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Updated: June 25, 2025
This, then, according to Dr. Achilli is the spirit of Romanism! Can we doubt that it would lead to results as frightful as anything described in the foregoing story? But let us listen to his further remarks on the present state of the Inquisition. On page 75 he says, "What, then, is the Inquisition of the nineteenth century? The same system of intolerance which prevailed in the barbarous ages.
Achilli thrown into one of its old prisons, on the 29th of July 1849, but the violence of the people having made the building less adequate to the purpose of safe keeping, he was transferred to the castle of St.
Hope-Scott's Manners His Generosity Courage in admonishing Habits of Prayer Services to Catholicity Remark of Lord Blachford The Catholic University of Ireland Cardinal Newman's Dedication of his 'University Sketches' to Mr. Hope-Scott Aid in the Achilli Trial Mr. Hope-Scott Letter to Right Hon.
Here, then, we see the Roman Inquisition extending to the most remote countries." The above statements of Dr. Achilli are fully corroborated by the Rev. Wm. H. Rule, of London. In a book published by him in 1852, entitled "The Brand of Dominic," we find the following remarks in relation to the Inquisition of the present time.
We shall be impatient for Mr. Young's book, which will be published by Putnam, in a style of unusual beauty. Dr. Achilli, whose history, so full of various and romantic vicissitudes, has become familiar in consequence of his imprisonments in the Roman Inquisition, is now in London, at the head of a congregation of Protestant Italians. He has intimated to Dr.
Its processes are all as secret as the grave. Its cells are full of dead men's bones. They call it the Asylum for the poor a retreat for doubting and distressed pilgrims, where they may have experience of the parental kindness of their father the Pope, and their mother the church. "Dr. Achilli had a trial of this beneficient discipline, when thrown into the deep dungeon of St. Angelo.
QUAM PALMAM etc.: a prophecy after the event, like that in Rep. 6, 11 avi relliquias, the finishing up of the Punic wars. For the use of relliquias cf. Verg. Aen. 11, 30 Troas relliquias Danaum atque immitis Achilli; ib. 598; ib. 3, 87. TERTIUS: so all our MSS. This places the elder Scipio's death in 183, which agrees with Livy's account in 39, 50, 10.
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