Page:Memoirs of a Huguenot Family.djvu/491

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SECRET ARTICLES.
483
Secret articles, taken from the General ones, that the King granted to those of the pretended Reformed religion: which his Majesty did not wish to embody in the general articles, nor yet in the Edict made and drawn up from them, given at Nantes in the month of April last: and nevertheless it is the will of His said Majesty that they shall be as fully observed as those contained in the said Edict. And for this purpose they shall be registered in his Courts of Parliament and elsewhere as required, and all Declarations, Provisions and Letters, that be needed shall be dispatched.


Article 1st.—The sixth article of the said Edict relating to liberty of conscience, and permission to reside within this kingdom, granted to all his Majesty's subjects, shall be extended to, and include within it, all Ministers, Schoolmasters and others, who are or may be in future of the said religion, whether natives or foreigners, acting in all things in conformity with the provisions of said Edict.

2d.—Those of the said religion shall not be obliged to contribute towards the building or repairs of Churches or Chapels, nor to the purchase of Sacerdotal ornaments, Lights, casting of Bells, consecrated bread, hiring houses for Priests or Monks, nor any similar thing; except in cases where they themselves or their ancestors have made endowments.

3d.—They shall not be obliged to decorate their houses on Festivals when it is so ordered, they shall merely allow the official persons to do it, without contributing any thing towards it.

4th.—Those of the said religion shall not, when sick or dying, be obliged to receive exhortations from persons not of their own faith, and their own Ministers shall be permitted to visit and comfort them without hindrance. As for those who shall be under judicial condemnation, the said Ministers may visit and comfort them, but can only offer up public prayers in those places where the said religion is allowed free exercise.

5th.—The public exercise of the said religion shall be lawful at Pimpoul: and in the faubourg of Paulet for Dieppe; and the said places of Pimpoul and Paulet shall be places for bailiwicks. As for Sancerre, the said exercise shall be continued as at present, save that for the establishment of it in the said town, the inhabitants must make it appear that they have the consent of the Lord of the Manor. Commissioners appointed by His Majesty for the execution of the Edict will attend to this. The free exercise of the said