1 You are a Christian; you are my sister in religion.
The Three Musketeers By Alexandre DumasContextHighlight In 55 CAPTIVITY: THE FOURTH DAY 2 I mean to say that since we last met you have changed your religion.
The Three Musketeers By Alexandre DumasContextHighlight In 53 CAPTIVITY: THE SECOND DAY 3 "Then you have no religion at all; I like that best," replied Lord de Winter, laughing.
The Three Musketeers By Alexandre DumasContextHighlight In 53 CAPTIVITY: THE SECOND DAY 4 The religion I serve, the God I adore, were blasphemed because I called upon that religion and that God, but still I resisted.
The Three Musketeers By Alexandre DumasContextHighlight In 56 CAPTIVITY: THE FIFTH DAY 5 In short, she had taken the measure of motives hitherto unknown to herself, through this experiment, made upon the most rebellious subject that nature and religion could submit to her study.
The Three Musketeers By Alexandre DumasContextHighlight In 56 CAPTIVITY: THE FIFTH DAY 6 Now, he was accustomed to walk with his fowling piece on his shoulder, behind the hedges which border the roads, and when he saw a Catholic coming alone, the Protestant religion immediately prevailed in his mind.
7 Besides, his probity was irreproachable, in an age in which soldiers compromised so easily with their religion and their consciences, lovers with the rigorous delicacy of our era, and the poor with God's Seventh Commandment.
8 It goes without saying that when he saw a Huguenot coming, he felt himself filled with such ardent Catholic zeal that he could not understand how, a quarter of an hour before, he had been able to have any doubts upon the superiority of our holy religion.
9 Aramis, suffering at once in body and mind, had at length fixed his eyes and his thoughts upon religion, and he had considered as a warning from heaven the double accident which had happened to him; that is to say, the sudden disappearance of his mistress and the wound in his shoulder.
The Three Musketeers By Alexandre DumasContextHighlight In 26 ARAMIS AND HIS THESIS 10 MM Bassompierre and Schomberg were marshals of France, and claimed their right of commanding the army under the orders of the king; but the cardinal, who feared that Bassompierre, a Huguenot at heart, might press but feebly the English and Rochellais, his brothers in religion, supported the Duc d'Angouleme, whom the king, at his instigation, had named lieutenant general.
The Three Musketeers By Alexandre DumasContextHighlight In 43 THE SIGN OF THE RED DOVECOT