. The coal trade: a compendium of valuable information relative to coal production, prices, transportation etc., at home and abroad, with many facts worthy of preservation for future reference; corrected to the latest dates [for 1876 and 1877]. i^ter. vitiorum dcpuUor, corona prucicntum, diadcma sapicntium, (gloria honoium, iicru\ ir\.!i-torum, comes itineris, domcsticus amicus, collocutor et congcrro tacentik, collc^aet contiliarius pncsidcntis, %as plenum tapicntia, myrothccium clo({ucnlijr,hortus plcnuft fructibus, pratum floribus dislinctum, memorix pcnu&, vita rc-cordationis.—Lucai de IrN


. The coal trade: a compendium of valuable information relative to coal production, prices, transportation etc., at home and abroad, with many facts worthy of preservation for future reference; corrected to the latest dates [for 1876 and 1877]. i^ter. vitiorum dcpuUor, corona prucicntum, diadcma sapicntium, (gloria honoium, iicru\ ir\.!i-torum, comes itineris, domcsticus amicus, collocutor et congcrro tacentik, collc^aet contiliarius pncsidcntis, %as plenum tapicntia, myrothccium clo({ucnlijr,hortus plcnuft fructibus, pratum floribus dislinctum, memorix pcnu&, vita rc-cordationis.—Lucai de IrNKA. HE principal object ofDolcts journey at the end «»fthe year i,34 was to htain the royal sanc-• I >n for the publicationr his Commentaries,which had now afterten years of labourapproached .at partial the moment )], ..I) pfiMussion to print any originalwork, even one merely devoted to Latin literature. Thefather of letters, as the French are fond of styling Francisthe First, althouj^h he had unquestionably a for literature and literary men, and thouj;h iof his beloved sister La Marjjuerite des Marguerites in-duced him .It times to lent! a not unwilling ear to the. 222 ETIENNE DOLET. teaching of the religious reformers, yet, alternating be-tween fits of vicious indulgence and of religious re-morse, he allowed himself to be the tool and prey of thebigots who surrounded him, and who persuaded him thatthe salvation of his own soul required the destruction ofthe bodies of those whom, had he followed his own tastes,he would have especially desired to protect and caring at all times in his heart for literature andintellectual progress, and sometimes even for a reformationin religion, yet, as M. Henri Martin has remarked ^, heallowed the Reformation to be burned in the person ofBerquin, and the Renaissance in that of Dolet. Physicallybrave, he was yet morally a coward, and dared not callhis soul his


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1, bookdecade1870, booksubjectcoal, initial, initialt