[117] Comp. below, p. 248.
[118] This time came during Luther's sojourn at the Wartburg, when he wrote De votis monasticis, 1521. See Vol. IV.
[119] The XCV Theses, the Resolutiones, the Sermon von Ablass und Gnade, the Confitendi Ratio; the first and last of these in Vol. I.
[120] Reference to a probably spurious bull of Clement VI. In his Grund u. Ursach aller Artikel D. Martin Luthers, so durch röm. Bulle unrechtlich verdammt sind (1521), Luther writes: "Thus it happened in the days of John Hus that the pope commanded the angels of heaven to conduct to heaven the souls of the Roman pilgrims who died en route. Against this dreadful blasphemy and more than devilish presumption Hus raised his voice, and though he lost his life therefor, yet forced the pope to pipe a different tune and in future to refrain from such blasphemy."—Compare Köhler, Luther u. die Kirchengeschichte, p. 206. See also above, p. 81.
[121] Longe viliorem; the Jena Ed., followed by Lemme and Kawerau, reads, longe meliorem.
[122] Comp. Vol. I, p. 20.
[123] Comp. Vol. I, p. 86.
[124] See above, pp. 105 f.
[125] See above, p. 105, note 4.
[126] See above, p. 223, note 1,