Capitolo 8
the setup is not none of the best. I/you/he/she don't allow us to leave house.
I know the house in which we live; it is not new, but it will last
more from very of Your Holiness--provided that any attempt is made
the mends. Later us the downpour; we don't have children!"
"All very true", the Pope answers.
"But the sovereign that is imploring to do me anything, is
a child the more old man of the Church. He has made us great
services. He continually protects still us. What they would become
of us if he abandoned us?"
"Has not alarmed", it says the Cardinal. "I will systematize the matter
diplomatically." And he sits him, and he/she writes an invariable note in a,
tortuous style diplomatically that can be added so on:--
"We want Your soldiers and not the Your suggestion, seeing that us
it is infallible. If You pits to show some symptom to doubt
that infallibility, and if you tried to force anything
on us, also our maintenance, we would fold up our wings
around our expressions, we would raise the palms of
martyrdom, and we would owe becoming an object of compassion to
all the Catholics in the universe. You know that we have in Your
country forty thousand men that are to the liberty to say
all, and that You pay with Your his/her own money to beg
our cause. They will preach to Your subjects that you are
tyrannizing on his/her/their Father Saint, and we will put Your
country in a blaze without seeming to touch him/it."
I CAPITULATE II.
THE NECESSITY OF THE TEMPORAL POWER.
"For the Pontificate it is not independence but
the same sovereignty. Here is an interest of the tallest
orders of what you/he/she should make to keep silent the particular affairs
nations, also as in a State the silences of interest public
individual affairs."
These are not my words but the words of M. Thiers: they happens in his
you bring to the Legislative Reunion to October 1849. I without doubt have
this Father of the temporal Church expressed the wishes of one hundred