The Lives and times of the Roman Pontiffs from StPeter to Pius IX . during thewhole of their first audience. On his return to Home, the pope ordered his nephews Fla\aus and Augus-tine to go and perform the exercises of Saint Ignatius at the novitiate ofthe Jesuits, where those exercises had been performed by Saint CharlesBorromeo, also nephew to a pope. Flavins, destined to the ecclesiasticalcareer, prepared liimseK to receive holy orders, and obtained the priesthoodon the 3d of June. Alexander had strongly recommended to his relativesthat they should accept no presents. But as his brother Mar
The Lives and times of the Roman Pontiffs from StPeter to Pius IX . during thewhole of their first audience. On his return to Home, the pope ordered his nephews Fla\aus and Augus-tine to go and perform the exercises of Saint Ignatius at the novitiate ofthe Jesuits, where those exercises had been performed by Saint CharlesBorromeo, also nephew to a pope. Flavins, destined to the ecclesiasticalcareer, prepared liimseK to receive holy orders, and obtained the priesthoodon the 3d of June. Alexander had strongly recommended to his relativesthat they should accept no presents. But as his brother Marius would beput to greater expense by residing at Rome than at Sienna, he thought itright to assist him by making him general of the holy Church, and governor * The life of Ferdinand III. was published in 1027, in folio, by tlie Jesuit, John Pinedal; byHippolytus de Vargas, Ossuna, 1630, in 8vo; by Father Michael Angelo Laurati, Naples, in1680, 4to; by Eanuccio Pico, Rome, 1633; by Francis Boutard, a friend of Bossuet, Paris, 1759,8vo; and by many other V : r>7 c^/r: : /// ^\t\ ^..i .\-A! . .--:._? h:L I. ^ ALEXANDER VII. 107 of the castle of Saint Angelo. Augxistiuo was named general of the pope at the same time determined that they should lodge in the apos-tolic palace, so that they might be constantly under his eyes; and he wouldnot allow Flavins to inhabit the apartments usually appropriated to cardinal-nei)hews. At that time, the pestilence appeared in the city of Naples—carrying offmore than a thousand persons each day. Marius, who, under similar cir-cumstances, had saved Sienna from that scourge, was named general healthcommissioner, and in concert with some prelates, devised means to saveRome and the papal State from a horrible evil already spreading beyondthe vicinity of Naples. But a fisherman carried the contagion to Nettuno, whence it speedilyextended to Rome. The whole of the island of Saint Bartholomew wasappropriated as an
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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, booksubjectcatholicchurch, booksubjectpapacy