We return to the papistic author, to hear from his own lips, how they dealt with these upright and simple people."When the fathers of the council," he writes;"admonished them to do penitence and manifest sorrow for their belief, that they might be united with the (Roman) church, they despised this advice, as well as the threats with which they were menaced in order that they, through fear, if by no other means, might be driven to conversion; yea, they scoffed at them, saying: 'Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness sake: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven."', "In order, then," he writes,"that the poison of their heresy might not spread further, the bishops publicly pronounced them heretics, and delivered them over to the Catholic prince, for corporal punishment. The latter commanded that they. should be branded on their foreheads, as an infamous mark of their heresy, and publicly, in the sight of all the
* All these passages, Mellinus has taken from the account of Guido Perpiggna in lib. de Haeresib. Bal. Cent. 2, in Append. ad Gervasium Giestrensem. Guido was of the opinion, that said people belonged to the Poor Men of Lyons, that is the Waldenses.
people, scourged out of the city, strictly prohibiting any one from taking them into his house, or affording them the least comfort or assistance." From William Neubrig. Hist. Engl., lib. 2, cap. 13.