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Brewer Gairdner, /The Reign of Henry VIII./, 2 vols., 1884. Gairdner, /Lollardy and the Reformation/, 4 vols., 1908-13. Gasquet, /Short History of the Catholic Church in England/, 1903. Dixon, /History of the Church in England from 1529/, 6 vols., London, 1878-1902. Pocock, /Records of the Reformation/ 2 vols., 1870. Taunton, /The English Black Monks of St. Benedict/, 2 vols., 1897.

One of my Aix friends, the poet Joachim Gasquet, has described to me the Christmas Eve customs which were observed in his own home: the Gasquet bakery, in the Rue de la Cepède, that has been handed down from father to son through so many hundreds of years that even its owners cannot tell certainly whether it was in the fourteenth or the fifteenth century that their family legend of good baking had its rise.

As Father Gasquet says in his Parish Life in Medieval England, of the universality of these "gilds" in this country: "Every account of a medieval parish must necessarily include some description of the work of fraternities and guilds.... Their existence dates from the earliest times." Mr.

* History of the Reformation, edited by Abbot Gasquet, p. 207.

Francis Aidan Gasquet, a Benedictine monk, in his valuable work on "Henry VIII. and the English Monasteries," says of Cromwell: "No single minister in England ever exercised such extensive authority, none ever rose so rapidly, and no one has ever left behind him a name covered with greater infamy and disgrace."

The great proportion of it was in the hands of foreigners, and there was the same inconsistency in the policy of the central government on the occasions when it did intervene or take any action on the subject. Jessop, Augustus: The Coming of the Friars and other Essays. Two interesting essays in this volume are on The Black Death in East Anglia. Gasquet, F. A.: The Great Pestilence of 1349.

In the Gasquet family it was the custom to eat the Great Supper in the oven room: because that was the heart, the sanctuary, of the house; the place consecrated by the toil which gave the family its livelihood.

Once he informed his patron that he prayed regularly for him, prefacing this information with the remark, "I will now tell you something to make you laugh." Father Gasquet sums up his view of the commissioners in the words of Edmund Burke: "It is not with much credulity that I listen to any when they speak ill of those whom they are going to plunder.

Lupton, /Life of Dean Colet/, 1887. Gasquet, /Eve of the Reformation/, 142. Chalmers, /History of the College ... of Oxford/. Mullinger, /The University of Cambridge to 1535/. Wilkins, /Concilia/, iii. 317. Gasquet, op. cit., chap. viii., /The Old English Bible/, iv., v. Maitland, /The Dark Ages/, 1845, no. xii. Gairdner, /Lollardy and the Reformation/, vol. ii., 221-303. On this subject, cf.

For nothing is more imperatively necessary among the ranks of workers to-day. Mr. Dom Gasquet describes thus their object: "Broadly speaking, they were the benefit societies and the provident associations of the Middle Ages. The Romans had no poor laws ... until the destruction of small freehold." Toulmin Smith describes them, institutions of "local self-help."

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