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John Knox
Scotch Protestant leader, b. at Haddington, Scotland, between 1505 and 1515;
d. at Edinburgh, 24 November, 1572. All the older biographies assign his birth
to 1505, but recent authorities (Lang, Hay Fleming, etc.) give grounds for the
latter date from contemporary evidence, and from certain facts in his career.
Nothing authentic is known of his ancestry or kinsfolk, excepting that his
mother was a Sinclair; his father was probably a small farmer. Educated at the
Haddington burgh school, he is not known to have graduated at any university,
though both Glasgow and St. Andrews have claimed him. His own writings testify
to his knowledge of Latin and French, and his acquaintance with the works of
some of the Fathers, and he seems to have acquired a smattering of Greek and
Hebrew in later life. His mastery of vernacular Scotch is shown in his History
,
as well as the fact that he had studied law, for his citations from the Pandects
are apt and not infrequent. We know from his own words that he was a priest -
one of Baal's shaven sort
, as he expresses it - and practised as a notary by
ecclesiastical authority. In a still extant document, he is styled Johannis
Knox, sacri altaris minister, sancte Andreæ diocesis auctoritate apostolica
notarius.
Nothing whatever is known of his ecclesiastical career; and we can
only surmise that he had already begun to doubt, if he had not actually
repudiated, the Catholic tenets by 1540, when we first find him engaged as
private tutor to certain bairns
, a profession in which he continued until 1547.
The names of some of his pupils have come down to us, but we know nothing of the
details of his life until 1545, when his own History of the Reformation
,
written some eighteen years later and largely autobiographical in character,
first brings him before us.
The most prominent exponent of the new doctrines in Scotland at this time was
George Wishart, who had come home from his travels in Germany a confirmed
Protestant, and was expounding his tenets in Haddington and other parts of the
Scottish Lowlands. Bitterly hostile to Cardinal Beaton, the great champion of
the Catholic cause, Wishart (whose most devoted adherent and disciple at this
time was Knox) was deeply involved in the intrigues of the Protestant party with
Henry VIII of England for the kidnapping or murder of the cardinal. Wishart was
arrested in January, 1546, and burned at St. Andrews on 1 March; and on 29 May
Beaton was murdered at the same place in revenge for Wishart's death. The
assassination was approved and applauded by Knox, who describes the deed with a
gleeful and mocking levity strangely unbecoming in a Christian preacher, though
his panegyrists speak of it merely as his vein of humour
. Some months later we
find him, with his pupils, shut up in the castle of St. Andrews, which Beaton's
murderers and their friends held for some months against the regent Arran and
the Government. On 31 July, 1547, the besiegers being reinforced by a large
French fleet, the castle was surrendered, and Knox was imprisoned with some
others for nineteen months on board the French galleys and at Rouen. His
captivity, however, was not rigorous enough to prevent him from writing a
theological treatise, and preaching to his fellow prisoners.
In 1549 Knox was free to return home; but he preferred to stay for a time in
England, where, under Edward VI, he would feel himself secure, rather than to
expose himself to fresh arrest in Scotland. He received a state license to
preach at Berwick, where he remained two years, and was then transferred to
Newcastle, and at the same time appointed a royal chaplain. He preached at least
twice before the young king, and in October, 1552, was nominated to the
Bishopric of Rochester, which he refused, declining also a benefice in the city
of London. His own alleged reason for declining these preferments was that he
thought the Anglican Church too favourable to Roman doctrine, and that he could
not bring himself to kneel at the communion service. When Edward VI was
succeeded in July, 1553, by his Catholic sister Mary, Knox continued his
preaching for a time, and, as long as he remained in England, took care not to
attack the new sovereign, for whom indeed he published a devout prayer. But
early in 1554 he thought it prudent to take refuge in Dieppe, having meanwhile
gone through a form of marriage with Marjorie, fifth daughter of Mrs. Bowes, a
Calvinistic lady of his own age living in Newcastle, who had taken him as her
spiritual adviser. From Dieppe he went to Geneva, partly to consult Calvin and
other divines as to the lawfulness and expediency of resisting the rule of Mary
Tudor in England and Mary of Guise, just appointed Regent, in Scotland; but he
got little satisfaction from his advisers. In September, 1554, he accepted the
post of chaplain to the English Protestants at Frankfort; but his Puritanism
revolted against the use of King Edward's prayer-book and of the Anglican
ceremonial. Schism arose in the congregation: Knox's opponents accused him of
comparing the Emperor Charles to Nero in a published tract; he was ordered by
the authorities to leave Frankfort, and returning to Geneva he ministered for a
time to the English congregation there. In August, 1555, however, an urgent
summons from his mother-in-law, Mrs. Bowes, caused him (as he says, most
contrarious to mine own judgement
) to set out for Scotland and join his wife at
Berwick. The new doctrines had made headway during his absence, and he found
himself able to preach both in public and in the country houses of his
supporters among the nobles and gentry. At a historic supper, given by his
friend Erskine of Dun, it was formally decided that no believer in the Evangel
could attend Mass; and the external separation of the party from Catholic
practice, as well as doctrine, thus became complete. Knox, whose religion had
now become entirely of the Old-Testament type, boldly proclaimed that adherents
to the old faith were as truly idolaters as the Jews who sacrificed their
children to Moloch, and that the extermination of idolaters was the clear duty
of Christian princes and magistrates, and, failing them, of all individual
believers
. In the letter, however, which he addressed about this time, on the
advice of two of his noble supporters, to the queen regent, he assumed a
somewhat different tone, appearing to petition only for toleration for his
co-religionists. The letter contained at the same time violent abuse of
Catholics and their beliefs, and threatened the regent with torment and pain
everlasting
, if she did not act on his counsel. Mary seems to have treated the
effusion with silent contempt, which Knox resented bitterly; but it was no doubt
with the conviction that the time was not yet come for the triumph of his cause
that he returned to his ministry, in Geneva (in the summer of 1556), sending his
wife and her mother thither before him. Immediately on his departure he was
cited to appear before the judges in Edinburgh, condemned and outlawed (in
absence) as contumacious, and publicly burnt in effigy.
Until the end of 1558 Knox remained at his post in Geneva, imbibing from
Calvin all those rigid and autocratic ideas of church discipline which he was
subsequently to introduce into Scotland - England would have none of them - and
which were to be followed by over a century of unrest, persecution, and civil
war. His two sons, Nathaniel and Eleazar, were born to him at Geneva, and he was
joined there by Mrs. Locke and other female admirers from England and Scotland.
Glencairn and other friends tried to persuade him in 1557 to come back, on the
ground that persecution was diminishing, and he actually got as far as Dieppe on
his journey home. Here his courage seems to have evaporated; and after
ministering for a time to the Dieppe Protestants he went back to Geneva. During
1558 his pen was constantly busy: he published his letter to the queen regent
with comments, and his famous First Blast of the Trumpet against the Monstrous
Regiment of Women
, directed against Mary Tudor, Mary of Guise, Catherine de'
Medici, and the youthful Mary Stuart, who had just married the French Dauphin.
In other writings he reiterated his views that every Christian man (i.e.
Protestant) had a right to slaughter every idolater (i.e. Catholic), if he got
an opportunity. In a Brief Exhortation to England
he insisted on the expulsion
of all dregs of Popery
and the introduction of the full Kirk discipline
of
Calvin and Geneva; and in his Treatise on Predestination
he answered the
blasphemous cavillations
of an Anabaptist. The last-named work was not
published until 1560.
At length, in the first days of 1559 (Queen Mary of England having been
succeeded by her sister Elizabeth a few weeks previously), Knox deemed it safe
or opportune to leave Geneva for Scotland. He came to Dieppe, and, finding
himself refused a safe-conduct through England, travelled by sea from Dieppe to
Leith, arriving on 2 May. He had already heard by letter that the Scottish
Protestants were no longer in any danger. The queen regent had indeed denounced
and forbidden by proclamation attacks on priests, disturbance of Catholic
services, invasion of churches by lay preachers, and religious tumults in
general. But she was already in the grip of deadly illness, was meditating a
retirement to France, and, notwithstanding certain advices from that country,
had neither the power nor the intention of organizing movement to suppress the
Protestant party in the realm, which was growing daily in power and influence.
St. Giles's Church in Edinburgh had been the scene of a riot, followed by the
flight of the Catholic clergy. The Lords of the Congregation were practically in
arms against the regent; and Knox, who had never seemed to be the least anxious
for lonely martyrdom, showed himself full of fight and courage with a stout
body-guard at his back. Repairing to Dundee, he found the Protestants masters of
the situation there, and going thence to Perth he preached a series of
inflammatory sermons which culminated on 25 May, when the mob of that city -
angered, according to Knox, by the regent's having broken her pledge of
toleration of the preachers (see however as to this, Lange, Knox and the
Reformation
, Appendix A) - sacked and partly demolished the parish church and
several of the monasteries. A private letter from Knox describes these deeds of
violence and outrage as done by the brethren
; but in his History
- written
partly for the followers of Calvin, who rebuked and condemned such works of
pillage - he ascribes them to the rascal multitude
, with no reference to their
having been inspired by his own harangues or encouragement.
The Protestants, entrenched in Perth (the only fortified town in Scotland),
were now in open rebellion against the regent, who advanced with her troops from
Stirling. A parley with the Congregation resulted in a treaty, by which the
Protestants were to be allowed complete freedom of worship, and no French troops
were to be quartered in the town. Knox meanwhile moved on with his friends to St.
Andrews, and, in spite of Archbishop Hamilton's threat that if he dared to
preach there he should be saluted with a dozen of culverins, whereof the most
part should light upon his nose
, he did preach there, with the result that the
St. Andrews mob repeated the work of sack and pillage which had followed his
sermons at Perth. The wreck of other great abbeys, such as Scone and Lindores,
followed; the Congregation seized Stirling and marched to Edinburgh, the regent
meanwhile retreating to Dunbar. Knox accompanied them to the capital, where the
same scenes of devastation of churches and monasteries were repeated, and on 7
July he was chosen minister of the Edinburgh Protestants. We meane no tumult,
no alteratioun of authoritie
, he wrote to one of his female devotees in Geneva,
but onlie the reformation of religioun, and suppressing of idolatrie.
Knox
wrote these words while actually in full revolt against the authoritie
of the
regent of the realm, with the further professed desire to prevent the lawful
queen, Mary Stuart, from enjoying her hereditary crown.
On 22 July the regent and her advisers suddenly determined to march upon
Edinburgh, before the Congregation could concentrate its scattered forces, and
the Protestants consequently decided to come to terms, one of the articles of
the treaty being that the capital was to be free to choose its own religion. The
choice of the majority would certainly not have been in favour of the new
doctrines, and this and other points of the agreement were openly violated by
the Congregation, who left preachers in possession of the churches, and retired
to Stirling. Conscious at this juncture of the immense advantage of gaining the
support of England, now a Protestant kingdom, they determined to appeal to
Elizabeth, and to send Knox on a mission to her powerful minister Cecil. Knox
had already written to Cecil with a letter for the queen which was more or less
an apology for his fiery pamphlet, the Monstrous Blast
. He sailed from Fife to
Northumberland early in August, interviewed Croft, the governor of Berwick, and
finally brought back to Stirling letters from Cecil more or less favourable to
the demands of the Congregation for help, but indefinite in their terms. Further
correspondence, however, elicited from Sadler, Elizabeth's agent, a gift of
money, which encouraged the Scotch Protestants to believe that the Queen of
England was on their side. Knox in a letter to Geneva, dated 2 September,
describes his labours as envoy of the Congregation, and adds that ministers are
now permanently appointed to eight of the chief towns in Scotland. A few weeks
later, the regent being then at Leith, which she had strongly fortified and
garrisoned with French troops, the Congregation took a bold step. Encouraged by
English sympathy, and still more, perhaps, by the adhesion of the powerful Earl
of Arran to their cause, they proceeded to depose - or, as Knox thought it more
prudent to describe the measure, to suspend from office - the regent in the name
of the young king and queen, whose great seal was counterfeited in order to give
official weight to the proclamations announcing the step. Leith was vigorously
besieged, but unsuccessfully, and Knox continued to appeal energetically to
England for money, troops, and military commanders. The result was that
Elizabeth sent a fleet to the Firth of Forth; the Congregation, thus reinforced,
renewed the siege of Leith, and the regent took refuge in Edinburgh Castle,
where she died on 10 June, 1560. Knox vilified this unfortunate princess to the
end, but neither contemporary opinion nor the judgment of history has accepted
his verdict, or his outrageous aspersions on her moral character. A month after
her death the Treaty of Edinburgh was signed by representatives of England and
France, providing for the withdrawal from Scotland of the French and English
troops. The Congregation held a solemn thanksgiving service at St. Giles's
Church, Knox of course taking the leading part, and profiting by the occasion to
prescribe from the pulpit the course which the Protestant leaders were bound to
follow to secure the triumph of their cause.
That triumph was indeed now imminent. Parliament met on 1 August, Knox
preaching daily to crowded audiences speciall and vehement
harangues on the
need of rebuilding the temple, in other words establishing the Protestant
religion. The spirit of the assembly - at which, by the way, the sovereign was
not represented, and which was consequently not really a parliament at all - was
never in doubt. The new Confession of Faith, drawn up by Knox and his friends,
was adopted word for word; the authority of the pope was abolished; the
celebration of Mass was forbidden - under certain penalties
, as one of Knox's
biographers mildly remarks, the penalty for the third offence being in fact
death. The formality of praying the young king and queen to ratify these
enactments was gone through; but Knox boldly says that such ratification was
unnecessary - a mere glorious vane ceremony
. The Catholic Church of Scotland
was extinct, as far as human power could extinguish it, and the Protestant
religion officially established. Parliament rose on 25 August, having
commissioned Knox and three other ministers to draw up the plan of
church-government, known as the First Book of Discipline
, which was ready by
the date (20 December, 1560) of the first meeting of the newly constituted
General Assembly
of the Kirk, of which Knox was of course the most prominent
member. The Book of Discipline
was founded on the code of various Protestant
bodies, more especially on the Ordonnances of Geneva and on the formularies of
the German Church founded in London in 1550, both very familiar to Knox and both
thoroughly Calvinistic in spirit. The opening words are that all doctrine
contrary to the new evangel must be suppressed as damnable to man's salvation
;
and it is ordained that every home of the ancient superstition
must be cleared
out of the land. The several districts of Scotland were to be under the
spiritual charge of officials known as superintendents, until such time as
ministers were forthcoming for each parish; and there was provision for a
comprehensive scheme of national education, elementary, secondary, and
university. This plan, for which it has been customary to give all the credit to
Protestantism, was devised on lines already laid down by the ancient Church; but
as a matter of fact it was never carried into effect. Nor were the provisions
for the diversion of the wealth of the old Church to national purposes any more
effectual. Many of the Protestant nobles signed the book, but they had no idea
of giving up their own share of the ecclesiastical plunder. Converted in matter
of doctrine
, says Lang, in conduct they were the most avaricious, bloody, and
treacherous of men.
Such as they were, they were the pillars of the new Church
and the new religion.
In December, 1560, died the young King Francis II of France, husband to our
Jezebel
, as he is styled by Knox, who lost his own wife, Marjorie Bowes, about
the same time. The whole situation in Scotland was now changed. The Catholic
earls sent Bishop John Lesley to invite the widowed queen to land in the
Catholic north; but she distrusted them, not without reason, and confided rather
in her Protestant half-brother, Lord James Stewart, who promised that she should
be allowed the private celebration of Mass in Scotland. Mary landed at Leith on
19 August, 1561, and on the following Sunday Mass was said in her chapel at
Holyrood. This was followed by protests and riots; Knox publicly declared that
one mass was more fearful to him than 10,000 armed men
, and in an interview
with the queen inveighed against that Roman antichrist
, denounced the Catholic
Church as a harlot, compared himself to Paul and Queen Mary to Nero, and
indulged in much other abuse which he reports copiously in his History
(suppressing most of Mary's replies) and calls reasoning
. The question of the
queen's privilege to have her own Catholic services became a burning one: Lord
James (now created Earl of Moray), Morton, Marischal, and other leading
Protestants were on her side, Knox and most of the preachers on the other. It
was suggested to refer the question to Calvin; but the lords' view was meanwhile
accepted, and Mary kept the Feast of All Saints with what Knox calls
mischievous solemnity
. He continued his tirades against the queen both
privately and from the pulit, sometimes reducing her to tears by his violence.
In the spring of 1562 he held a public controversy on the doctrine of the Mass
with Abbot Quintin Kennedy, a Benedictine of Crossraguel; and he also had a
controversial correspondence with an able Catholic apologist, Ninian Winzet of
Linlithgow.
Some months later Knox found himself in trouble for having summoned the
brethren
from all parts of Scotland to Edinburgh to defend - apparently by
violence, if necessary - one Cranstoun, who was to be tried for brawling in the
chapel-royal. Knox's letter was interpreted by the council as treasonable, but
when brought to trial he was judged to have done nothing more than his duty in
summoning the brethren in time of danger. Soon after this - in March, 1564 -
general surprise seems to have been caused by the second marriage of Knox, his
bride being a girl of sixteen, Margaret Stewart, daughter of Lord Ochiltree. He
makes no mention of the fact himself in his History
. The Lords of the
Congregation, in the summer of this year, publicly censured Knox for his
violence in speech and demeanour against the queen, but Knox retorted with his
usual references to Ahab and Jezebel, and maintained that idolaters must die
the death
, and that the executioners must be the people of God
. The Lords in
vain cited the opinions of Luther, Calvin, Melanchthon, and other Continental
Protestants as entirely opposed to Knox's views, and requested him to write and
ascertain their judgment on the questions at issue. Knox flatly refused to write
to Mr. Calvin and the learned of other Kirks
, and, as he always produced
Scriptural texts to back up his opinions, the Lords were silenced if not
convinced. A year later he was again in conflict with the council in consequence
of a vehement attack he had made from the pulpit on Mary and the young
king-consort, Darnley, in their presence, about a month after their marriage. He
was formally suspended from preaching, but he seems to have disregarded the
prohibition, remarking that if the Church (not the council) commanded him to
abstain he would obey so far as the Word of God would permit
; in other words,
he would obey even the Church only so far as he himself thought fit. This
particular sermon, which he printed with a preface, is the only extant specimen
of his public eloquence; it is extremely long and dull to read, whatever may
have been its effect when delivered.
The situation in Scotland was now, from the point of view of Knox and his
friends, a gloomy one. Moray and the other lords who had protested against
Mary's marriage to Darnley were now in exile; all hope of the queen's conversion
to Protestantism was at an end; and her Catholic secretary Rizzio was high in
her confidence, indeed her chief adviser. Whether Knox was actually privy to the
foul murder of Rizzio before the queen's eyes on 9 March, 1566, is a matter of
doubt; but his own statement that the act was most just and worthy of all
praise
shows that his subsequent approval was beyond any doubt whatever. He
thought it well at this juncture to leave Edinburgh for a time, and retired to
his friends in Ayrshire, where he busied himself with the writing of his
History
. In December he received from the General Assembly leave of absence
from Scotland for six months, so that he was not a witness of the events of the
first half of 1567, which included the murder of Darnley, the abduction of Mary
by Bothwell, and her marriage to him on 15 May, 1567. The queen was already,
after the disaster of Carberry Hill, a prisoner at Lochleven, when Knox
re-appeared at Edinburgh and at once resumed, in spite of the disuasion of
Throgmorton, the English Ambassador, his pulpit invectives against the sovereign,
and his denunciations of the national alliance with France. On 29 July Knox went
to Stirling to preach at the coronation of the young king, James VI, when he
protested against the rite of unction as a relic of popery. The appointment of
Moray to the regency brought him again into close association with Knox, who,
however, after the fall of the queen, his great antagonist, never seems to have
regained his former prominence in the country. I live as a man already dead
from all civil affairs
, he wrote a little later to Moray's agent in England.
Foolish Scotland
, he said on another occasion, hath disobeyed God by sparing
the queen
, and he seemed constantly harassed and haunted by a dread of her
restoration. Her escape from Lochleven apeared to justify his worst fears, but a
fortnight later she was hopelessly defeated at Langside, and was a fugitive to
England. Henceforth Knox's declining forces were devoted to his ministerial work,
which he seemst to have carried on with many intervals of weariness and
depression. With his one foot in the grave
, as he describes himself, the
assassination of Moray in January, 1569, was a great blow to him. He preached the
Regent's funeral sermon in St. Giles's Church and, according to one of his
admirers, moved three thousand persons to shed tears for the loss of such a
good and godlie governor
. The shock of this event doubtless affected his health,
and he was struck by apoplexy in the autumn, and never entirely recovered.
Knox continued to preach in his church in Edinburgh, but with the nobles,
Protestant as well as Catholic, many of them his own former friends, in league
for the queen's restoration, he was no longer at home or at ease in the capital;
and in the spring of 1571 he retired to St. Andrews, where he remained for
fifteen months, continuing to write, and preaching occasionally, notwithstanding
his infirmities, with his old fire and vehemence. In August, 1572, Mary's
adherents having left Edinburgh, Knox was persuaded to return thither. The news
of the massacre of St. Bartholomew had just reached Scotland, and Knox thundered
from his pulpit (to which he had almost to be carried), in the presence of the
French ambassador, denunciations of that cruel murderer and false traitor, the
King of France
. On 9 November he took part in the induction-services of Mr.
Lawson as minister of St. Giles's in his place; and fifteen days later, on 24
November, 1572, he died in his house at Edinburgh. Contemporary narratives of
his last illness and death (by Richard Bannatyne and Thomas Smeton) are printed
by Laing in his edition of Knox's Works
(vol. VI). At his burial, two days
later, the Regent Morton uttered the well-known words, Here lieth a man who in
his life never feared the face of man.
The facts of his life perhaps hardly
justify these laudatory words. Knox
, says his learned and sympathetic
biographer and editor, Dr. Laing, cannot be said to have possessed the
impetuous and heroic boldness of a Luther.
On more than one occasion he
displayed a timidity or shrinking from danger scarcely to have been expected
from one who boasted of his willingness to suffer death in his master's cause
.
On his own showing he was courageous enough in his personal encounters with his
unfortunate queen; but, according to another of his Protestant biographers, he
was most valiant when he had armed men at his back, and the popular idea of his
personal courage, said to have been expressed by the Regent Morton, is entirely
erroneous
.
As to Knox's religion, it is sufficient to say, without questioning the
sincerity of his convictions, that the reaction from the Catholicism of his
youth seems to have landed him outside the pale of Christianity altogether.
Permeated with the spirit of the Old Testament and with the gloomy austerity of
the ancient prophets, he displays neither in his voluminous writings nor in the
record of his public acts the slightest recognition of the teachings of the
Gospel, or of the gentle, mild, and forgiving character of the Christian
dispensation. Genial, amiable, and kind-hearted he may have been in private life,
though it is difficult to see from what premises his panegyrists deduce his
possession of those qualities; but the ferocity and unrestrained violence of his
public utterances stand out, even in the rude and lawless age in which he lived,
as surpassing almost everything recorded of his contemporaries, even those most
closely in sympathy with his political and ecclesiastical views. It is to his
credit that he died, as he had lived, a poor man, and that he never enriched
himself with the spoils of the Church which he had abandoned - a trait in which
he contrasts singularly with the Protestant lords and lairds who were his
friends and adherents. Of his ability and his power of influencing those among
whom he lived and laboured, there is no room to doubt. His gifts as a speaker
and a preacher we have to take on the evidence of his contemporaries, whose
testimony there is no need to question; of his command of his native tongue we
have abundant proof in his writings, in particular in his History
, by far the
most remarkable specimen of the vernacular Scots of the sixteenth century which
has come down to us. The best edition of it is in his collected Works
, edited
by David Laing in six volumes.
The best-known likeness of Knox (of whom no contemporary portrait exists) is
the woodcut of him in Beza's Icones
, published at Geneva in 1580, and often
since reproduced. Lord Torphichen possesses a portrait of him painted a century
later, probably from Beza's. The so-called Somerville portrait, maintained by
Carlyle to be the only authentic likeness of Knox, apparently represents a
divine of the seventeenth century. Knox was survived by his widow, who married
again, and by two sons of his first marriage (who both died childless) and three
daughters of his second. Descendants of his youngest daughter still exist.
LAING, Works of John Knox, with introductory and chronological notes (6 vols., Edinburgh, 1895); MCCRIE, Life of Knox (2 vols., Edinburgh, 1813); HUME BROWN, John Knox (2 vols., London, 1845); LANG, John Knox and the Reformation (London, 1905); MILLER, John Knox, the Hero of the Scottish Reformation (London, 1905); GOSSE, Life and Times of John Knox (London, 1888); ROGERS, Genealogical Memoirs of John Knox (Grampian Club, 1879); TAYLOR INNES, John Knox (Famous Scots Series, Edinburgh, 1896); WILMOT, John Knox and the Scottish Reformation (Glasgow, Catholic Truth Society, s. d.); MACKAY in Dict. Nat. Biog., s. v. (London, 1892); CARLYLE, Essay on the Portaits of John Knox in Collected Works (London, 1885); BROWN, The Life Story of John Knox (London, 1905).
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