[122] Id. op. cit. p. 76.

[123] Id. op. cit. p. 78.

[124] Dejob, op. cit. p. 74.

[125] Id. op. cit. p. 54.

[126] Discorso dell'Origine, etc. dell'Inquisizione,' Opp. vol. iv. p. 34.

[127] Mutinelli, Storia Arcana, vol. i. p. 277.

[128] Dejob, op. cit. pp. 53-57.

[129] Id. op. cit. p. 75.

[130] Sarpi's Letters abound in useful information on this topic. Writing to French correspondents, he complains weekly of the impossibility even in Venice of obtaining books. See, for instance, Lettere, vol. i. pp. 286, 287, 360, vol. ii. p. 13. In one passage he says that the importation of books into Italy is impeded at Innsbruck, Trento, and throughout the Tyrolese frontiers (vol. i. p. 74). In another he warns his friends not to send them concealed in merchandise, since they will fall under so many eyes in the custom-houses and lazzaretti (vol. i. p. 303).

[131] It was usual at this epoch to send Protestant publications from beyond the Alps in bales of cotton or other goods. This appears from the Lucchese proclamations against heresy published in Arch. Stor. vol. x.