The Huguenots and the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, 第 1 巻

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C. Scribner's sons, 1895
 

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189 ページ - Therefore thus saith the LORD concerning the king of Assyria, He shall not come into this city, nor shoot an arrow there, nor come before it with shield, nor cast a bank against it.
445 ページ - ... reign ; how happy France had been now for fifty years, occasioned chiefly by the quiet it was in with relation to those matters. He gave him an account of their numbers, their industry and wealth, their constant readiness to advance the revenue, and that all the quiet he had with the court of Rome was chiefly owing to them : if they were rooted out, the court of Rome would govern as absolutely in France, as it did in Spain.
258 ページ - I have received your letter by Die Graeme ; this is my answer : — I command you to send all the French away to-morrow out of the town, if you can by fair means (but stick not long in disputing), otherwise force them away, driving them away like so many wild beasts until you have shipped them, and so the devil go with them.
458 ページ - Catholicks upon the French Protestants, who tremble for fear of some violent persecution, and are ready to go into England in such vast numbers as would be a great advantage to the nation, if you would by easy naturalization make it in the least easy to them. I find those who are rich are afraid our King should meddle with their concerns, but the crowd and the number talk of nothing but the necessity of his declaring himself Protectour of the whole Protestant religion, and live upon the hopes of...
515 ページ - ... of British parliamentary government, political philosophy was ready to accept the current maxims of British success. It was not Rousseau but Locke, therefore, whose teachings triumphed in the first revolution, which was to be American and not French. And it was still Locke whose diction prevailed in the Declaration of the Rights of Man at the beginning of the French Revolution. By that time, however, the secularization of the most active minds of Europe and America had advanced nearly to completion...
459 ページ - Rj holds himself obliged in honour and conscience to comfort and support all such afflicted Protestants, who by reason of the rigours and severities which are used towards them, upon the account of their religion, shall be forced to quit their native country, and shall desire to shelter themselves under His Majesty's Royal Protection, for the preservation and free exercise of their religion...
517 ページ - Professor Baird has established for himself a high and secure position among American historians His style is very clear and correct, his preparation is conscientious and thorough ; he possesses great skill in the selection and arrangement of his material, and he has given us a thoroughly interesting and valuable work.*
445 ページ - He came well prepared. He told him what the state of France was during the wars in his father's reign ; how happy France had been now for fifty years, occasioned chiefly by the quiet it was in with relation to those matters. He gave him an account of their numbers, their industry and wealth, their constant readiness to advance...
460 ページ - Four other boats left with this, one of which is said to have put into Dartmouth, but it is not yet known what became of the other three.
457 ページ - Charenton one Sunday since I came into France. How much more that is for the King's service you cannot imagine, unless you saw how kindly those poor people take so small a countenancing as mine is...

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