[107] Green, Short History, ch. vi, § 4; 1881 ed. p. 311. Compare Green’s whole estimate. Michelet’s hostile criticism (x, 356) is surprisingly inept. For the elements of naturalism in the Utopia see bk. ii, sections “Of their Journeying” and “Of the Religions.” [↑]
[108] Cp. T. C. Grattan, The Netherlands, 1830, pp. 231–43. [↑]
[109] Who, as it happened, avowed that “religion was almost extinct” in Europe at the time of the rise of the Lutheran and Calvinistic heresies. Concio xxviii. Opera, vi, 296, ed. 1617, cited by Blunt, Ref. of Church of England, ed. 1892, i, 4, note. [↑]
[110] Cp. The Works of Arminius, ed. by James Nichols, 1825, i, 580, note. [↑]
[112] Cp. Schuster, as cited, pp. 191 sq., 202 sq. [↑]
[113] Nichols’s Arminius, i, p. 233. [↑]
[114] Hallam, Lit. of Europe, ii, 406–416; Pattison, Isaac Casaubon, 2nd ed. pp. 447–48. As to Casaubon’s own intolerance, however, see p. 446. [↑]