those who were even suspected of heresy, and every
parish was the scene of cruelties. I need not
here enumerate the victims of persecution, continued
with remorseless severity during the whole reign of
Henry VII. But it was impossible to suppress the
opinions of the reformers, or to prevent the circulation
of the Scriptures. The blood of martyrs was the
seed of the Church. Persecution in this instance
was not successful, since there was a noble material
in England, as in Germany, for Christianity to work
upon. It was in humble homes, among the yeomanry
and the artisans, that evangelical truth took the
deepest hold, as in primitive times, and produced the
fervent Christians of succeeding centuries, such as
no other country has produced. In no country
was the Reformation, as established by Edward VI.
and Elizabeth, so complete and so permanent, unless
Scotland and Switzerland be excepted. The glory
of this radical reform must be ascribed to the humble
and persecuted followers of Wyclif,—who
proved themselves martyrs and witnesses, faithful
unto death,—more than to any of the great
lights which adorned the most brilliant period of
English history.
AUTHORITIES.
The Works of Wyclif, as edited by F.D. Matthew;
The Life and Sufferings of Wicklif, by I. Lewis (Oxford,
1820); Life of Wiclif, by Charles Wehle Le Bas (1846);
John de Wycliffe, a Monograph, by Robert Vaughan, D.D.
(London, 1853); Turner’s History of England should
be compared with Lingard. Mosheim’s Ecclesiastical
History; Neander’s Church History; Wordsworth’s
Ecclesiastical Biography; Gieseler, Milner, and general
historians of the Church; Geikie’s English Reformation.
A German Life of Wyclif, by Dr. Lechler, is often
quoted by Matthew, and has been fortunately translated
into English. There is also a slight notice of
Wyclif by Fisher, in his History of the Reformation.
The name of the English reformer is spelled differently
by different historians,—as Wiclif, Wyclif,
Wycliffe, Wyckliffe; but I have selected the latest
authority upon the subject, F.D. Matthew.