Capitolo 47
To that sweep should be, attractive Skies! Doesn't do their good
knows--dukes and principles--that they is every inferior similar to the
more done tear of the cardinals? The day that a Capuchin receives the red
hat, he acquires the right to squirt the mud in their faces as him
rides passed in his/her gilded trainer.
In States monarchic, the king is the natural head of the
nobility. The strongest term of that a gentleman can use, in
alluding to his/her house, it is that it is noble as the King. Noble _As
as the Pope_s would simply be laughable, since a swineherd, his/her child of
a swineherd, can be chosen Pope, and it receives the oath of the fidelity
from all the Roman principles. They can consider then well him
on an equality among them, these characters important poor men, seeing that
they is bewared above equally down of some priests.
They comforts him with the thought that they is superior to everybody
the laymen in the world. This vanity soothing, neither noisy neither
insolent, but anybody the firmly rooted in their hearts, it trains
them to swallow the daily affront of the aware inferiority.
I am rather aware of the points in which they is inferior to the
individuals enriched by few of the Church, but their affected superiority to the other men is
less evident to me.
As to their courage. Some years have passed from when they had the
the opportunity to try him/it on the battleground. [4]
Sky prevents duelling. The Government inculcates the kindest
virtue.
They is not wanting in a certain ostentatious and theatrical
liberality. A Lead sent its ambassador to the lecture to
Vienna, leaving space L4,000 to the expenses of the mission. A Bourgeois
datum attacks him rioting of Rome a banquet that has cost L48,000 to celebrate the,
return of Pius VII. Almost all the Roman principles their buildings open,
villas and galleries to the public. Being sure Sciarra, old it used
sells permission to copy his/her portraits, but he was a notorious miser,
and you/he/she has not found imitators.
They generally practises the virtue of the charity, in a rather