| Charles Elliott - 1851 - 512 pages
...that he was at all acquainted with the irregularity of his conduct : ' For,' says she, ' if what I now write to you were known, it would be sufficient to cause me to be poisoned by 2 my companions, who are totally given up to vice.' She requests the prince to speak to the provincial,... | |
| John Dowling - 1871 - 962 pages
...condition of these prisonhouses of misery and despair. " For," says she, " if what I now write to yon were known, it would be sufficient to cause me to...my companions, who are totally given up to vice." Testimonies such as these, not from protestant sources, but from the inmates of the convents themselves,... | |
| John Gotlieb Matteson - 1895 - 648 pages
...asked him not to make known the fact that she had communicated with him. " For," says she, " if what I now write to you were known, it would be sufficient to cause me to be pois38 Bowling's " History of Romanism," book ii, chap, iv, par. 23-26 oned by my companions, who are... | |
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