Page:Protestant Exiles from France Agnew vol 1.djvu/293

 the Duke of Buckingham’s fleet. This expedition came to worse than nothing. After the assassination of Buckingham, the Earl of Lindsey, in the year 1628, appeared before the brave little town with a second fleet, which did no service except to convey the Seigneur Soubise to England in its homeward voyage. Although he was specially included in the pardon granted by the Edict of Nismes in 1629, Soubise never returned to his native country. He took up his abode in London, and died there, unmarried, on 9th October 1642, aged fifty-nine. (The Due de Rohan, his brother, was mortally wounded at the battle of Rheinfelt, and died on 13th April 1638, in his fifty-ninth year.)  

Thomas Vautrollier is the earliest refugee printer, whose work I have seen. He came from France to England, early in the year 1564. In the London census of strangers in 1571 he is found in Blackfriars, and is entered as a bookbinder.

He printed Delaune’s abridgement of Calvin’s Institutes, first edition, 1583; second edition, 1584. His printer’s mark or device represents a cloud, out of which proceeds a hand, suspending an anchor entwined with olive branches — motto, Anchora Spei. I have the second edition, of which the title is [v being put for u]:— “Institutionis Christianas Religionis a Ioanne Calvino conscriptae Epitome. In qua adversariorum objectionibus breves ac solidae responsiones annotantur. Per Gulielmum Launeum, Verbi Dei Ministrum. Editio secunda emendatior : Tabulis etiam ct Indice multò facilioribus et locupletioribus. I Pet. 3. 15. Estote semper parati ad respondendum cuilibet petenti rationem spei quae in vobis est, cum lenitate et reverentiâ, Londini, Excudebat Thomas Vautrollerius Typographus. 1584.”


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