Continental Monthly, Vol. I. February, 1862, No. II. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 313 pages of information about Continental Monthly, Vol. I. February, 1862, No. II..

Continental Monthly, Vol. I. February, 1862, No. II. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 313 pages of information about Continental Monthly, Vol. I. February, 1862, No. II..
for France the close of the Middle Ages, and the true commencement of modern times; it was sealed with the great seal of green wax, to testify its irrevocable and perpetual character.  In signing this great document, Henry IV. completely triumphed over the usages of the Middle Ages, and the illustrious monarch wished nothing less than to grant to the ‘Reformed’ all the civil and religious rights which had been refused them by their enemies.  For the first time France raised itself above religious parties.  Still, a state policy so new could not fail to excite the clamors of the more violent, and the hatred of factions.  The sovereign, however, remained firm.  ’I have enacted the Edict,’ said Henry to the Parliament of Paris,—­’I wish it to be observed.  My will must serve as the reason why.  I am king.  I speak to you as king.—­I will be obeyed.’  To the clergy he said, ’My predecessors have given you good words, but I, with my gray jacket,—­I will give you good deeds.  I am all gray on the outside, but I’m all gold within.’  Praise to those noble sentiments, peace was maintained in the realm; the honor of which alone belongs to Henry IV.

In the first half of the seventeenth century, there could be counted in France more than eight hundred Reformed churches, with sixty-two Conferences.  Such was the prosperity and powerful organization of the Protestant party until the fall of La Rochelle, which was emphatically called the citadel of ‘the Reform.’  This misfortune terminated the religious wars of France.  The Huguenots, now excluded from the employment of the civil service and the court, became the industrial arms of the kingdom.  They cultivated the fine lands of the Cevennes, the vineyards of Guienne, the cloths of Caen.  In their hands were almost entirely the maritime trade of Normandy, with the silks and taffetas of Lyons, and, from even the testimony of their enemies, they combined with industry, frugality, integrity all those commercial virtues, which were hallowed by earnest love of religion and a constant fear of God.  The vast plains which they owned in Bearn waved with bounteous harvests.  Languedoc, so long devastated by civil wars, was raised from ruin by their untiring industry.  In the diocese of Nimes was the valley of Vannage, renowned for its rich vegetation.  Here the Huguenots had more than sixty churches or ‘temples,’ and they called this region ’Little Canaan.’  Esperon, a lofty summit of the Cevennes, filled with sparkling springs and delicious wild flowers, was known as ‘Hort-dieu’ the garden of the Lord.

The Protestant party in France did not confine themselves to manufactures and commerce, but entered largely into the liberal pursuits.  Many of the ‘Reformed’ distinguished themselves as physicians, advocates and writers, contributing largely to the literary glory of the age of Louis XIV.  In all the principal cities of the kingdom, the Huguenots maintained colleges, the most flourishing of which were those at Orange,

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Continental Monthly, Vol. I. February, 1862, No. II. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.