[96]. Ruchat, v. pp. 164-167. Calvin to the lords of Geneva, Lettres françaises, i. p. 38. To the lords of Neuchâtel, ibid. pp. 39-43. Calv. Opp. xi. pp. 275-293. Registers of the Council for the day.
[97]. Registers of the Council, August 29 and September 9. De la Maison de Calvin, by Th. Heyer. Mémoires d’Archéologie, ix. pp. 394, 403.
[98]. Préface des Psaumes, p. 8.
[99]. ‘Summa cum universi populi ac senatus imprimis singulare Dei erga se beneficium serio tunc agnoscentis congratulatione.’—Beza, Vita Calvini, p. 7.
[100]. Bèze-Colladon, Vie de Calvin, p. 47.
[101]. ‘So durchzog er jetzt im Triumph . . Er hielt unter dem Jubel der Bevölkerung seinen feierlichen Einzug in Genf . . richtete an die versammelte Menge Worte,’ &c.—Kampschulte, J. Calvin, i. p. 381. These flights of imagination are astonishing in a writer like Kampschulte. M. Roget, with reference to a passage of Henry, rejects as we do the idea of outward demonstrations.—Peuple de Genève, i. p. 312.
[102]. Heyer, Mem d’Archéologie, ix. pp. 396-398, 405, 406. The house of the abbé de Bonmont, in which Calvin first lived, is that in the Rue des Chanoines, which, as rebuilt in 1708 by the syndic Buisson, now bears the number 13, and belongs to M. Adrien Naville, president several times of the Société Evangélique and the Evangelical Alliance.
[103]. Την πανοπλιαν τοῦ Θεοῦ. Ephes. vi. 11.
[104]. Beza, Vita Calvini, ad finem.
[105]. ‘Non posse consistere ecclesiam, nisi certum regimen constitueretur,’ &c. Calvin to Farel, September 16, 1541. Opp. xi. p. 281.