The Pocket Bible; or, Christian the Printer: A Tale of the Sixteenth Century

PART II--THE HUGUENOTS.

Chapter 2370 wordsPublic domain

INTRODUCTION 1

CHAPTER

I. THE QUEEN'S "FLYING SQUADRON" 7

II. ANNA BELL 32

III. THE AVENGERS OF ISRAEL 71

IV. GASPARD OF COLIGNY 90

V. FAMILY FLOTSAM 112

VI. THE BATTLE OF ROCHE-LA-BELLE 132

VII. "CONTRE-UN" 163

VIII. ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S NIGHT 185

IX. THE SIEGE OF LA ROCHELLE 215

X. THE LAMBKINS' DANCE 233

XI. CAPTURE OF CORNELIA 254

XII. THE DUKE OF ANJOU 264

XIII. THE BILL IS PAID 273

EPILOGUE 288

TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE.

The epoch covered by this, the 16th story of Eugene Sue's dramatic historic series, entitled _The Mysteries of the People; or, History of a Proletarian Family Across the Ages_, extends over the turbulent yet formative era known in history as the Religious Reformation.

The social system that had been developing since the epoch initiated by the 8th story of the series, _The Abbatial Crosier; or, Bonaik and Septimine_, that is, the feudal system, and which is depicted in full bloom in the 14th story of the series, _The Iron Trevet; or, Jocelyn the Champion_, had been since suffering general collapse with the approach of the bourgeois, or capitalist system, which found its first open, or political, expression in the Reformation, and which was urged into life by Luther, Calvin and other leading adversaries of the Roman Catholic regime.

The history of the Reformation, or rather, of the conflict between the clerical polity which symbolized the old and the clerical polity which symbolized the new social order, is compressed within the covers of this one story with the skill at once of the historian, the scientist, the philosopher and the novelist. The various springs from which human action flows, the various types which human crises produce, the virtues and the vices which great historic conflicts heat into activity--all these features of social motion, never jointly reproduced in works of history, are here drawn in vivid colors and present a historic canvas that is prime in the domain of literature.

In view of the exceptional importance of some of the footnotes in which Sue refers the reader to the pages of original authorities in French cited by him, the pages of an accessible American edition are in those cases either substituted or added in this translation.

DANIEL DE LEON.

New York, February, 1910.