[Renaissance in Italy, Volumes 1 and 2 by John Addington Symonds]@TWC D-Link book
Renaissance in Italy, Volumes 1 and 2

CHAPTER IV
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The aversion he felt for ascetic discipline is evinced in a letter he addressed to Francis Borgia in 1548.

It is better, he writes, to strengthen your stomach and other faculties, than to impair the body and enfeeble the intellect by fasting.

God needs both our physical and mental powers for his service; and every drop of blood you shed in flagellation is a loss.
[Footnote 161: See Philippson, _op.

cit._ pp.

61, 62.] The end in view was to serve the Church by penetrating European society, taking possession of its leaders in rank and hereditary influence, directing education, assuming the control of the confessional, and preaching the faith in forms adapted to the foibles and the fancies of the age.


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