[167] i., 627.

[168] Luther's Werke, ed. Walch, xxii., 1612-1630.

[169] vii., ad init.

[170] iii.², 1713-F.

[171] iii.¹, 884.

[172] iii.², 1132, 1133.

[173] iii.², 1189-F.

[174] iii.², 1206. We are fairly well informed as to Berquin through French sources, quoted, for example, by H. M. Baird, History of the Rise of the Huguenots of France, 1879, i., 130. The account of Erasmus agrees strikingly with these other sources, but it seems a little too much to reproduce it with all its literary decoration as a history of Berquin's trial, as is done by Mr. Drummond and in Haag, France Protestante, s. v.

[175] Desiderii Erasmi Declarationes ad Censuras Lutetiae, etc., IX., 813-954.

[176] iii.², 1168-D.