[506] MSS. of David Fergusson Esqr. The sentence in this case is so unusual that I give the essential portion of it in the Appendix.

[507] Medina, p. 266.

[508] Gams, Series Episcoporum, s. vv.

[509] Munich MSS., Cod. Hispan., 79.

[510] Archivo de Simancas, Inquisicion, Lib. 940, fol. 2.

[511] Páramo, p. 243.—Archivo de Simancas, Lib. 940, fol. 6.

[512] MSS. of David Fergusson Esqr.

[513] See the Author’s “Chapters from the Religious History of Spain,” p. 73.

There was no little scandal, in 1768, when it was discovered that the receiver of the tribunal, Vicente de las Heras Serrano, had sold for 850 pesos to the Licentiate Juan José Azpeitia a number of the prohibited books which had been seized. No great damage to the faith could have ensued if they were all like Milton’s Paradise Lost, for the possession of which a French surgeon, Carlos Loret, was forced to abjure and was banished to Spain.—Medina, p. 434.

[514] MSS. of David Fergusson Esqr.