[137] Christie, p. 80. [↑]

[138] Liv. iii, ch. xxix. [↑]

[139] Christie, p. 86. [↑]

[140] One of his enemies wrote of him that prison was his country—patria Doleti. [↑]

[141] Procès d’Estienne Dolet, Paris, 1836, p. 11; Galtier, pp. 65–70; Christie, pp. 389–90. [↑]

[142] Procès, p. viii.; Galtier, p. 78. [↑]

[143] Galtier, p. 101 sq.; Christie, p. 461. [↑]

[144] A modern French judge, the President Baudrier, was found to affirm that the laws, though “unduly severe,” were “neither unduly nor unfairly pressed” against Dolet! Christie, p. 471. [↑]

[145] Concerning whom see Christie, as cited, pp. 29 01. [↑]

[146] Tilley, as last cited, p. 69. [↑]