Page:The letters of John Hus.djvu/222

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184
LETTERS WRITTEN DURING THE

I am surprised that no Bohemian visits me in prison. Perhaps they are acting for the best. Let this letter be torn up at once.

Send another shirt by the bearer. My Lord John, insist with the Bohemians that the citation against certain parties already issued be annulled; and that the King have compassion on his inheritance and not let it be harassed gratuitously because of one disaffected person.

I should like to speak to the King at least once before I am condemned; for I came here at his own request and under his promise that I should return in safety to Bohemia.[1]

XLVI. To his Friends at Constance

(Without date: end of February 1415)

So far as revising my defence is concerned, I do not see how I can do it in any way or arrange otherwise, as I have no idea on what issue a hearing will be given to me. I put in a strong protest[2] in the presence of the notaries and I wrote an appeal to the whole Council which I gave to the Patriarch, entreating to be allowed to reply to each article, as I had already done in private. I wrote this with my own hand. I asked as an alternative that if a hearing should be granted me, I might reply as we do in the schools.[3] On the other hand, perhaps God will give me the hearing that I may deliver my sermon.[4]

I trust by God’s grace I shall never swerve from

  1. Hus’s view of the meaning of the safe-conduct is clear, however mistaken (see p. 144 and especially p. 230).
  2. See p. 176.
  3. Cf. determinare, p. 180, n. 7.
  4. Ib.