Chapter 8—Luther Before the Diet
      
      
        A new emperor, Charles V., had ascended the throne of Germany,
      
      
        and the emissaries of Rome hastened to present their congratulations,
      
      
        and induce the monarch to employ his power against the Reformation.
      
      
        On the other hand, the Elector of Saxony, to whom Charles was in great
      
      
        degree indebted for his crown, entreated him to take no step against
      
      
        Luther until he should have granted him a hearing. The emperor was
      
      
        thus placed in a position of great perplexity and embarrassment. The
      
      
        papists would be satisfied with nothing short of an imperial edict sen-
      
      
        tencing Luther to death. The elector had declared firmly that “neither
      
      
        his imperial majesty nor any one else had yet made it appear to him
      
      
        that the reformer’s writings had been refuted; “therefore he requested
      
      
        “that Doctor Luther be furnished with a safe-conduct, so that he might
      
      
        answer for himself before a tribunal of learned, pious, and impartial
      
      
        judges.”
      
      
        The attention of all parties was now directed to the assembly of
      
      
        the German States which convened at Worms soon after the accession
      
      
        of Charles to the empire. There were important political questions
      
      
        and interests to be considered by this national council; for the first
      
      
        time the princes of Germany were to meet their youthful monarch in
      
      
        deliberative assembly. From all parts of the Fatherland had come the
      
      
        dignitaries of Church and State. Secular lords, highborn powerful, and
      
      
        jealous of their hereditary rights; princely ecclesiastics, flushed with
      
      
        their conscious superiority in rank and power; courtly knights and their
      
      
        armed retainers; and ambassadors from foreign and distant lands—all
      
      
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        gathered at Worms. Yet in that vast assembly the subject that excited
      
      
        the deepest interest, was the cause of the Saxon reformer.
      
      
        Charles had previously directed the elector to bring Luther with
      
      
        him to the Diet, assuring him of protection, and promising a free
      
      
        discussion, with competent persons, of the questions in dispute. Luther
      
      
        was anxious to appear before the emperor. His health was at this time
      
      
        much impaired; yet he wrote to the elector: “If I cannot perform the
      
      
        journey to Worms in good health, I will be carried there, sick as I
      
      
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