Page:Letters of John Huss Written During His Exile and Imprisonment.djvu/29

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INTRODUCTION.
xix

and suffer. England, in fine, had witnessed a powerful mind,—that of Wycliffe, nourished by the Scriptures,—bring to light a body of doctrine, from which, at a later period, sprang the code of the Reformation;[1] but Wycliffe escaped alive the solemn sentence of an œcumenical council;[2] and many doubt whether he could have passed triumphantly through that formidable ordeal.

It was reserved for the little town of Constance to afford a spectacle which the world had not witnessed for ages. There, one man, weakened by sickness and long imprisonment, isolated from a few friends dispersed and trembling, resisted, strong in the gospel and in his conscience, all that external authority could display to intimidate and subjugate souls. He yields not before the efforts of all the spiritual and temporal powers united. John Huss, lastly, by his

  1. See The Reformers before the Reformation, Hist. Introduct., section v.
  2. Wycliffe died thirty-five years before the Council of Constance condemned his memory and works.