays de Vaud to waste their country
-with fire and sword if they moved. Meanwhile the
-council called out all the citizens. Thus the mine
-was discovered, the blow failed, and the duke, once
-more disappointed in his expectations, left Chambéry
-for Turin.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_855" id="Ref_855" href="#Foot_855">[855]</a></span>
-The diet which met at Payerne, even
-while conceding the vidamy to the duke (which he
-was not in a condition to reclaim), maintained the
-alliance of Geneva, Berne, and Friburg, and condemned
-Charles III. to pay these three cities 21,000
-crowns. Geneva and Berne desired more than this:
-they demanded that Bonivard should be set at liberty—'if
-perchance he be not dead,' they added. The
-Count of Chalans replied that M. St. Victor was 'a
-lawful prisoner.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_856" id="Ref_856" href="#Foot_856">[856]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As neither war nor diplomacy had succeeded in
-restoring the prince-bishop to his see, he had recourse
-to less secular means: he turned to the pope,
-who determined to grant the city a marvellous favour
-by which he hoped to attach once more the bark of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_578" id="Page_578">{578}</a></span>
-Geneva to the ship of St. Peter. The heroism which
-the sisters of St. Claire had shown when the Swiss
-had come to the help of the city in October 1530, had
-touched the pontiff: among the conventuals of Geneva
-the only men were the women. The pope therefore
-granted a general pardon to all who should perform
-certain devotions in the church of that convent. On
-Annunciation Day (March 25) this remarkable grace
-was published throughout the country.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=PILGRIMAGE TO ST. CLAIRE.=</p>
-
-<p>An immense crowd from all the Savoyard villages
-flocked to the city, 'in great devotion,' on the first
-day. Chablais, Faucigny, Genevois, and Gex were
-full of devotees strongly opposed to the Reformation;
-they were delighted at going to pay homage in Geneva
-itself to the principles for which they had so often
-taken up arms. As they saw these long lines approach
-their walls, the citizens felt a certain fear. 'Let us
-be on our guard,' they said, 'lest under the dress of
-pilgrims the knights and men-at-arms of the Spoon
-should be concealed.' They suddenly closed the city
-gates. The pilgrims continuing to arrive soon made
-a crowd, and, being fatigued with their long march,
-exclaimed in a pitiful voice: 'Pray open the gates, for
-we have come from a distance.' But the Genevans
-were deaf. Then appeared the pilgrims from Faucigny,
-energetic and vigorous men, who got angry,
-and finding words of no avail, they forced the gates,
-and proceeded to the church of St. Claire, where they
-began unceremoniously to say their <i>Paters</i> and <i>Aves</i>.
-According to a bull of Adrian VI., it was sufficient to
-repeat five of these to obtain seventy thousand years of
-pardon.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_857" id="Ref_857" href="#Foot_857">[857]</a></span>
-The colour mounted to the cheeks of some
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_579" id="Page_579">{579}</a></span>
-of the huguenots, who would have resisted the unlawful
-intrusion; but the Faucignerans continued their
-devotions as calmly as if they had been in their own
-villages. Then the syndics went to St. Claire (it was
-the hour of vespers), accompanied by their sergeants
-'with drawn swords and stout staves,' and made the
-usual summons for these strangers to leave the city.
-Upon the refusal of the Savoyards, the public force
-interfered; the Faucignerans resisted, blows were
-exchanged, and finally these extraordinary pilgrims
-were compelled to retire without having gained their
-pardon. This scene increased the dislike of the
-Genevans to the Romish ceremonies. To publish
-indulgences was a curious means of strengthening
-catholicism in Geneva. Pope Clement VII. forgot
-that Leo X. had thus given the signal for the
-Reformation.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_858" id="Ref_858" href="#Foot_858">[858]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When these scenes were described at Rome, they
-excited great irritation. The sacred college determined
-to try again, and to exhibit in the very midst
-of this heretic population a still more striking act of
-Roman devotion. Clement VII. called his secretary
-and dictated to him, 'of divine inspiration,' a new
-pardon, to which the Bishop of Geneva affixed his
-<i>placet</i>, and which inflicted the penalty of excommunication
-on any who should oppose it. This bull was
-published in the Savoyard country adjacent to Geneva.
-The parish priests had scarcely announced the pardon
-from their pulpits, ere the villages were astir, and
-men and women, old and young, made their arrangements
-to go and seek the glorious grace offered them
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_580" id="Page_580">{580}</a></span>
-in the city of the huguenots. The Genevans, friends
-of religious liberty and legality, determined to offer no
-hindrance to these devotions. But they took their
-precautions, and the captain-general called out a
-strong guard. The pilgrims approached, staff in
-hand, some carrying a cross on their shoulders; and
-erelong a great crowd of Savoyards appeared before
-the walls. Here they were compelled to halt. At
-each gate were arquebusiers, a great many of them
-huguenots, who searched the pilgrims lest they
-should carry swords beneath their clothes, in addition
-to their staves. The examination was made,
-not without much grumbling, but no arms were
-found.</p>
-
-<p>Then the devoted multitude rushed into the city,
-and crowded into the church of St. Claire as if it had
-been that of Our Lady of Loretto. The Genevans
-suffered the pilgrims to go through all their forms
-without obstruction. If the Savoyards wished to perform
-their devotions, they reckoned also, as is usual
-in affairs of this kind, upon eating and drinking, and
-that abundantly. The crowd for this part of the pilgrimage
-was so great, that the tavern-keepers, for
-want of room, were forced to set tables in the open
-air. This mixture of praying and drinking made the
-spectators smile, and some of the huguenots gave vent
-to their sarcastic humour: 'Really,' said one, 'this
-pardon is quite an ecclesiastical fair' (<i>nundinæ ecclesiasticæ</i>)!
-'The fair,' said another, 'is more useful
-than people imagine. By these pilgrimages the priests
-revive the flagging zeal of their flocks. They are
-nets in which the simple birds come and are caught.'
-'I very much fear,' added a third, 'that in order to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_581" id="Page_581">{581}</a></span>
-sell her indulgences, the Church makes many promises
-which God certainly will not fulfil.... It is a pious
-fraud, as Thomas Aquinas says.'—'Let them alone,'
-said others, 'let them bring their money ... and
-then, when the plate is well filled, we will empty it.'
-They did not proceed to such extremities: the syndics
-merely forbade the money to be spent out of the
-city.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_859" id="Ref_859" href="#Foot_859">[859]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=PRIDE OF THE NUNS OF ST. CLAIRE.=</p>
-
-<p>The sisters of St. Claire rejoiced. The pope had
-honoured them in the sight of all christendom; their
-monastery was on the way to become a celebrated
-place. They believed themselves to be the favourites
-of God and of the heavenly intelligences, and imagined
-that angels would come to their assistance. As the
-plague was then raging in Geneva, they saw—surprising
-miracle!—the hosts of heaven leaving their
-glorious abodes to preserve the convent: the plague
-did not visit it. All the nuns were convinced that
-this was due to a miraculous intervention. And when
-the sisters, in church or in refectory, at vespers or at
-matins, conversed about this great grace, they whispered
-to one another: 'Three wondrously handsome
-and formidable knights, each having a beautiful
-shining cross on his forehead, keep watch before the
-gate.... And when the wicked plague appears, she
-sees them straight in front of her, and flees away,
-fearing the brightness of their faces.' Sister Jeanne
-de Jussie informs us of this miraculous fact, and concludes
-her narrative with this pious exclamation: 'To
-God be the honour and praise!' Some sensible men
-afterwards asked why these knights, 'with the shining
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_582" id="Page_582">{582}</a></span>
-cross on their foreheads,' had not stationed themselves
-at the gates of Geneva to prevent the entrance
-of that other plague (as Rome called it), the Reformation?</p>
-
-<p>The means which the pope had selected for reannexing
-Geneva to Rome, had quite a different effect: they
-produced a revival of religion. The Roman indulgence
-aroused the Genevans, and made them seek for a real
-pardon. Had not Luther, fourteen years before, proclaimed
-at Wittemberg that '<i>every true christian
-participates in all the blessings of Christ, by God's
-gift, and without a letter of indulgence</i>?'—'This doctrine,'
-said certain huguenots who had returned from
-a journey through the cantons, 'is received in Switzerland,
-and not at Zurich and Berne alone. There are
-many people of Lucerne and Schwytz even, who prefer
-God's pardon to the pardons of the pope.'</p>
-
-<p>An invisible hand was at that time stretched over
-the city, and holding a blessing in reserve for it.
-Farel, who was on the shores of the lake of Neufchatel,
-was informed of the evangelical movement
-which followed the noisy devotions of the Faucignerans,
-and wrote about it immediately to Zwingle,
-his friend and counsellor. This was in October
-1531: yet a few more days, and the reformer of
-Zurich was to meet his death on the battle-field of
-Cappel. This awakening of Geneva was the last news
-which came to rejoice his oppressed soul. 'Many in
-that city,' wrote Farel, 'feel in their hearts holy
-aspirations after true piety.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_860" id="Ref_860" href="#Foot_860">[860]</a></span>
-And, according to this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_583" id="Page_583">{583}</a></span>
-energetic reformer, it was something more than vague
-movements of the soul that they felt. 'Several Genevans,'
-he wrote another day to Zwingle, 'are meditating
-on the work of Christ.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_861" id="Ref_861" href="#Foot_861">[861]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">='DE CHRISTO MEDITARI.'=</p>
-
-<p>Thus, then, did that city of Geneva, which had been
-so engrossed with political independence, begin to
-reflect on Jesus Christ. It was the new topic which the
-Reformation presented everywhere to the consideration
-of earnest men. In Germany, Switzerland, France,
-and England, still more than at Geneva, serious minds
-were beginning to meditate on Christ—<i>de Christo
-meditari</i>. Some did so in a superficial manner; others
-devoted themselves to it in the depths of their soul;
-and holy thoughts found a home in the houses of the
-citizens, in the colleges, in obscure cells, and even on
-the throne. 'Christ is the Redeemer of the world,'
-thought these meditative minds, 'the restorer of the
-union with God, which sin destroyed.... Christ came
-to establish the kingdom of God upon earth.... But
-no one can enter that kingdom unless God pardons
-his sins.... In order that we may find peace, not only
-must our souls be relieved from the penalty, but our
-consciences must be delivered from the feeling of the
-sin that keeps it apart from its God.... An atonement
-is necessary.... Christ, like those whom he came to
-save, a man like them, is at the same time of an eternal
-and divine nature, which has given him power to ransom
-the entire people of God, and to be the principle
-of a new life.... He took upon himself the terrible
-penalty which we deserved.... His whole life was one
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_584" id="Page_584">{584}</a></span>
-continuous expiatory suffering.... But the crowning
-of his sorrows, and what gave them truly the character
-of expiation, was his death.... Christ, uniting himself
-to humanity through love for us, suffered death under
-a form which bears in the most striking manner the
-character of a punishment, that is to say, the pain
-of a malefactor condemned by a human tribunal....
-He, the Holy One, wishing to save his people, was
-made sin upon the cross.... He was treated as the
-representative of sinful humanity.... He, the beloved
-of the Father, endured for rebellious men the most
-deadly anguish, the entire abandonment by God....
-From that hour the people of God enjoy the remission
-of their sins, they are reconciled with God, they
-have free access to the Father.... That sacrifice is
-of universal comprehensiveness; no one is excluded
-from it ... and yet no one receives the benefit of it,
-except by a personal appropriation, by being united
-to Jesus Christ, by participating, through faith, in his
-holy and imperishable life.'</p>
-
-<p>Such, in the sixteenth century, were the meditations
-of elect souls in many a secret chamber, and it is
-in this way that the Reformation was accomplished.
-Perhaps one or two Genevans had similar thoughts;
-but, generally, their knowledge was not very advanced,
-and most of the huguenots desired rather to be delivered
-from the bishop and the duke than from sin and condemnation.
-Farel did not conceal from Zwingle his
-anxieties in this respect, and said, in his letter from
-Granson: 'As for the degree of fervour with which
-the Genevans seek after piety—it is known only to
-the Lord.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_862" id="Ref_862" href="#Foot_862">[862]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_585" id="Page_585">{585}</a></div>
-
-<p class="side">=FAREL FEELS THE WANTS OF GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p>No one interested himself more than Farel in the
-reformation of Geneva. That year he was at Avenche,
-Payerne, Orbe, Granson, and other places; and everywhere
-he ran the risk of losing his life. In one place
-a sacristan threatened him with a pistol; in another,
-a friar tried to kill him with a knife concealed under
-his frock; but Farel never thought of himself. Of
-intrepid heart and indomitable will, always burning
-with desire to promote the triumph of the Gospel, and
-prepared to confront the most violent opposition, he
-felt himself strongly drawn to Geneva as soon as he
-heard that the Reformation had to contend with powerful
-adversaries there. He then fixed his eyes on that
-city, and during his long career never turned them
-away from it. In the midst of his labours at Granson,
-by the side of the lake, near the old castle, on the
-famous battle-field, Geneva occupied his thoughts.
-He reflected that although it already had a reputation
-for heresy, there was in reality no true reform. What!
-shall the Reformation die there before it is born? He
-desired to see the Word of God preached there publicly,
-in an appropriate, vivifying, effective manner, and, as
-Calvin said, 'by pressing the people importunately.'
-He desired to see the pulpit become the seat of the
-prophets and apostles, the throne of Christ in his
-Church. No time must be lost. The Reformation
-would be ruined in Geneva, and the new times would
-perish with it, if the huguenots, who had ceased to
-listen to the mass, were contented, as their only
-worship, with walking up and down the church while
-the priests were chanting. The ardent passions and
-warlike humour of the Genevese alarmed him. 'Alas!'
-he said, 'there is no other law at Geneva than the law
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_586" id="Page_586">{586}</a></span>
-of arms.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_863" id="Ref_863" href="#Foot_863">[863]</a></span>
-He desired to establish the law of God
-there. He would have liked to go there himself, and
-perhaps he would have carried away some by his lively
-eloquence, and alarmed others by the thunders of his
-voice; but he owed himself at this time to the places
-he was evangelising at the peril of his life. If he
-quitted the work, Rome would regain her lost ground.
-He therefore looked about him for a man fitted to
-scatter through the city the seeds of the Word of
-God.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CALLS TOUSSAINT TO GO THERE.=</p>
-
-<p>Pierre Toussaint, the young canon of Metz, had
-quitted France, at the invitation of Œcolampadius,
-after his sojourn at the court of the Queen of Navarre,
-and had joined Zwingle at Zurich.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_864" id="Ref_864" href="#Foot_864">[864]</a></span>
-Farel came to
-the determination of sending Toussaint to Geneva:
-they had occasionally preached the Gospel together
-since 1525. 'Make haste to send him into the Lord's
-vineyard,' he wrote to Zwingle, 'for you know how well
-fitted he is for this work. I entreat you to extend a
-helping hand.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_865" id="Ref_865" href="#Foot_865">[865]</a></span>
-And, as if he foresaw the importance
-of the reformation of Geneva, he added: 'It is no
-small matter: see that you do not neglect it.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_866" id="Ref_866" href="#Foot_866">[866]</a></span>
-Urge Toussaint to labour strenuously, so as to redeem by
-his zeal all the time he has lost.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_867" id="Ref_867" href="#Foot_867">[867]</a></span>
-Zwingle executed
-the commission. Toussaint, one of the most amiable
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_587" id="Page_587">{587}</a></span>
-among the secondary personages of the Reform, listened
-attentively to the great doctor, and at first
-showed himself inclined to accept the call.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_868" id="Ref_868" href="#Foot_868">[868]</a></span>
-Zwingle spared no pains to bring him to a decision: he set
-before him what the Gospel had already done in Geneva,
-and what remained to be done. 'Enter into this
-house of the Lord,' he said. 'Rend the hoods in
-pieces, and triumph over the shavelings.... You will
-not have much trouble, for the Word of God has
-already put them to flight.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_869" id="Ref_869" href="#Foot_869">[869]</a></span>
-He did not mean that
-Toussaint should literally tear the friars to pieces, for
-the expression is figurative; but the energy of Farel
-and Zwingle, and what he heard of the Genevan persecutions,
-alarmed the poor young man. He had
-quitted the court of Francis I. because of the worldliness
-and cowardice he had encountered there; and
-now, seeing in Geneva monks and priests, <i>bishopers</i>
-and <i>commoners</i>, huguenots and mamelukes, he shrank
-back in terror, as if from a den of wild beasts. He
-had said 'No' to the court, he said 'No' to the energetic
-and impetuous city. Geneva wanted heroes—men
-like Farel and Calvin. The project failed.</p>
-
-<p>Farel was vexed. He who had never shrunk from
-any summons could not succeed in sending an evangelist
-into this city!... He called to mind that all
-help comes from a God of mercy, and in his anguish
-turned to the Lord: 'O Christ,' he said, 'draw up thy
-army according to thy good pleasure; pluck out all
-apathy from the hearts of those who are to give thee
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_588" id="Page_588">{588}</a></span>
-glory, and arouse them mightily from their slumber.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_870" id="Ref_870" href="#Foot_870">[870]</a></span>
-The moment was soon to arrive when he would go
-himself to Geneva; but before he appeared there, his
-prayer would be answered. God, whom he had invoked,
-was to send there within a few months a strong
-and modest man, who would prepare the way for
-Farel, Calvin, and the Reformation.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile several Genevans, who did not understand
-that a conversion of the heart is necessary,
-wished to effect at least a negative reform, which
-would have consisted in doing away with the mass,
-images, and priests. The more daring asked why
-Geneva should not do like Zurich, Berne, and Neufchatel.
-'Yes,' answered the more prudent, 'if the
-Friburgers would permit.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_871" id="Ref_871" href="#Foot_871">[871]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>These desires for reform, weak as they were, alarmed
-the Romish party. Friars, priests, and bigots got up
-an agitation, and, going in great numbers before the
-procurator-fiscal, conjured him to lay aside his apathy,
-seeing that this new religion would change everything
-in Geneva, and deprive the bishop not only of his
-spiritual jurisdiction, but of his secular authority also.
-The fiscal, who was empowered to watch over the
-rights of the prince, called for a severe inquiry upon
-all suspected persons.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_872" id="Ref_872" href="#Foot_872">[872]</a></span>
-At these words there was
-silence in the assembly: some of the members of the
-council looked at one another, and felt ill at ease, for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_589" id="Page_589">{589}</a></span>
-they were among the number of the suspected. The
-fiscal spoke out more plainly, and filled the hall with
-complaints and clamour. 'Let us destroy heresy!'
-he repeated.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_873" id="Ref_873" href="#Foot_873">[873]</a></span>
-The council, perplexed to the highest
-degree, evaded the matter by doing nothing either
-for or against it.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=BERNE AND FRIBURG AT GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p>The fervent catholics next proceeded to the hotel
-where the Friburg ambassadors were staying. 'If
-Geneva is reformed,' said the latter, 'there is an end
-to the alliance.' The Friburgers did more than this:
-leaving their lodgings, they accosted the more decided
-liberals, and repeated to them in a firm tone: 'If
-Geneva is reformed, there is an end to the alliance!'
-The huguenots hurried off to the Bernese ambassadors;
-but the battle of Cappel was not far off, and it
-was a matter of doubt whether the Reformation could
-be preserved even in Berne and Zurich. The Bernese
-received the Genevans coldly, and the latter returned
-astonished and incensed. 'Alas!' said Farel, 'the
-Bernese show less zeal for the glory of Christ than the
-Friburgers for the decrees of the pope.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_874" id="Ref_874" href="#Foot_874">[874]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A new difficulty arose. The huguenots would
-have desired to march to the deliverance of Zurich
-and the reformed, while the catholics wished to support
-Lucerne and the smaller cantons. On the 11th
-of October—the very day of the battle of Cappel, but
-it was not yet known—Berne demanded a hundred
-arquebusiers of Geneva; and the next day Friburg
-wrote desiring them to send all the help they could
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_590" id="Page_590">{590}</a></span>
-against the heretical cantons. Which side should
-Geneva take? 'Let us refuse Friburg,' said some.
-'Let us refuse Berne,' said others. The former called
-to mind the assistance which the most powerful republic
-in Switzerland had sent them; the latter remembered
-that Friburg had espoused the cause of
-Geneva when Berne was against them. The council,
-impelled in contrary directions, resolved to preserve a
-just balance, and extricated themselves from their
-embarrassment by the strangest middle course. They
-resolved that a hundred Genevans should go and fight
-in favour of the Reformation, and appointed Jean
-Philippe, one of the most zealous huguenots, to command
-them; after which they also gave Friburg a
-favourable answer, and elected syndic Girardet chief
-of the auxiliaries intended for the catholics.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_875" id="Ref_875" href="#Foot_875">[875]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_853" id="Foot_853" href="#Ref_853">[853]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Hist. of the Ref. of the Sixteenth Century</i>, vol. iv. bk. xiv. ch. xii.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_854" id="Foot_854" href="#Ref_854">[854]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See the emperor's letter of Nov. 18, 1530, and the answer of the
-Council, Dec. 10. Registers, December 9, 1530. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii.
-pp. 591-594.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_855" id="Foot_855" href="#Ref_855">[855]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Journal de Balard</i>, pp. 306-309.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_856" id="Foot_856" href="#Ref_856">[856]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. pp. 312, 313. Bonivard, <i>Chroniq.</i> ii. pp. 595, 607. Galiffe fils,
-<i>Besançon Hugues</i>, p. 407. Ruchat, ii. p. 305.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_857" id="Foot_857" href="#Ref_857">[857]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Chais, <i>Lettres sur les Jubilés</i>, ii. p. 583.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_858" id="Foot_858" href="#Ref_858">[858]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-La Sœur J. de Jussie, p. 25.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_859" id="Foot_859" href="#Ref_859">[859]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-La Sœur J. de Jussie, p. 28.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_860" id="Foot_860" href="#Ref_860">[860]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Sunt qui ad pietatem aspirant.'—Farel to Zwingle, October 1,
-1531, <i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 647. This letter, written from Granson eleven days
-before Zwingle's death, was the last the Zurich reformer ever received.
-That which comes after, dated simply from Orbe, 1531, is evidently
-anterior to that from Granson.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_861" id="Foot_861" href="#Ref_861">[861]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Apud Gebennenses non nihil audio de Christo meditari.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_862" id="Foot_862" href="#Ref_862">[862]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Sed quanto fervore novit Dominus.'—Zwingl. <i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 647.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_863" id="Foot_863" href="#Ref_863">[863]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Jus est in armis.'—Zwingl. <i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 647.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_864" id="Foot_864" href="#Ref_864">[864]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Petrus Tossanus per Œcolampadium sæpe suis vocatus literis,
-quibus nostras frequentes addidimus. E Gallis pulsus ad te se contulit.'—Farel
-to Zwingle, Orbe, <i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 648.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_865" id="Foot_865" href="#Ref_865">[865]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Quantum agnoscis idoneum, tantum adige in vineam Domini
-properare.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_866" id="Foot_866" href="#Ref_866">[866]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Res non parva est, neque contemnenda.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_867" id="Foot_867" href="#Ref_867">[867]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Strenue laborare, id studio et diligentia compenset, quod diu
-cessans omisit.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_868" id="Foot_868" href="#Ref_868">[868]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Petrum sperabam in messem Domini venturum.'—Farel to Zwingle,
-<i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 648.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_869" id="Foot_869" href="#Ref_869">[869]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Fractis cuculatis aliisque rasis, quos pridem Verbum fugasset.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_870" id="Foot_870" href="#Ref_870">[870]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Christus pro sua bona voluntate disponat omnia! Socordiam
-omnem et veternum excutias a pectoribus eorum, per quos Christi honor
-procurandus venit.'—Farel to Zwingle, Orbe, <i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 648.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_871" id="Foot_871" href="#Ref_871">[871]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Et si per Friburgenses liceret, asserit excipiendum prompte
-Evangelium.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_872" id="Foot_872" href="#Ref_872">[872]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'In hæreticæ pravitatis suspectos severa diligentia inquireretur.'—Spanheim,
-<i>Geneva Restituta</i>, p. 37.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_873" id="Foot_873" href="#Ref_873">[873]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Clamosa quiritatione et crebro convitio.'—Spanheim, <i>Geneva Restituta</i>,
-p. 37.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_874" id="Foot_874" href="#Ref_874">[874]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Bernenses non ea diligentia laborant pro Christi gloria, qua
-Friburgenses pro pontificiis placitis.'—Zwingl. <i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 648.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_875" id="Foot_875" href="#Ref_875">[875]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 11, 13, 14 octobre 1531.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_591" id="Page_591">{591}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XIII.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">DANGER TO WHICH GENEVA IS EXPOSED BY THE DEFEAT OF
- CAPPEL.<br />
- (<span class="smc">October 1531 to January 1532.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=GENEVA AGAIN IN DANGER.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE news of the war between the catholics and the
-reformed having reached Turin, the duke thought
-it a favourable opportunity for attacking Geneva. It
-was reported that five thousand lansquenets were
-approaching on the side of Burgundy, ten thousand
-Italians on the side of the Alps, and that all the
-states of his highness beyond the mountains were in
-motion to fall upon the city. 'There are certain
-heads in Geneva,' said the duke, 'that I purpose
-to set flying.' The Genevans lost not a moment.
-'Let everything be destroyed that may obstruct the
-defence of the city,' said the council. 'Let all the
-suburbs be levelled—Eaux Vives on the left shore of
-the lake; St. Victor, at the other side of St. Antoine;
-St. Leger, up to the Arve; and the Corraterie as far as
-the Rhone. Let every man keep a good look-out; let
-no one be absent without leave; let those who are away
-return to defend the city; and let solemn prayers and
-processions be made for three days.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_876" id="Ref_876" href="#Foot_876">[876]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Thus, while Lucerne and the smaller cantons were
-attacking Zurich, the Duke of Savoy and the gentlemen
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_592" id="Page_592">{592}</a></span>
-of the Leman were preparing to attack Geneva.
-These two cities were in the sixteenth century the
-capitals of protestantism in Switzerland. Geneva,
-however, was still filled with priests and monks, while
-the choirs of all the churches reechoed with the
-matins and other chants of the Romish ritual,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">De pieux fainéants y laissant en leur lieu,</div>
-<div class="verse">A des chantres gagés, le soin de louer Dieu.</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>How did it happen that Geneva was at this time
-coupled with Zurich? It is because that city, though
-not yet won over to the Reformation, was predestined
-to be so: a solitary example, probably, of a state
-exposed to great dangers, not so much on account of
-what it is, as on account of what it will be. The
-beginnings of the evangelical faith to be found there
-were so very small, that they would not have sufficed
-to draw upon it the anathemas of the bishop and the
-armies of the duke; but the election of God was
-brooding over it; God prepared it, tried it, and delivered
-it, because of the great things for which he
-destined it. The adversaries of the Gospel seemed
-to have a secret presentiment of this; and they desired
-therefore to destroy by the same blow the
-city of Zwingle and that which was to be the city of
-Calvin.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=DEFEAT AT CAPPEL: TRIUMPH OF ROME.=</p>
-
-<p>All the citizens were afoot. Some armed with
-arquebuses mounted guard; others marched out
-with their mattocks to level the suburbs. At this
-moment a messenger arrived from Switzerland announcing
-the defeat at Cappel: Zurich had succumbed....
-At first the huguenots could not believe the
-mournful news; they made the messenger repeat it;
-but it was soon confirmed from various quarters, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_593" id="Page_593">{593}</a></span>
-the friends of independence and of the Reformation
-bent their heads in sorrow. The arm in which they
-had trusted was rudely broken. The protestant party
-throughout Switzerland was disheartened, while the
-Roman party rejoiced. It was told at Geneva that
-the mass had been restored at Bremgarten, Rapperschwyl,
-and Soleure, and in all the free bailiwicks,
-and that the monks were returning in triumph to
-their deserted cells. Was it possible for the Reformation
-to plant its banners on the shores of Lake Leman,
-at the very moment when it was expelled from those
-places where it seemed to have been so firmly established?</p>
-
-<p>The Genevan catholics anticipated their triumph.
-The death of the Swiss reformer was (they thought)
-the end of the Reformation; they had only to strike
-the final blow. Their secret meetings became more
-numerous; detestable plots were concocted. The
-heroes of the old episcopal party, resuming their arrogant
-look, walked boldly in the streets of Geneva,
-some rattling their swords, others sweeping the ground
-with their long robes. If they chanced to meet any
-<i>suspected</i> persons, they made contemptuous gestures
-at them, picked quarrels with them, insulted, and
-even struck them, and the outrages remained unpunished.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_877" id="Ref_877" href="#Foot_877">[877]</a></span>
-The Friburgers, in particular, thought
-everything was lawful against the evangelicals,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_878" id="Ref_878" href="#Foot_878">[878]</a></span> and
-desiring to subdue Geneva, emulous of the Waldstettes
-at the Albis, they marched through the streets in small
-bands, and whenever they discovered any huguenot,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_594" id="Page_594">{594}</a></span>
-they surrounded him, carried him off, and threw him
-into prison without trial.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_879" id="Ref_879" href="#Foot_879">[879]</a></span>
-In this way the partisans
-of the bishop expected to restore him to his episcopal
-throne. Pierre de la Baume was getting ready to
-ascend it again.</p>
-
-<p>The huguenots, astonished at the perpetration of
-such outrages in the presence of the Swiss, and even by
-the Swiss, applied once more to the Bernese, but in
-vain. The latter were unwilling to countenance a
-struggle in Geneva which they were checking in other
-quarters. 'Let there be no petulance, no violence,'
-they said; 'we have the orders of the senate.' But,
-as the Genevans were not disposed to remain quiet,
-the envoys of Berne assumed a grave countenance, and,
-putting on a magisterial haughtiness, dismissed their
-unseasonable visitors. The Genevans withdrew murmuring:
-'What scandalous neglect and cowardice!'
-they said; 'Messieurs of Berne think a great deal
-more of this world than of the world to come.'—'The
-senate of Berne,' repeated Farel, 'would not put up
-with the slightest insult to one of their ambassadors,
-and yet they make light of serious insults offered to
-the Gospel of Christ.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_880" id="Ref_880" href="#Foot_880">[880]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=APPROACH OF THE DUKE AND HIS ARMY.=</p>
-
-<p>The defeat of Zurich redoubled the energy of Duke
-Charles. Desirous of adorning his brows with laurels
-similar to those of the victors at Cappel, he gave orders
-for a general attack. The troops of Vaud and Savoy
-surrounded Geneva, and cut off the supplies; the
-boats were seized on both shores of the lake, and the
-duke arrived at Gex, three leagues from the city,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_595" id="Page_595">{595}</a></span>
-with a strong force of cavalry to superintend the
-assault. Under these gloomy auspices the year 1532
-began in Geneva. The danger appeared such that,
-at seven in the evening of the 2nd of January, all the
-heads of families assembled and resolved to keep night
-and day under arms, to wall up the gates, and to
-die rather than renounce the Swiss alliance and their
-dearest liberties. A greater misfortune was about to
-befall them.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_881" id="Ref_881" href="#Foot_881">[881]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the 7th of January, five days after this courageous
-resolution, three Bernese deputies, De Diesbach,
-De Watteville, and Nägueli, appeared before the
-council. Sadness was depicted on their faces, and
-everything betokened that they were the bearers of a
-distressful message. 'We are come from Gex, where
-the duke is lying,' they said. 'He consents to treat
-with you, if you will first renounce the alliance with
-the cantons. Remember, he is a mighty prince, and
-able to do you much harm. You have not yet paid
-for the last army we sent you; we cannot set another
-on foot. We conjure you to come to some arrangement
-with his highness.'</p>
-
-<p>During this speech the Genevans flushed with
-anger and indignation. They could not understand
-how the proud canton of Berne could ask them to
-renounce the cause of independence and the Swiss
-alliance. The deputy having ended his address—the
-general council of the people had been convened to
-hear it—the premier syndic replied: 'We will listen
-to no arrangement except how to preserve the alliance.
-The more we are threatened, the firmer we shall be.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_596" id="Page_596">{596}</a></span>
-We will maintain our rights even till death. We
-trust in God and in Messieurs of the two cities. And
-if, to pay you what we owe, we must pawn our property,
-our wives, and our children, we will do so. As
-for the alliance, we are resolved to live and die for it.'
-The syndic had scarcely done speaking, when all the
-people cried out: 'So be it! We will do nothing
-else—we will die first!' The arquebusiers of Jean
-Philippe and of Richardet were of the same mind.
-The ambassadors thought it strange that they should
-dare to resist Berne. 'We will carry your answer
-back to our lords,' they said, 'and they will do what
-pleases them.' They then retired. The people held
-up their hands, and all swore to be faithful to the
-alliance.</p>
-
-<p>The Bernese envoys had left. The people were in
-great agitation. The cause of liberty had just been
-vanquished at Cappel; the armies of the duke surrounded
-the city, and the Swiss desired to cancel the
-alliance. Geneva was not exempt from secret terrors:
-the women shed tears, and even the men felt an
-oppression like that of the nightmare; but enthusiasm
-for liberty prevailed over every fear. Deprived of
-the help of men, the Genevans raised their eyes to
-heaven. Many of them experienced extraordinary
-emotions, and were the victims of strange spectral
-hallucinations. One night, the sentries posted on
-the walls saw seven headless horsemen, dressed in
-black, keeping guard around the city. They were
-dressed in black, for all Geneva was in mourning;
-they were without heads, for no one could reckon
-upon preserving his own; and then these Genevans
-fancied, in their enthusiasm, that they could defend
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_597" id="Page_597">{597}</a></span>
-Geneva, even when their heads were off. The duke,
-having learnt that some mysterious allies had come to
-the help of the city, quitted Gex, and hurried off to
-Chambéry. It is probable, however, that his conference
-with the three lords of Berne had more influence
-in arresting the execution of his designs, than the
-apparition of the seven black horsemen.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_882" id="Ref_882" href="#Foot_882">[882]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=GOD PREPARES GENEVA BY TRIAL.=</p>
-
-<p>The trials, the terrors, the repeated attacks that
-Geneva was forced to undergo at the hands of her
-enemies, are the characteristics of her history at the
-epoch of the Reformation. Her citizens, plundered,
-hunted down, captured, thrown into the dungeons of
-the castles, always between life and death, lived continually
-in the apprehension of an assault, and almost
-every year their fears were changed into terrible realities;
-of this we have seen several instances, and we
-shall see more. There is probably no city of the
-sixteenth century which arrived at the possession of
-truth and liberty through such great perils. When
-their supplies failed, when their communications, with
-Switzerland were interrupted, when no one could leave
-the city, when all around the arms of the Savoyards
-were seen flashing in the rays of the sun, the citizens
-no doubt displayed an heroic courage; but yet the
-women and the aged men, and even men in the vigour
-of life, felt a mortal fear and anguish. 'Christians are
-not logs of wood,' it was said subsequently in this city,
-and we may well apply the words to the Genevans of
-this epoch; 'they are not so devoid of human feeling,
-that they are not touched by sorrow, that they do not
-fear danger, that poverty is not a burden to them, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_598" id="Page_598">{598}</a></span>
-persecution sharp and difficult to bear. This is why
-they feel sad when they are tried.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_883" id="Ref_883" href="#Foot_883">[883]</a></span>
-Long ago in the
-early days of Christianity, famines, earthquakes, plagues,
-persecution, and afterwards, at the period of the invasion
-of the barbarians, the devastations with which
-that calamity was attended, made serious souls feel the
-presence of God, and led them to the cross. An earthquake
-which threw down part of the city of Philippi,
-terrified a gaoler, until then hardened in superstition,
-humbled him, and made him listen to the teaching of
-the disciples which he had previously despised;<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_884" id="Ref_884" href="#Foot_884">[884]</a></span>
-and, later still, a similar calamity in Africa brought a
-great number of pagans to confess the Gospel and be
-baptised.</p>
-
-<p>It was by such trials as these that Geneva was now
-prepared. God was ploughing the field which he wished
-to sow. Distresses and deliverances continually repeated
-revealed to thoughtful men the power of God:
-to this even the Registers of the Council bear witness.
-Did this rough school lead any souls further? Were
-there any who sought beyond the world for life incorruptible?...
-The inward travail of men's minds is
-generally concealed, and the chroniclers give us no
-information on this point (it is not their department);
-but we cannot doubt that the end for which God sent
-the trial was attained. Perhaps at that time there
-were souls which, in the midst of the evils they saw
-around them, were led to discover in themselves the
-supreme evil—sin; perhaps in some private chamber
-humble voices were then raised to heaven; perhaps
-the judgments of God, which were suspended over
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_599" id="Page_599">{599}</a></span>
-their heads and those of their wives and children, induced
-some to dread the last judgment; and perhaps
-there were many who embraced the eternal love, that
-inexhaustible source of salvation, who believed in the
-Gospel of the Son of God and found peace therein.
-We know not what took place in the secret depths of
-men's hearts; but certainly the times which we are
-describing were times of trial which contributed to
-make Geneva what it subsequently became: it was a
-'burning furnace from which came forth fine brass.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_885" id="Ref_885" href="#Foot_885">[885]</a></span>
-If Geneva shone out in the sixteenth and seventeenth
-centuries, it was partly because at the epoch of the
-Reformation it had been sorely tried, and, if the expression
-be allowable, 'brightly burnished.'—'We
-are as it were annealed in the furnace of God,' may be
-said of this city, 'and the scum of our faith has been
-thus purged away.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_886" id="Ref_886" href="#Foot_886">[886]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=SWISS PATRICIANS CANCEL THE ALLIANCE.=</p>
-
-<p>On the 7th of February, 1532, five ambassadors—two
-from Berne, and three from Friburg—with
-Sebastian de Diesbach at their head, appeared at
-Geneva before the Council of Two Hundred; they
-were the representatives of the Swiss aristocracy, of
-those proud captains who figured in battles and
-appeared in the courts of kings. They discharged
-their mission with as little ceremony as they observed
-in taking cities, and demanded that Geneva
-should renounce its alliance with the Swiss and put the
-Duke of Savoy again in possession of his supremacy....
-What will the Genevans do? Even Friburg,
-which had at first appeared favourable to them, failed
-them now.... Two hundred voices exclaimed: 'We
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_600" id="Page_600">{600}</a></span>
-will die sooner!' The next day, when the general
-council was assembled, the greatest excitement prevailed
-among them; everybody seemed eager to speak
-at once; loud clamours arose on every side: 'All the
-people began to shout,' say the minutes of this assembly.
-The language of Diesbach was urgent, imperative, and
-threatening.... A hurricane was blowing over Geneva;
-the tree must bend or break. But it neither bent nor
-broke. The ambassadors, amazed and indignant, returned
-to their own country.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_887" id="Ref_887" href="#Foot_887">[887]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Genevans, left alone, asked what was to be done....
-The cup was overflowing. Suddenly a happy idea
-crossed the minds of certain patriots. Although the
-patricians and pensioners are opposed to the rights of
-Geneva, will not the people, and the grand council
-which represents them, be in favour of liberty? When
-the Reformation was established at Berne, in 1528, the
-noblest resolutions were formed. The indigent had
-been clothed with the church ornaments, the pensions
-of the princes renounced, and the military capitulations
-which bound the Swiss to the service of foreign
-powers abolished. Then the enthusiasm had cooled
-down; the pensioners regretted the old times; they
-tampered with the more influential people of the city,
-and exasperated them against the alliance with Geneva
-which displeased their old master the duke. 'Let
-us make an attempt,' exclaimed some of the Genevese,
-'to revive in Berne the noble aspirations for Reform
-and liberty.' Robert Vandel and two other deputies
-departed for the banks of the Aar.</p>
-
-<p>Vandel was well suited for this mission. Ever since
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_601" id="Page_601">{601}</a></span>
-the day when he saw his aged father illegally seized
-by the bishop and thrown into prison, he had given
-his heart to independence, as he subsequently gave it
-to the Gospel. He knew that the people had retained
-their sympathy for Geneva, and that if the patricians
-prevailed in the little council, the citizens prevailed
-in the great council: he therefore appeared before
-this body. He explained to them the dangers of the
-Genevans, their love of independence, and their resolution
-to risk everything rather than separate from the
-Swiss. His language moved the hearts of the Bernese,
-and the good cause prevailed. 'We will maintain the
-alliance,' they said; 'and, if necessary, we will march
-to defend your rights.' Friburg adopted the resolutions
-of Berne.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_888" id="Ref_888" href="#Foot_888">[888]</a></span>
-Thus after the trial came the
-deliverance; Geneva began to breathe freely. Yet
-another sorrow was in store for it.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=RESIGNATION AND DEATH OF HUGUES.=</p>
-
-<p>On the 20th of February, Besançon Hugues appeared
-before the council and resigned all his functions.
-'I am growing old,' he said (he was only forty-five);
-'I have many children, and I desire to devote myself
-to my own affairs.' There is no doubt that the motives
-assigned by Hugues had some part in his determination;
-we may, however, ask if they were the only ones.
-He watched attentively the movement of men's minds
-in Geneva, and, being devoted to Roman-catholicism
-and the bishop, he could not help seeing that the
-opposite party was gaining more followers every day.
-He had spared neither time, trouble, fortune, nor health
-to bring about the alliance with the Swiss. Seeing
-that it existed no longer solely in the parchments of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_602" id="Page_602">{602}</a></span>
-the archives, but in the hearts of the people, he thought
-that he had fulfilled his task, and that for the new work
-Geneva ought to have new leaders. If Hugues was
-not old, he was ailing; he already felt the approaches
-of that disease which carried him off a few months
-later. He declined rapidly, and breathed his last towards
-the end of the year.</p>
-
-<p>The death of Besançon Hugues did not proceed
-from an ordinary sickness: he died of a broken heart.
-Although still a catholic, at the moment when the
-Reform was about to enter his country, a crown ought
-to be laid upon his grave. The continual anxiety
-which the perils of Geneva had caused him; more than
-forty official missions; his incessant labours in the
-Genevan cause; the new burdens continually imposed
-upon him; the reverses which rent his heart; his precipitate
-flight, his dangers on the roads and in the
-cities, cold, watchings, and the cares of a family—('I
-commend to you my poor household,' he said sometimes
-in his letters to the council); his disappointments;
-the reproaches he had to endure from both
-parties; his struggles with the pensioners, the agents
-of Savoy, the knights of the Spoon, and some of his
-fellow-citizens—all these vexations contributed to his
-disease and death. The head of Besançon Hugues did
-not fall under the sword of the executioner, like those
-of Berthelier and Lévrier; but the pacific hero sank
-under the weight of fatigue and sorrow. An invisible
-sword struck him; and it may be said that the deaths
-of the three great men of Genevan emancipation were
-the deaths of martyrs.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_876" id="Foot_876" href="#Ref_876">[876]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil du 11 octobre 1531.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_877" id="Foot_877" href="#Ref_877">[877]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Alii impune injuria afficiuntur.'—Zwingl. <i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 648.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_878" id="Foot_878" href="#Ref_878">[878]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Nihil pene non licet Friburgensibus in pios.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_879" id="Foot_879" href="#Ref_879">[879]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Indicta causa, rapiuntur in carceres.'—Zwingl. <i>Epp.</i> ii. p. 648.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_880" id="Foot_880" href="#Ref_880">[880]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Non putarim senatum Bernensem olim ita laturum levem injuriam
-in nuntium sicut gravem in Evangelium perfert.'—Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_881" id="Foot_881" href="#Ref_881">[881]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil du 2 janvier 1532.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_882" id="Foot_882" href="#Ref_882">[882]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 7, 8, 9 janvier 1532. Savyon, <i>Annales</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_883" id="Foot_883" href="#Ref_883">[883]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin on 1 Peter i. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_884" id="Foot_884" href="#Ref_884">[884]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Acts xvi. 23, 24.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_885" id="Foot_885" href="#Ref_885">[885]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Revelation i. 15.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_886" id="Foot_886" href="#Ref_886">[886]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_887" id="Foot_887" href="#Ref_887">[887]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 4, 7, 8 février 1532.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_888" id="Foot_888" href="#Ref_888">[888]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>History of the Reformation of the Sixteenth Century</i>, bk. xv. ch. iii.
-Ruchat, ii. p. 83. Galiffe fils, <i>B. Hugues</i>, p. 442.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_603" id="Page_603">{603}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XIV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">AN EMPEROR AND A SCHOOLMASTER.
- (<span class="smc">Spring 1532.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="side">=THE EMPEROR'S NEW SCHEME.=</p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">JUST as the noble citizen, who had defended with
-such devotedness the independence of his country,
-had retired from the stage of the world, new plots
-were got up against Geneva; but new strength came
-also to her help. An emperor was rising against
-the city, and a schoolmaster was bringing it the everlasting
-Word.</p>
-
-<p>The imperial court was then at Ratisbon, where
-the Germanic diet was to assemble. The Duke and
-Duchess of Savoy, who could not make up their minds
-to resign Geneva, had ordered their ambassador accredited
-to Charles V. to solicit the influence of that
-prince in order to induce the bishop, his partisan, to
-cede his temporal principality to the duke's second
-son. The duchess, who appears to have been anxious
-to bring about this cession, made every possible exertion
-to attain her object. The emperor, who was very
-fond of Beatrice, answered: 'I desire this arrangement,
-because of the singular love, goodwill, and
-affection I feel towards my dearly beloved cousin and
-sister-in-law.' He added, moreover, that he desired
-it also 'in the interest of the holy faith and for the
-preservation of mother Church.' He undertook to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_604" id="Page_604">{604}</a></span>
-persuade Pierre de la Baume to transfer his temporality
-to the young prince; and, that he might bring
-the negotiation to a favourable issue, he applied to
-the Count of Montrevel, the head of the bishop's
-family. On the 14th of April, 1532, he dictated and
-forwarded the following letter to that nobleman:
-'The emperor, king, duke, and count of Burgundy,
-to his very dear liegeman: We require and order you
-very expressly, that as soon as possible, and at the
-earliest opportunity and convenience, you proceed to
-the Bishop of Geneva, and tell him, as you may see
-most fitting, the desire we have that he should <i>please
-our said cousins</i>, the duke and duchess; employing
-with him soft words of persuasion, according to your
-accustomed prudence. He can all the easier yield to
-our prayer, because, as the successor-designate of the
-Archbishop of Besançon, he must necessarily leave
-Geneva to reside in that city.' The emperor, moreover,
-used his influence with the Marshal of Burgundy,
-the Baron of St. Sorlin, Pierre de la Baume's brother.
-The prelate was to be attacked on every side.
-Charles's recommendations could hardly have been
-more urgent if the safety of the German empire had
-been at stake.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_889" id="Ref_889" href="#Foot_889">[889]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The duke, who was delighted at these letters of the
-emperor, began to take such measures as would enable
-him to profit by them. Since the puissant Charles V.
-gives Geneva to his son, he will go in quest of the
-young prince's new states. In the following month
-(May 1532) everything foreboded that some new
-attack was preparing against Geneva. There was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_605" id="Page_605">{605}</a></span>
-great commotion in the castles; trumpets were sounding,
-banners flying, and priests raising loud their
-voices. It might have been imagined that they
-were preparing for a crusade like those which had
-taken place of yore against the Albigenses or the
-Saracens. The Genevans, who had not a moment's
-repose, mournfully told one another the news. 'In
-the states of Savoy there are loud rumours of war,'
-they said; 'the nobles are enraged against the evangelicals,
-whom they call <i>Lutherans</i>; and some of the
-gentry are assembled already, and going to and fro
-under arms.' The citizens did not give way to dejection;
-on the contrary, the knowledge of these intrigues
-and preparations made them long the more earnestly
-for the emancipation of Geneva. They said that from
-the day when the pope had deprived the citizens of
-the choice of their ruler, and had nominated creatures
-or members of the house of Savoy as bishops at Geneva,
-there had been in the city nothing but disorders, violence,
-extortion, imprisonment, confiscations, tortures,
-and cruel punishments. They asked if it was not time
-to return to the primitive form of Christianity, to the
-popular organisation of the Church; they repeated
-that Geneva would never secure her independence
-and her liberty, except by trusting to the great principles
-of the Reformation. 'Zurich,' they said, 'has
-resumed the rights which Rome had taken away: it
-is time that Geneva followed her example.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_890" id="Ref_890" href="#Foot_890">[890]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=NEGATIVE PROTESTANTISM INSUFFICIENT.=</p>
-
-<p>The Reformation was neither a movement of liberty
-nor a philosophical development, but a christian, a
-heavenly renewal. It sought after God, and, having
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_606" id="Page_606">{606}</a></span>
-found him, restored him to man: that was its work.
-But, at the same time, wherever it was established, at
-least under the Calvinistic form, civil liberty followed it.
-We must acknowledge, however, that the reformers,
-with the exception of Zwingle, did not trouble themselves
-much about this. It was grace that filled them
-with enthusiasm. It was the great idea of a free
-pardon, and not artillery, which shattered the power
-of the pope. Every man was then invited to the foot
-of the cross, to receive immediately from Christ, and
-through no sacerdotal channel, an inestimable gift.
-But Christianity, which the priesthood had monopolised,
-vitiated, and made a trade of during the middle
-ages, became common property in the sixteenth
-century. It passed from the pomps of the altar to
-men of humble and contrite heart, from the gloomy
-and solitary cloisters to the domestic hearth, from
-isolated Rome to universal society. Once more
-launched into the midst of the nations, it everywhere
-restored to man faith, hope, and morality, light, liberty,
-and life.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=OLIVÉTAN ARRIVES AT GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p>At the very time when a beautiful princess was
-coveting Geneva, an ambitious duke intriguing, and
-courtiers agitating, and when a puissant monarch was
-granting his imperial favours, a humble schoolmaster
-arrived in the city. And while all those pomps and
-ceremonies were among the number of things worn
-out and passing away, this teacher brought with him
-the principles of a new life. Farel, as we have seen,
-ardently desired that the Word of God should be
-circulated and even publicly preached at Geneva.
-He thought that then only would the Reformation be
-truly established and independence secured. It is
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_607" id="Page_607">{607}</a></span>
-probable that the person who arrived in this city, and
-whom he had long known, was sent by him; but we
-have no proof that such was the case. However, this
-man was not, properly speaking, a preacher; he was
-merely a schoolmaster, and yet he was to perform a
-work greater than that of the emperor. At that time
-Geneva passed for protestant; but her protestantism
-was limited to throwing off despotism and superstition.
-But it is not sufficient to reject what is false; the truth
-preached by Christ and the apostles must be believed.
-<i>Faith</i> is the principle of the Reformation. There was
-at Geneva, to some extent, that negative protestantism
-which rejects not only the abuses of popery, but also
-evangelical truth itself; which can create nothing,
-and which is little else than a form—and certainly
-one of the least interesting forms—of philosophy. If
-Geneva was to be reformed, to become a centre of light
-and morality, and to maintain her political independence,
-she must have a positive and living christianity;
-and it was this that Olivétan, Farel, and Calvin were
-about to bring her.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=CHARACTER OF CHAUTEMPS.=</p>
-
-<p>In the street of the Croix d'Or, not far from the
-Place du Molard, lived an enlightened, wealthy, and
-influential citizen, Jean Chautemps, a member of council.
-He was a quiet and conscientious man, yielding
-unhesitatingly to his convictions. Chautemps valued
-learning highly, and having sons desired to see them
-well educated. People spoke to him of a Frenchman,
-born at Noyon, in Picardy, who, after a long residence
-at Paris, had been compelled to leave France in consequence
-of one of the attacks so frequently made
-upon the <i>Lutherans</i> at that time. 'Besides,' added his
-informant, 'he is a very learned man.' Indeed, without
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_608" id="Page_608">{608}</a></span>
-being either a Reuchlin in Hebrew or a Melanchthon
-in Greek, he had a sound knowledge of both
-languages; it was his practice to read the Holy Scriptures
-in the original text, and he was fond of inserting
-in his writings passages from the Old Testament, where
-they still appear in beautiful Hebrew characters, in the
-midst of his antiquated French. His name was Peter
-Robert Olivétan—the same who, during his residence
-in Paris, had had the happiness of bringing to a knowledge
-of evangelical truth one of his cousins and fellow-townsmen,
-John Calvin. Chautemps, considering it
-fortunate to have such a master for his children, received
-him into his house.</p>
-
-<p>Calvin's cousin boldly set to work. He taught his
-patron's children, and, as it would appear, some
-others that had been placed with them. He taught
-with love and clearness, according to 'the right mode'
-of Mathurin Cordier, whom he had known at Paris.
-He believed, as Calvin says, that 'roughness and servile
-austerity excite children to rebellion, and extinguish
-in them the holy affections of love and reverence,'
-and he strove 'by moderate and kind treatment
-to increase in them the will and readiness to
-obey.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_891" id="Ref_891" href="#Foot_891">[891]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The schoolmaster, as he is termed in the Registers
-of the Council of Geneva, did not restrict himself to
-teaching Latin and Greek. He was simple and
-modest, and calls himself, in the preface to the book
-which has immortalised him (the translation of the
-Bible), '<i>the humble and lowly translator</i>.' But God
-had kindled a divine fire in his heart. He believed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_609" id="Page_609">{609}</a></span>
-that the christian ought to carry a lighted lamp in
-his hand to show others the way of life, and he never
-failed to do so. He sometimes accompanied Chautemps
-to the churches, and was observed to be deeply
-moved by the errors which he heard there; he would
-leave the temple in agitation, return home, and, seated
-with his patron, refute by Holy Scripture the opinions
-of the priests, and faithfully explain the true Christian
-doctrine. The councillor, who had early sided with
-those who inclined towards the Reformation, was
-struck with these conversations, and, far from resisting
-the truth that was set before him, joyfully yielded
-himself to it. He presently displayed, according to
-Froment's testimony, 'if not a perfect knowledge, at
-least a great desire for learning, with much love and
-zeal to show himself as a friend of the Reformation.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_892" id="Ref_892" href="#Foot_892">[892]</a></span>
-From that hour the pious councillor always came forward
-whenever there was a question of upholding the
-evangelical cause in Geneva. When that great missionary,
-Farel, arrived, Chautemps was among the first
-to welcome him. When a dispute occurred with the
-curate of St. Magdalen's, he was one of those who defended
-the teaching of the Scriptures.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_893" id="Ref_893" href="#Foot_893">[893]</a></span>
-And subsequently
-he boldly declared, in full council, that he
-desired to live according to the Gospel and the Word
-of God.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_894" id="Ref_894" href="#Foot_894">[894]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Olivétan's zeal was not confined to the house in
-which he lived; he laboured to make the Gospel
-known to the councillor's friends, and even to everybody
-whom he found accessible to the Divine Word.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_610" id="Page_610">{610}</a></span>
-He exerted himself, and overcame obstacles; by means
-of the Scriptures he endeavoured to 'point out <i>with
-gentleness</i>' to the priests the errors which they taught,
-and would not allow himself to be hindered by any fear.
-Such zeal was not without danger, for the priests
-had still much power in Geneva. Chautemps and his
-friends accordingly advised Olivétan to be prudent,
-lest he should come to harm; but the schoolmaster
-said like his cousin: 'It is God's will that his truth
-should be proclaimed, happen what may; it must be
-published, even should the depths of hell pour forth
-their rage against it.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_895" id="Ref_895" href="#Foot_895">[895]</a></span>
-Olivétan once reproved a priest
-with so much boldness that the latter stirred up all
-the clergy against him, and he was ordered (without
-being brought to trial) to leave the city; but this
-belongs to a later time.</p>
-
-<p>Conversation did not suffice, and if any persons
-showed a desire to learn the new doctrine, Olivétan
-explained it to them. He did not do so before large
-audiences; it was generally to small parties. Yet a
-document speaks of assemblies held not only in private
-houses, but in public, in the open places, and in front
-of the churches.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_896" id="Ref_896" href="#Foot_896">[896]</a></span>
-Olivétan, therefore, like his illustrious
-relative, called to mind that in the beginning of
-christianity the doctrine of the Lord did not remain
-'hidden as it were in little comers, and that never was
-thunder heard so loud and so piercing as the sound of
-the preaching of the Gospel, reverberating from one
-end of the world to the other.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_897" id="Ref_897" href="#Foot_897">[897]</a></span>
-He sometimes quitted
-the humble conventicle and preached the Word of truth
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_611" id="Page_611">{611}</a></span>
-under the vault of heaven. Alarmed at the great disorders
-in which those men indulged who were one
-day to bear the name of 'libertines,' he attacked the
-conscience with holy intrepidity.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=OLIVÉTAN'S MISSION.=</p>
-
-<p>One day, one of those 'private assemblies' was
-held, of which the emperor had complained to the
-syndics. It was, we may suppose, in the house of
-Chautemps or some other huguenot (public meetings
-were, I think, rare exceptions) in the street of the Croix
-d'Or or of the <i>Allemands</i>, so called because some German
-Switzers, friends of the Reformation, lived in it.
-A few men and women, most of them known to the
-master of the house, came and took their seats on the
-benches in front of the evangelist. Olivétan, who saw
-before him souls slumbering in false security and heedless
-of the Supreme Judge, 'magnificently discharged
-the embassy intrusted to him' (according to Calvin's
-expression). 'One day,' he said, 'when thou shalt
-hear the Lord calling thee to judgment, will there be
-found anything in thee but fear and trembling, flight
-and concealment? Look! Access to the Lord is
-cut off, because of sin. With whom wilt thou take
-refuge? In what place wilt thou find relief? God, the
-avenger of sin, from whom nothing can be hid, is
-everywhere present ... and everywhere terrifies the
-guilty conscience.'</p>
-
-<p>Then, imagining that he saw some of those Genevans,
-whose morals, as depraved as those of the monks,
-alienated them from the Gospel, he exclaimed: 'The
-flesh excludes the Spirit, and stops the way, so that
-the entrance of the heart is not opened to it. The flesh
-desires present pleasures, it follows vanity, it carefully
-seeks after the delights of the body, by eating
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_612" id="Page_612">{612}</a></span>
-and drinking, by idleness, licentious pursuits, and
-other such things, in which it is entirely absorbed.
-Reason, illumined by the Spirit, strives after good
-things, and fights against the flesh; but the sensual
-man is nothing more than a brute, and gives himself
-up entirely to things that belong to brutes.'</p>
-
-<p>Among those who sat on the humble benches and
-listened to the preacher, were also some of those intellectual
-men, numerous in Geneva, who would have
-liked to come to the faith, but whom the doctrine of
-Christ astonished and even alarmed. 'You believe,'
-said the evangelist, 'and yet you do not believe. You
-willingly hear the words of salvation, and yet you are
-terrified at them. There is nothing that we hear from
-the mouth of the Saviour which, without a mediator,
-should not be terrifying to us, and the flesh is quite
-dismayed that it should be necessary to possess such
-faith.'</p>
-
-<p>Then the schoolmaster raised the trumpet of the
-Gospel to his lips and announced the great mystery
-of Redemption, without concealing what the Greeks
-would have called its <i>foolishness</i>. 'Let us turn then,'
-he exclaimed, 'to the Mediator, who has consummated
-the alliance and purified us by his own blood, with
-which our consciences are sprinkled and watered. The
-Old Covenant always depended on the blood of beasts;
-the New Covenant depends on new blood. Eternal
-Redemption was effected by an eternal sacrifice. The
-alliance is indissoluble, perpetual, and perfect through
-the eternal blood which was of God.... The kingdom
-of the Messiah has no end; its king must therefore be
-immortal; and the new men, also immortal, are citizens
-of an everlasting kingdom.'</p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_613" id="Page_613">{613}</a></div>
-
-<p>The huguenots were fond of debating, even unseasonably.
-Some of those seated in front of Olivétan
-were astonished at hearing this doctrine of Christ's
-sacrifice set forth, and maintained that, if they were to
-judge from facts, it did not do much to free man from
-sin. 'No doubt,' said Olivétan, 'if the Holy Ghost
-does not teach us. We cannot attain true holiness
-if the Holy Ghost, who is the reformer of hearts, is
-absent. By the Spirit of Jesus Christ the remains
-of sin in us diminish little by little. The Spirit of
-Christ burns gently and cleanses away the stains of
-the heart.... What a profound mystery! He who
-was hung upon the cross, who even ascended into
-heaven to finish everything, comes and dwells in us,
-and there accomplishes the perfect work of eternal
-Redemption.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_898" id="Ref_898" href="#Foot_898">[898]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Thus spoke the tutor of Councillor Chautemps'
-children.</p>
-
-<p>Olivétan was a mysterious personage, a singular reformer.
-At Paris he called Calvin to the Gospel, and
-gave him to Christianity as the apostle of the new
-times. At Geneva, he was the forerunner of his illustrious
-relative; like a pioneer in the forest, he cut
-down the secular trees, and prepared the soil into
-which his pious and mighty successor so copiously
-scattered the seed. Later, as we shall see, he
-gave to the reformed French Church its first Bible,
-a translation which, revised by Calvin, so greatly
-advanced the kingdom of God. Perhaps Olivétan,
-during his residence in Geneva, may have thought
-that his cousin would hereafter occupy this post. He
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_614" id="Page_614">{614}</a></span>
-appears in history only as the precursor of the
-reformer, and Calvin had hardly set foot in this city
-when Olivétan crossed the Alps, went to Italy, even
-to the city of the pontiffs, as if he desired now to
-accomplish a new work, to come to close quarters with
-the papacy, and prepare Rome for the Reformation as
-he had prepared Geneva. But there he suddenly disappeared—poisoned,
-as some say. There is a veil
-over his death as over his life. He is spoken of no
-more, and scarcely any one appears to know either his
-work or his name. But we must not anticipate: we
-shall meet him again erelong.</p>
-
-<p>Olivétan certainly played an important part in the
-great change which has renewed modern society, and
-his name deserves to be enrolled among those which
-are carved on the foundation-stones of the vast temple
-of the Reformation.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_889" id="Foot_889" href="#Ref_889">[889]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-The emperor's letter to the Count of Montrevel. Galiffe fils,
-<i>B. Hugues, Pièces Justificatives</i>, p. 494.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_890" id="Foot_890" href="#Ref_890">[890]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Zwinglii <i>Opp.</i> iii. p. 439. <i>Archives de Genève.</i> James Fazy, <i>Précis
-de l'Histoire de la République de Genève</i>, pp. 183-191.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_891" id="Foot_891" href="#Ref_891">[891]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvini <i>Opera</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_892" id="Foot_892" href="#Ref_892">[892]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Froment, <i>Actes et Gestes de Genève</i>, p. 4.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_893" id="Foot_893" href="#Ref_893">[893]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil du 31 décembre 1532.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_894" id="Foot_894" href="#Ref_894">[894]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ibid. du 8 janvier 1534.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_895" id="Foot_895" href="#Ref_895">[895]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin, <i>Comm. sur les Actes</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_896" id="Foot_896" href="#Ref_896">[896]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-<i>Archives de Genève, Pièces Historiques</i>, nᵒ 7069, 8 juillet 1532.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_897" id="Foot_897" href="#Ref_897">[897]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Calvin, on Matthew x. 36.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_898" id="Foot_898" href="#Ref_898">[898]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Olivétan. Introduction to his French translation of the Bible. Fol.
-Neuchatel, 1535.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_615" id="Page_615">{615}</a></div>
-
- <h3>CHAPTER XV.<br />
- <span style="font-size:80%">THE PARDON OF ROME AND THE PARDON OF HEAVEN.<br />
- (<span class="smc">June and July 1532.</span>)</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">OLIVÉTAN'S teaching had not been fruitless. There
-occurred erelong an evangelical manifestation in Geneva,
-which was an important step, and the first
-public act of Reform. Calvin's cousin may have been
-the instrument, though Clement VII. was the proximate
-cause.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE JUBILEE.=</p>
-
-<p>The pope was preparing at that time to publish, not
-a local pardon like that of St. Claire, but a universal
-jubilee. It was the general topic of conversation in
-many places, and some told how it had originated.
-'On the eve of the new year, 1300,' said a scholar,
-jeeringly, 'a report spread suddenly through Rome
-(no one knew from whence it came) that a plenary
-indulgence would be granted to all who should go
-next morning to St. Peter's. A great crowd of Romans
-and foreigners hurried there, and in the midst
-of the multitude was an aged man who, stooping
-and leaning on his staff, wished also to take part in
-the festival. He was a hundred and seven years old,
-people said. He was conducted to the pope, the
-proud and daring Boniface VIII. The old man told
-him how, a century before, an indulgence of a hundred
-years had been granted on account of the jubilee; he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_616" id="Page_616">{616}</a></span>
-remembered it well, he said. Boniface, taking advantage
-of the declaration of this man, whose mind was
-weakened by age, decreed that there should be a
-plenary indulgence every hundred years.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_899" id="Ref_899" href="#Foot_899">[899]</a></span>
-The great
-gains which were made out of it, led to the jubilee
-being appointed to be held successively every fifty
-years, thirty-three years, and twenty-five years. But
-the jubilee of the twenty-fifth year did not always
-hinder that of the thirty-third.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_900" id="Ref_900" href="#Foot_900">[900]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At Geneva people were already beginning to talk
-much about the coming jubilee. Olivétan and his
-friends were scandalised at it. The heart of this just
-and upright man was distressed at seeing the pardon
-of God set aside in favour of a festival of human invention,
-in which, in order to obtain remission of sins,
-it was necessary to frequent the churches during
-a fixed number of days, and perform certain works,
-and whose surest effect was a large increase to the
-revenues of the pope. The schoolmaster maintained
-that if any one sought to find repose of conscience in
-such inventions, he would waste his time; his heart
-would be lulled to sleep in forgetfulness of God, or be
-full of fear and trembling until it had found repose in
-Jesus Christ. 'Christ alone is our peace,' he said,
-'and alone gives our conscience the assurance that
-God is appeased and reconciled with it.'</p>
-
-<p>Men's minds were soon in a great ferment in Geneva.
-People met and talked about it in the streets, and everywhere
-began to murmur. 'A fine tariff is the pope's!'
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_617" id="Page_617">{617}</a></span>
-said the more decided of the huguenots. 'Do you want
-an indulgence for a false oath? Pay 29 livres 5 sols.
-Do you want an indulgence for murder? A man's life
-is cheaper; a murder will only cost you 15 livres 2 sols
-6 deniers.' They added, 'that the pretended treasury
-of indulgences, from which the pope took the wares
-he sold to every comer, was an invention of the
-devil.'</p>
-
-<p class="side">=ENCROACHMENTS OF THE CLERGY.=</p>
-
-<p>It was thus that the christians, whom preceding
-ages had kept down, began to reappear in the
-Church. The lay spirit was manifested in Geneva.
-Baudichon de la Maison-Neuve, one of the most determined
-huguenots, had frequent conversations with
-other good <i>Lutherans</i>, all of whom complained of the
-domineering spirit of the clergy, who had monopolised
-everything. Such complaints were, however, universal
-throughout christendom. In the earliest times,
-said the people, the <i>priests</i> began by confiscating the
-rights of the laity; and erelong these shepherds had
-nothing but silly <i>sheep</i> under their crooks.... But while
-the priests were engrossed in this work, another was
-going on behind their backs which they did not observe.
-The <i>bishops</i> did to the priests what the priests had
-done to the laity; and when the inferior functionaries
-of the Church had succeeded in catching the flocks in
-their trap, they found in their turn that they had fallen
-into the bishops' pitfall. At the Council of Cologne
-(<small>A.D.</small> 346) there were ten priests, presbyters, or elders,
-in addition to the fourteen bishops; but that was the
-last time. At the Councils of Poitiers, Vaison, Paris,
-and Valence (all held in the latter half of the fourth
-century), none but bishops were present. Subsequently,
-indeed, a <i>delegated</i> priest was found in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_618" id="Page_618">{618}</a></span>
-three councils; but at last this single priest was
-politely dismissed. While the bishops were busied
-with this conquest, another was going on; and they
-had no sooner confiscated the rights of the priests (as
-the priests had confiscated those of the laity), than
-they found their own confiscated by the <i>pope</i>. All
-rights had come to an end. Flocks, priests, bishops—all
-had lost their liberty. The pope was the Church.
-One monster had swallowed the other, to be swallowed
-in its turn. Nothing is more sad, nothing more disastrous,
-than this tragic history. <i>Quod des devorat.</i><span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_901" id="Ref_901" href="#Foot_901">[901]</a></span>
-The Romish hierarchy devours everything that is
-given to it. The Reformation was to restore that
-christian society which the clerical society had put
-out of sight.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=GOD'S PARDON.=</p>
-
-<p>And so it happened at Geneva. Their rights as
-christians were among the first claimed by these
-Genevans, who were so enamoured of their rights as
-citizens. 'If the pope <i>sells</i> indulgences,' said they,
-'the Gospel <i>gives</i> a free pardon. Since Rome advertises
-her pardon, let us advertise that of the Lord.'
-These reformers, who were probably among the
-number of Olivétan's hearers, drew up, conjointly,
-a 'heavenly proclamation,' in simple and evangelical
-terms: it is possible that Olivétan himself was the
-author. Baudichon de la Maison-Neuve took the draft,
-hurried off with it to a printer, and ordered him to
-print it in bold characters. After that, certain huguenots,
-the most zealous of whom were Maison-Neuve
-and Goulaz, arranged their plans; and early in the
-morning of the 9th of June they posted on the walls,
-in different parts of the city, the <i>great general pardon</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_619" id="Page_619">{619}</a></span>
-<i>of Jesus Christ</i>,<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_902" id="Ref_902" href="#Foot_902">[902]</a></span>
-at such a height that every one could
-read it. At that time there was in front of St. Pierre's
-a pillar on which the clerical notices were displayed;
-Goulaz went to it, and over one of the announcements
-of the Roman jubilee he fastened the proclamation of
-Gospel pardon.</p>
-
-<p>The sun had risen above the Alps: it was already
-broad daylight; the city woke from its slumbers;
-windows and doors were opened, and the people began
-to pass through the streets. They stared and stood
-still in surprise before these proclamations.... Men
-and women, priests and friars, crowded in front of the
-placards, and read with amazement the following words,
-which sounded strange to them:—</p>
-
- <p class="gap-above2
- center"><span class="small">GOD, OUR HEAVENLY FATHER</span><br />
- <span class="x-small">PROMISES</span><br />
- <span class="spaced">A GENERAL PARDON OF ALL HIS SINS</span><br />
- <span class="small">TO EVERY ONE WHO FEELS SINCERE REPENTANCE,</span><br />
- <span class="x-small">AND POSSESSES</span><br />
- <span class="small">A LIVELY FAITH IN THE DEATH AND PROMISES</span><br />
- <span class="x-small">OF</span><br />
- <span class="small">JESUS CHRIST.</span></p>
-
-<p>'This cannot surely be a papal indulgence,' said
-certain huguenots, 'for money is not mentioned in it.
-Salvation given gratuitously must certainly come from
-heaven.' But the priests thought differently; they
-looked upon the placard as a defiance of the pope's
-pardon, and their wrath grew fiercer than ever. They
-insulted those whom they believed to be the authors
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_620" id="Page_620">{620}</a></span>
-of the proclamation, overwhelmed them with abuse,
-and attacked them not only with their fists, but with
-the weapons which they had provided.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_903" id="Ref_903" href="#Foot_903">[903]</a></span>
-'The clergy
-made a great uproar,' says the pseudo-Bonivard;
-'and when the priests tried to tear down the said
-placards, the believers, whom they called <i>Lutherans</i>,
-showed themselves and prevented them, which caused
-a great commotion among the people.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_904" id="Ref_904" href="#Foot_904">[904]</a></span>
-In a short time the parties were organised: the burghers
-gathered together in groups. On one side were the
-citizens, who defended the placards; on the other, the
-priests and their followers, who wanted to pull them
-down.</p>
-
-<p>A canon, named Wernly, a native of Friburg, had
-remained in Geneva; he was a stout active man, of
-hasty temper, a fanatical papist, who could handle the
-sword as skilfully as the censer, and give a blow as
-readily as he gave holy water. Having heard the
-tumult, he ran out of his house, went towards the
-cathedral, and just as he was about to enter he caught
-sight of the placard which Goulaz had fastened to the
-pillar. He flew into a rage, rushed up to the paper,
-and tore it down with a coarse oath. Goulaz, one of
-those bold spirits who brave those whom they despise,
-was standing close by, watching all that took place.
-Seeing what the canon had done, he went up to the
-pillar, and calmly put another paper in the place of
-that which Wernly had pulled down. Immediately
-the Friburger lost all self-control: the heretic and not
-the paper was the object of his rage. He rushed at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_621" id="Page_621">{621}</a></span>
-Goulaz, dealt him a violent blow; and then, not content
-with this chastisement, drew his sword (for the
-canons wore swords at that time), and would have
-struck him. Goulaz was by no means a man of
-patient temper, and, seeing the canon's sword, immediately
-drew his own, put himself on the defensive, and
-in the struggle wounded Wernly in the arm. There
-was a great uproar immediately; the partisans of the
-priests fell upon the audacious man who had dared
-defend himself against that holy personage; the huguenots,
-on their part, rallied round Goulaz, and defended
-him.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=STRUGGLE BETWEEN THE TWO POWERS.=</p>
-
-<p>A battle between the priest and the layman, a
-struggle between clerical and secular society, then
-occurred in Geneva. The priests had determined
-that the placards should be torn down everywhere;
-and, accordingly, there was a loud noise of discord and
-battle, not only in front of the porch of St. Pierre's,
-but through great part of the city. 'Nothing could be
-seen,' says a writer, 'but strife, conflicts, and drawn
-swords.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_905" id="Ref_905" href="#Foot_905">[905]</a></span>
-Two men of the priests' party were wounded
-in the Bourg de Four. The magistrates, being informed
-of what was going on, hurried to the spot, and
-separated the combatants.</p>
-
-<p>Goulaz certainly did not represent the Reform; he
-was merely a Genevese patriot, and somewhat hasty;
-but the Romish Church could not disown a canon;
-he was truly its representative, and men asked whether
-the Church intended to combat the Gospel with sword
-and fist. During this sharp skirmish between the
-ultramontanes and the huguenots, one party held
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_622" id="Page_622">{622}</a></span>
-aloof and rejoiced in secret: they were the partisans
-of Savoy. They imagined that since the two great
-Genevan parties were quarrelling, they would be found
-erelong, wearied with civil discord, bending the knee
-to the absolute government of his most serene highness.
-Division would be their strength.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_906" id="Ref_906" href="#Foot_906">[906]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The news of this battle soon reached Friburg.
-People there had already begun to talk of a certain
-schoolmaster who was preaching the Gospel at Geneva,
-and the placard which had set all the city in commotion
-was (they thought) the result of his sermons.
-Friburg was excited, for in this matter there was
-something far more alarming than a blow dealt at a
-Friburger—it was a blow aimed against the papacy.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE INTERDICT OF THE COUNCIL.=</p>
-
-<p>On the 24th of June, Councillor Laurent Brandebourg
-arrived at Geneva, and having been introduced
-to the council, he complained, in the name of the
-catholic canton, of what had taken place, and particularly
-of the books and placards which led men to 'the
-new law,' and threw contempt on the authority of the
-bishop and the pope. 'Everybody assures us,' he
-said, 'that you belong to the Lutheran party. If it
-be so, gentlemen, we shall tear up the act of alliance
-and throw the pieces at your feet.' These words,
-accompanied by a corresponding gesture, alarmed the
-council. 'The Friburg alliance has never been more
-necessary than now,' they whispered to one another.
-There were still among the Genevans many zealous
-Roman-catholics; the evangelicals were the rare exceptions;
-a great number, as we have said, held
-to a certain negative middle way. The threats of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_623" id="Page_623">{623}</a></span>
-Friburg disturbed the magistrates. 'We are not
-Lutherans,' answered the premier syndic. 'Well,
-then,' resumed the catholic Brandebourg, 'summon
-Goulaz before the ecclesiastical court.' The council
-replied that the <i>general pardons</i> had been stuck up
-without their knowledge, that they disapproved of
-such excesses, that Goulaz had only struck the canon
-in self-defence, after having received a blow and seen
-him draw his sword, and that, nevertheless, he had
-been fined. The council added that they would go
-further to satisfy Friburg. Immediately they forbade,
-by sound of trumpet, any papers to be posted up
-without their permission; and then, as the priests
-cried out louder against Olivétan than against Goulaz,
-the syndics ordered that, 'for the present, <i>the schoolmaster</i>
-should discontinue preaching the Gospel.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_907" id="Ref_907" href="#Foot_907">[907]</a></span>
-They fancied they had thus completely rooted out the
-evil. The ultramontane party, delighted at this
-triumph, thought the moment had arrived for effecting
-a thorough reaction. The priests began to search
-after the Holy Scriptures, visiting every family, and
-demanding the surrender of their New Testaments.</p>
-
-<p>The people began to murmur. 'The priests want
-to rob us of the Gospel of Jesus Christ,' said the huguenots,
-'and in its place they will give us ... what?...
-Romish fables.... We must begin again to read
-the stories in the Golden Legend. Really it is quite
-enough to hear them at church.' Baudichon de la
-Maison-Neuve and his friends urged the council to
-show themselves christians. They represented that it
-was shameful to see priests and monks set so little store
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_624" id="Page_624">{624}</a></span>
-by the gospels and epistles, and fill the ears of their
-congregations with human inventions. Olivétan had
-often told them that there was no intention of introducing
-a new religion, but of reestablishing an old
-one—that of the apostles. This idea, so simple and
-so true, was easily understood. The triumph of which
-the priests had dreamt was changed into a triumph for
-the Gospel. 'The party of the <i>Lutherans</i>,' says an
-ancient manuscript, 'or, as they called themselves, of
-the <i>evangelicals</i>, became more numerous and stronger
-every day among the magistrates and people.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_908" id="Ref_908" href="#Foot_908">[908]</a></span>
-The friends of the Reformation who were on the council
-began to speak out boldly of the rights of the Word of
-God. Others who were not Lutherans were generally
-honest men, and they thought it very christian-like,
-and even quite catholic, to preach the Gospel, and
-not mere fables. They were unwilling that it should
-be said of the Church to which they belonged, that it
-was supported by visions and sham miracles. The
-council therefore ordered (unanimously, as it would
-appear) the grand vicar, De Gingins of Bonmont, 'to
-take measures that in every parish and convent
-the Gospel should be preached <i>according to the truth,
-without any mixture of fables</i> or other human inventions.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_909" id="Ref_909" href="#Foot_909">[909]</a></span>
-The evangelicals, in their turn, were delighted
-at this order. They knew that the magistrates
-did not intend abolishing the Roman worship; yet it
-was the first official act in Geneva in a direction
-favourable to the Reformation. They accordingly
-showed great respect for the syndics under whom this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_625" id="Page_625">{625}</a></span>
-decree was passed: they were Guillaume Hugues,
-Besançon's brother; Claude Savoie, a man of great
-energy; Claude du Molard, and Ami Porral, a clever,
-intelligent man, already gained to the Gospel.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=NUNCIO AND ARCHBISHOP AT CHAMBÉRY.=</p>
-
-<p>Without the city, men's opinions were very different.
-The preachings 'in the houses of Geneva, the <i>abominable
-Lutheran heresy</i> that was taught even in the
-schools,'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_910" id="Ref_910" href="#Foot_910">[910]</a></span>
-had caused a lively emotion in the catholic
-provinces adjoining the city, which was increased by
-the <i>general pardon of Jesus Christ</i>. At Chambéry
-people's minds were greatly agitated. Some, losing
-all self-control, would have liked to see the thunderbolts
-of heaven hurled against Geneva; others, more
-merciful and perhaps more prudent, would have entreated
-the Genevese, even with tears, to remain faithful
-to the papacy. There happened at this time to be
-a great crowd of priests at the palace of the Bishop of
-Chambéry; a papal nuncio was passing through that
-city, and the archbishop, the nuncio, and his attendants
-had some conversation about Geneva, loudly deploring
-its apostasy. The nuncio, a violent Romanist,
-would immediately have brought the facts to the knowledge
-of the pope, in order that the court of Rome
-should take proceedings in conformity with the severity
-of the ecclesiastical laws. The archbishop checked him;
-he preferred making a prior application to the council.
-Accordingly he wrote a letter to the syndics, in which,
-after mentioning the various charges against the Genevese,
-he added: 'Can it be true that such things
-are taking place in a city so long renowned for its
-faith?... This would be so serious a matter that we
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_626" id="Page_626">{626}</a></span>
-should be compelled to report it immediately to Rome....
-Put it in our power to tell the holy father that you
-will preserve a perpetual confidence in the holy apostolic
-see.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_911" id="Ref_911" href="#Foot_911">[911]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The syndics, who had no desire to declare either in
-favour of Rome or of Wittemberg, were greatly embarrassed.
-One of them, however, found a way of
-getting out of the difficulty. 'Let us make no reply,'
-he said. When the archbishop's messenger came for
-their answer, the syndics called him before them, and
-gave him this verbal message: 'Tell Monseigneur
-that we desire to live in a christian manner, and in
-accordance with the law of Christ.' The archbishop,
-the nuncio, and the pope might understand that as
-they pleased. It was soon seen that Rome and Savoy
-had no intention of permitting Geneva to live according
-to that <i>law of Christ</i> which the city had invoked.</p>
-
-<p>But if the papacy was uneasy, evangelical christians
-rejoiced. They believed that an important position
-had been gained by the Reformation, and, supposing
-the Genevese to be more advanced in the faith than
-they really were, rejoiced in anticipation over the
-victories which these new members of the evangelical
-body would win for their common standard. 'The
-Genevans,' said one of them, 'are true <i>christian knights</i>,
-who, having no respect for men who will soon pass
-away, do not fear to offend their superiors, the enemies
-of truth.'—'The Genevans,' said another, 'are energetic
-men: if they embrace the Gospel, they will know
-how to propagate it elsewhere.'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_912" id="Ref_912" href="#Foot_912">[912]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagenum"><a name="Page_627" id="Page_627">{627}</a></div>
-
-<p>The old evangelicals went further than this: they
-felt full of love for the new brethren. They desired
-to give them a welcome, to stretch out the hand of
-brotherhood to them, to receive them, with the charity
-of Christ, into that small and humble Church which
-was to increase from year to year and from age to age.
-They were not too sanguine, however: they knew the
-moral state of the Genevans; they knew that the
-little flock was still weak, and but just beginning to
-pronounce the name of Christ and to walk in his way.
-These old christians desired, therefore, to approach it
-as a father approaches his child, to take it by the hand,
-to point out the dangers by which it was surrounded,
-and to conjure it to remain firm, and to increase in
-that faith which it was beginning to confess boldly.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=LETTER FROM THE BRETHREN AT PAYERNE.=</p>
-
-<p>Between the Alps and the Jura, on the road leading
-from Lausanne to Berne, is situated a small town, clustered
-ages ago round an abbey which the famous Queen
-Bertha had declared exempt from all suzerainty, even
-from that of the pope, and which, in 1208, had resisted
-the Emperor Rodolph of Hapsburg. In one of the
-houses of this town of Payerne, some pious christians
-assembled in June 1532, under their pastor Anthony
-Saunier of Moirans, in Dauphiny, a friend of Farel.
-They conversed about <i>the destruction of the papistical
-realm</i>, and the news they had received from Geneva, and
-were full of hope that that city would contribute erelong
-towards the so much desired destruction. One
-of them proposed to send a letter to the Genevese.
-They began to write it immediately, and here are the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_628" id="Page_628">{628}</a></span>
-words which these simple-minded christians addressed
-to the episcopal city:—</p>
-
-<p>'We have heard that the glory of God has visited
-you, of his grace, as his elect children, and that he is
-now calling you with his everlastingly saving voice.
-Beloved in Jesus Christ, receive the word of the
-Great Shepherd, who gave himself once and was
-offered up a living host (sacrifice) for the salvation
-of all believers. God is manifesting to you the great
-riches of his glory; he invites us to forsake the doctrine
-of men, and to follow that of our only Saviour Jesus
-Christ, which makes us new creatures and heirs of the
-kingdom of God. Believe in this doctrine with all
-your heart, without shame or fear of men; having the
-assurance that it is good, holy, and alone able to save,
-and that all others which are opposed to it are wicked
-and damnable. Fear not the great number and
-power of your enemies; but, for the love of Jesus
-Christ, who has perfected your redemption, and who
-has granted us remission of all our sins, be ready not
-only to abandon your honour, your goods, and your
-families, but even to renounce yourselves, declaring
-with St. Paul, that neither glory, nor tribulation, nor
-death, nor life, shall separate you from the Gospel of
-salvation....</p>
-
-<p>'Now we, your brethren in the second and spiritual
-birth, pray the Father of lights to complete what he has
-begun in you, and to illumine the eyes of your heart
-by the true Gospel light, to the end that you may
-know the great and inexpressible riches prepared for
-those who are sanctified by the blood of Christ.
-Renounce, therefore, the king of this world, and all
-his followers, under whose banner you and we once
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_629" id="Page_629">{629}</a></span>
-walked, and acknowledge our Lord as your only
-master, your only God and Saviour, who gives us the
-kingdom of heaven without money and without price.
-Follow not what appears good and pleasant to you,
-but the commandment of God our Father, adding
-nothing, and taking nothing away. May his grace be
-written in your hearts, and may you impart it to those
-who are still ignorant and weak, by means of a meek
-and tender teaching, so that the flock of Jesus Christ
-may be increased by you daily. Our Lord God is
-for you, and the whole world cannot prevail against
-him. Be the standard-bearers upon earth of the
-colours of our Saviour, so that by your means the
-Holy Gospel may be borne into many countries.'</p>
-
-<p>The council deposited the letter among the city
-archives, where it may still be seen.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_913" id="Ref_913" href="#Foot_913">[913]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="side">=STANDARD RAISED AT GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p>Geneva was still far from the pure and living
-Christianity which breathes in this letter. The fight
-between Goulaz and Wernly, the tumult occasioned
-in the city by the placards of Baudichon de la Maison-Neuve
-and his friends, had little resemblance (impartiality
-compels us to acknowledge) to that picture,
-so full of gentleness, which Jesus Christ himself drew
-for us, when he described the servant of God: '<i>He
-shall not strive nor cry, neither shall any man hear his
-voice in the streets.</i>'<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_914" id="Ref_914" href="#Foot_914">[914]</a></span>
-But it is only by degrees that
-the old man disappears and the new man takes his
-place. It would have been too much, perhaps, to
-expect that these energetic huguenots, who defended
-their liberty with the courage of lions, should suddenly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_630" id="Page_630">{630}</a></span>
-become meek as lambs. But already there were to
-be found in that city souls who prized above everything
-the <i>great pardon of Jesus Christ</i>. The proclamation
-of salvation by grace, which we have described,
-marks an important epoch in the history of
-the Reformation of Geneva. All human religions represent
-salvation as to be gained by the works and
-ceremonies of man; the only divine religion, the
-Gospel, declares that God gives it, that he gives it
-through Jesus Christ, and that whosoever receives
-this assurance into his heart becomes a new creature.
-Such was the standard raised in Geneva in 1532. The
-servants of God, whether natives of that city or refugees,
-were to be, according to the beautiful language
-of the letter from Payerne, 'standard-bearers upon
-earth;' and, grasping the banner of the Gospel with a
-firm hand, they were to be called, perhaps more than
-others, in the sixteenth century 'to bear it into many
-countries.'</p>
-
-<p class="gap-above2">Everything gave token that the renovation of
-Geneva was advancing; but it had still numerous
-obstacles to overcome, and great works to achieve.
-Powerful instruments were about to appear to accomplish
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto the breath of the Reformation has blown
-to Geneva from the plains of France and the mountains
-of Switzerland. The men of God who were to
-labour most at the transformation of this city, Farel
-especially, have acted upon it from without only.
-But yet two months more, and that great-hearted
-evangelist will enter the city of the huguenots; others
-will follow him; they will be expelled from it by the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_631" id="Page_631">{631}</a></span>
-friends of Rome; but they will return with fresh
-determination, and labour with indefatigable zeal,
-until, after long darkness, we shall at last see the light
-of Jesus Christ shining in it.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=GENEVA ATTACKED BY TWO PARTIES.=</p>
-
-<p>The ancient city had not at this time to contend
-with a single party: it was attacked by two antagonistic
-bands at once, by the bishop on the one hand,
-and by the reformers on the other. Which of these
-two armies will conquer it?—Geneva, strange to say,
-rejects both. Will that city be destined to belong
-neither to the Gospel nor to Rome? It could not
-be so, and various symptoms appeared at this time to
-indicate an approaching solution.</p>
-
-<p>The fanaticism of the Genevese clergy, the respect
-felt by the magistrates for existing institutions, the
-energy with which one portion of the people rejected
-the Reformation, seemed to show that the movement
-by which Geneva was then agitated would end simply
-in the abolition of the temporal authority of the
-bishop.</p>
-
-<p>But other signs appeared to point to another conclusion.
-In proportion as the love of God's Word
-increased in men's hearts, respect for the Romish
-religion diminished. The evangelical christians said
-that salvation was a thing for eternity, while a government,
-even if ecclesiastical, was only a temporal thing;
-that the rights of truth took precedence of all clerical
-pretensions, and that the authority of Scripture was
-superior to that of the pontiff.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, a new element appeared. Ecclesiastical
-society had sunk into slumber and death; in the
-sixteenth century the Reformation aroused it and
-restored it to activity and life. Farel is one of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_632" id="Page_632">{632}</a></span>
-most remarkable types of this christian animation; his
-unbounded ardour, his indefatigable labours were,
-with God's help, to secure the victory.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that this new force soon turned against
-the Reform. The Romish Church woke up also, and
-put itself in motion, particularly after the foundation
-of the order of the Jesuits; but its activity differed
-widely from that of the reformers. The latter
-descended from on high; that of the Roman clergy
-came from below. At all events, popery soon became
-as energetic as protestantism. There was danger in
-this, but there was probably a benefit also. If its
-adversaries had continued to slumber, the Reformation
-might have ended by falling asleep likewise. Activity
-is far better than inactivity without hope. Let us not
-be afraid then. By struggles the Church is purified,
-the christian grows stronger, and the cause of truth
-and of humanity triumphs.</p>
-
-<p class="side">=THE STRUGGLE IN GENEVA.=</p>
-
-<p>Geneva was about to have greater experience of such
-contests, and the agitation within her walls was to become
-fiercer from day to day. Combats without and
-combats within. The dawning Reformation and the
-ancient (yet new) liberty will see arrayed against
-them the bishop, the duke, the emperor, the gentry
-and their vassals, and the Savoyard troops, besides
-veteran Italian bands, commanded by some of the
-ablest captains of the age.... At the same time the
-battle will rage furiously within. Popery, alarmed
-at seeing one of its oldest fortresses threatened, will
-utter a cry of rage; all the friends of the Romish
-priesthood will be aroused, will agitate, and fight; a
-furious opposition will raise its angry head. There
-will be not only secret councils, traitorous conspiracies,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_633" id="Page_633">{633}</a></span>
-fanatical preachings, and fierce discussions; but
-also riots in the streets, armed men endeavouring to
-stop the preaching of the Word, cannons planted in
-the public squares, assaults with the sword, the
-arquebuse, and the dagger, imprisonment, exile, and
-poisoning.... At the sight of these violent combats
-and repeated calamities, the thoughts of the historian
-become troubled and confused. It appears to him
-that the powers of darkness are marshalling their
-forces in the ancient city. He fancies he can see that
-mysterious being, whom a great poet describes in his
-immortal verse as plotting the ruin of the world, at
-the very moment when, smiling with innocence and
-glory, it left the hands of the Creator—he can see
-Satan descending, as he once did into Eden, and
-casting the immense shade of his 'sail-broad vans'
-over the gigantic Alps, over their white tops, their
-calm clear lakes and smiling hills, and swooping down
-upon the towers of the old cathedral to fight against
-the counsels of the King of Heaven, and, by scattering
-his wiles and fury all around, oppose the new creation
-of a new world.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_915" id="Ref_915" href="#Foot_915">[915]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But to all these efforts of the powers of darkness
-the men of the Gospel will oppose the resplendent
-army of light. They will proclaim the love of God,
-they will announce the work of Christ, they will publish
-grace. They will repeat with Jesus Christ that <i>the
-flesh profiteth nothing</i>; that is to say, that the grandeur
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_634" id="Page_634">{634}</a></span>
-of the proud hierarchy of Rome, the power of its
-temporal kingdom, the multitude of its servants in
-so many countries and under such various uniforms,
-the pomps by which its worship strives to captivate
-the senses, the oracles of its traditions, sometimes
-adorned with the seductions of human philosophy—that
-all is profitless; but that power belongs to
-God, that salvation is in the foolishness of the cross,
-and that it is <i>the Spirit that quickeneth</i>. And, thanks
-to the spiritual weapons they employ, two or three
-humble instruments of the Word of God will scatter
-the councils of their terrible adversary, destroy his
-fortresses, and humble even to the dust the barriers
-he had raised against the knowledge of God. The
-rough Farel, the gentle Viret, the weak Froment, will
-overcome the powers of Rome in Geneva, even before
-Calvin, the great captain, appears. God chooses the
-weak things of the world to confound the things which
-are mighty, and the things which are not to bring to
-nought things that are.<span
-class="fnanchor"><a name="Ref_916" id="Ref_916" href="#Foot_916">[916]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_899" id="Foot_899" href="#Ref_899">[899]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-See the Bull <i>Antiquorum habet</i> in the <i>Extravagant. Commun.</i> lib. v.
-tit. ix. cap. 1.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_900" id="Foot_900" href="#Ref_900">[900]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-In our time Leo XII. celebrated a jubilee in 1825, and Gregory
-XVI. in 1833.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_901" id="Foot_901" href="#Ref_901">[901]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Plautus.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_902" id="Foot_902" href="#Ref_902">[902]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Roset says positively (liv. ii. chap, lxvi.) that these placards were
-printed. See also Berne MSS., <i>Hist. Helvet.</i> v. p. 12.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_903" id="Foot_903" href="#Ref_903">[903]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Exarsit hic statim furor, nec verbis tantum erupit, sed et armis.—<i>Geneva
-Restituta</i>, p. 37.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_904" id="Foot_904" href="#Ref_904">[904]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-History under the name of Bonivard, Berne MSS. <i>Hist. Helvet.</i> v.
-p. 12.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_905" id="Foot_905" href="#Ref_905">[905]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Hinc rixæ, conflictus, et enses utrinque expediti.'—<i>Geneva Restituta</i>,
-p. 37.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_906" id="Foot_906" href="#Ref_906">[906]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'Dissidiis civilibus fessa imperium acciperet.'—<i>Geneva Restituta</i>,
-p. 38.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_907" id="Foot_907" href="#Ref_907">[907]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-'De prædicante Evangelii.'—Registres du Conseil des 24, 27, 30
-juin, et du 25 juillet. Spon, <i>Hist. de Genève</i>, ii. p. 463.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_908" id="Foot_908" href="#Ref_908">[908]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Berne MSS. <i>Hist. Helvet.</i> v. p. 12.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_909" id="Foot_909" href="#Ref_909">[909]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Registres du Conseil des 30 juin, 12 juillet, 20 août. Spon, <i>Hist. de
-Genève</i>, ii. pp. 464-466.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_910" id="Foot_910" href="#Ref_910">[910]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Archives de Genève, No. 1069.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_911" id="Foot_911" href="#Ref_911">[911]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Archives de Genève, No. 1069. Spon, <i>Hist. de Genève</i>, i. p. 466.
-Gaberel, i. p. 110.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_912" id="Foot_912" href="#Ref_912">[912]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Ruchat, iii. pp. 136-140. 'Epître des amateurs de la sainte Evangile
-de Payerne à ceux de Genève.' Archives de Genève, No. 1070. <i>France
-Protestante</i>, art. <i>Saunier</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_913" id="Foot_913" href="#Ref_913">[913]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Archives, No. 1070. 'Epître des amateurs de la sainte Evangile de
-Payerne.'</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_914" id="Foot_914" href="#Ref_914">[914]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-Matthew xii. 19.</p>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_915" id="Foot_915" href="#Ref_915">[915]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-fn">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="verse indent10">'He wings his way</div>
-<div class="verse">Directly towards the new-created world,</div>
-<div class="verse">And man there placed, with purpose to assay</div>
-<div class="verse">If him by force he can destroy, or, worse,</div>
-<div class="verse">By some false guile pervert.'</div>
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent20"><i>Paradise Lost</i>, bk. iii.</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nodent"><a name="Foot_916" id="Foot_916" href="#Ref_916">[916]</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
-1 Corinthians i. 27, 28.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center small">END OF THE SECOND VOLUME.</p>
-
-<p class="gap-above2 center x-small">LONDON<br />
-PRINTED BY SPOTTISWOODE AND CO.<br />
-NEW-STREET SQUARE</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
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