nt to the emperor, then besieging Tivoli, to acquaint him ofit; whom, when he could not prevail upon to accept The year following he there made hisprofession, looking on that day as the happiest of his whole life inwhich he made a sacrifice of his liberty that he might belong to Godalone. do this, with particular candor and courage, in things inwhich we are tempted to use any kind of duplicity or dissimulation. , are published genuine by Usher, Vossius, Cotelier, &c.
Nor was hislove of poverty less remarkable. ow to resist temptations; he always sent them back to theircells full of an extraordinary cheerfulness. He undertook to sailthrough the deep sea of this mortal life securely, under the directionof a prudent gui Francis, inCortona.
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