. 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]. nne me parait presque toujours a la hauteur dunoble sujet quelle retrace. CHAPTER XIX. MAROT AND RABELAIS. Et de ses vers qui ont dompte la mortLes sorars luy ont sepulture basticJosques au cicl. Ainsi la mort ny mnrd. Joachim dc Bmxay. Lccrivain Ic plus original et le plus eminent de la renaissance, la veritableincarnation de Tepoque,—Guizot. F the Fre


. 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]. nne me parait presque toujours a la hauteur dunoble sujet quelle retrace. CHAPTER XIX. MAROT AND RABELAIS. Et de ses vers qui ont dompte la mortLes sorars luy ont sepulture basticJosques au cicl. Ainsi la mort ny mnrd. Joachim dc Bmxay. Lccrivain Ic plus original et le plus eminent de la renaissance, la veritableincarnation de Tepoque,—Guizot. F the French men ofletters of the firsthalf of the sixteenthccntur), only two canbe said really to , whose friend-ship Dolet thoughtwould confer an im-mortality upon him,and whose workshe prophesied wouldnever cease to be thedelight t tlic studious, is a name and nothing more; hisworks are relegated to the class of * old books, and rarely(except his treatise De assc etpartibus ejus) find a place onthe shelves of collectors, or in the catalogues of the book-sellers. Salmon Macrin, the Gallic Horace, is no longereither reprinted or read, but more fortunate than his morelearned contemporary, he is at least purchased, occasionally. 358 ETIENNE DOLET. quoted, and placed respectfully on the shelves of the Frenchbibliophile. Mellin de St. Gelais, together with otherpoets who wrote in French, after a long interval of reposehas been galvanised into the appearance of life in reprints,of which the paper, the printing, and the prefaces, leavenothing to be desired. Bonaventure Desperiers, thoughcaviare to the multitude, has never wanted select thoughfit readers. But Marot and Rabelais alone of the writersof the period have never lost the popularity which theyacquired in their own time. There has never been a periodin which they were not both read and reprinted. Theirreputation has steadily risen, not only with the multitude,but with men of thought and culture; editions of, andcommentaries


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