| Shortly after his return, Beza was sent forth again, July 20, 1560. The occasion was, however, quite different. The Prince de Conde, shorn of his power by the Guises, had fled to Nerac. He desired to attach to the Protestant party his brother, Antoine de Bourbon-Vend me, king of Navarre. Calvin had already, by letter, made some impression on the irresolute and fickle king, but Conde induced his brother to send for Beza, who, with his eloquence and his courtly bearing, quite captivated the king, who declared that he would never hear the mass again, but would do all he could to advance the Protestant cause. His zeal was, however, of very short duration; for no sooner did his brother, the cardinal of Bourbon, arrive, than he and his queen, Jeanne d'Albret, who afterwards was a sincere convert to Protestantism, heard mass in the convent of the Cordeliers at Nerac. Beza, seeing that Antoine would not hold out, but was certain to fall into the power of the Catholic party, quietly left him, Oct. 17, and after many dangers reached Geneva early in November. The journey had taken three weeks, and had, for the most part, to be performed at night. | |