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Protestantism in Scotland - James Aitken Wylie

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McCrie, Life of Knox, vol. 2., pp. 4, 5.<br />

3. Knox, History (La<strong>in</strong>g's edition), vol. 2., pp.<br />

384-386.<br />

4. "There are some of that sex," says Randolph,<br />

wir<strong>in</strong>g to Cecil, and narrat<strong>in</strong>g a similar<br />

exhibition, "who can weep for anger as well as<br />

grief."<br />

5. Knox, History (La<strong>in</strong>g's edition), vol. 2., pp.<br />

386-389.<br />

6. Knox, History (La<strong>in</strong>g's edition), vol. 2., pp.<br />

393-412. McCrie, Life of Knox, vol. 2., p. 295.<br />

7. One who is neither a Scotsman nor a<br />

Presbyterian says justly as generously: "The<br />

time has come when English history may do<br />

justice to one but for whom the Reformation<br />

would have been overthrown among ourselves;<br />

for the spirit which Knox created saved<br />

<strong>Scotland</strong>, and if <strong>Scotland</strong> had been Catholic<br />

aga<strong>in</strong>, neither the wisdom of Elizabeth's<br />

m<strong>in</strong>isters, nor the teach<strong>in</strong>g of her bishops, nor<br />

her own chicaneries, would have preserved<br />

England from revolution." (Froude, History of<br />

England, vol. x., pp. 193, 194; London, 1870).<br />

173

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