Huss and Jerome
      
      
         97
      
      
        The rout was complete, and again an immense booty fell into the hands
      
      
        of the victors.
      
      
        Thus the second time a vast army, sent forth by the most powerful
      
      
        nations of Europe, a host of brave, warlike men, trained and equipped
      
      
        for battle, fled without a blow before the defenders of a small and
      
      
        hitherto feeble nation. Here was a manifestation of divine power. The
      
      
        invaders were smitten with a supernatural terror. He who overthrew
      
      
        the hosts of Pharaoh in the Red Sea, who put to flight the armies of
      
      
        Midian before Gideon and his three hundred, who in one night laid
      
      
        low the forces of the proud Assyrian, had again stretched out His
      
      
        hand to wither the power of the oppressor. “There were they in great
      
      
        fear, where no fear was: for God hath scattered the bones of him that
      
      
        encampeth against thee: thou hast put them to shame, because God
      
      
        hath despised them.”
      
      
         Psalm 53:5
      
      
        .
      
      
         [118]
      
      
        The papal leaders, despairing of conquering by force, at last re-
      
      
        sorted to diplomacy. A compromise was entered into, that while
      
      
        professing to grant to the Bohemians freedom of conscience, really
      
      
        betrayed them into the power of Rome. The Bohemians had specified
      
      
        four points as the condition of peace with Rome: the free preaching of
      
      
        the Bible; the right of the whole church to both the bread and the wine
      
      
        in the communion, and the use of the mother tongue in divine worship;
      
      
        the exclusion of the clergy from all secular offices and authority; and,
      
      
        in cases of crime, the jurisdiction of the civil courts over clergy and
      
      
        laity alike. The papal authorities at last “agreed that the four articles
      
      
        of the Hussites should be accepted, but that the right of explaining
      
      
        them, that is, of determining their precise import, should belong to the
      
      
        council—in other words, to the pope and the emperor.”—Wylie, b. 3,
      
      
        ch. 18. On this basis a treaty was entered into, and Rome gained by
      
      
        dissimulation and fraud what she had failed to gain by conflict; for,
      
      
        placing her own interpretation upon the Hussite articles, as upon the
      
      
        Bible, she could pervert their meaning to suit her own purposes.
      
      
        A large class in Bohemia, seeing that it betrayed their liberties,
      
      
        could not consent to the compact. Dissensions and divisions arose,
      
      
        leading to strife and bloodshed among themselves. In this strife the
      
      
        noble Procopius fell, and the liberties of Bohemia perished.
      
      
        Sigismund, the betrayer of Huss and Jerome, now became king
      
      
        of Bohemia, and regardless of his oath to support the rights of the
      
      
        Bohemians, he proceeded to establish popery. But he had gained little