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NOTE.-The American Sunday-school Union have made an arrangement with the London Religious Tract Society, to publish, concurrently with them, such of their valuable works as are best suited to our circulation. In making the selection, reference will be had to the general utility of the volumes and their sound moral tendency. They will occupy a distinct place on our catalogue, and will constitute a valuable addition to our stock of books for family and general reading.

As they will be, substantially, reprints of the London edition, the credit of their general character will belong to our English brethren and not to us; and we may add, that the republication of them, under our joint imprint, involves us in no responsibility beyond that of a judicious selection. We cheerfully avail ourselves of this arrangement for giving wider influence and value to the labours of a sisterinstitution so catholic in its character and so efficient in its operations as the London Religious Tract Society.

The present volume is issued under the above arrangement.

Entered according to act of Congress, in the year 1846, by the American Sunday-school Union, in the clerk's office of the District Court of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

SKETCHES

OF

THE WALDENSES.

CHAPTER I.

ACCOUNTS OF THE WALDENSES.

Summary view by Alexis Muston-Visit of Dr. Gilly-Early existence of the Waldenses-Vigilantius-The PauliciansMohammedanism-Claude of Turin-The Albigenses.

THE VAUDOIS, or WALDENSES, inhabit the valleys of Piedmont, a country which derives its name from its situation at the foot of the Alps, the highest mountains of Europe. Many works have been written by their own countrymen, and also by foreigners, giving accounts of their history in former times, and of their present characters and habits. One of the most complete has been prepared by a Vaudois pastor, Alexis Muston; a translation of some paragraphs will bring forward the leading points of their history, which will form the subject of this volume.

He says, "How many remembrances arise to the mind on climbing one of these lofty hills! They have a stern and frowning aspect in winter, it is true, but no prospect can be more beautiful in spring, when the mild sun diffuses its light and life, and the air is filled with sweet and balmy breezes. The vigorous and manly inhabitants of this district seem to derive their character from the nature of the soil. They are chiefly employed in rural labours. In all pastoral countries the sound of singing is often heard, but here the songs are chiefly psalms, when the united voices of some young girls returning from their religious services strike your ear, as you rest in some shady glen, or on the slope of a rocky eminence. All around is now calm and tranquil; but there have been times when the blood of these simple peasants has stained their fields, their hills, their dwellings-times of persecution and slaughter. Call to mind their courage and fortitude; first, in the cause of God; next, for those whom they loved. Their simple language has never been used to express corrupt or unworthy emotions; but they were well informed, before the literature of other lands had arisen from the darkness and depravity of the middle ages. Thus our ancestors, however falsely accused, have left us a simple and blameless character, and a soil enriched by the memory of their lives and deaths.

"Secluded from the world by their situation and their religious belief, they were the sub

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