The works of John Dryden, $c now first collected in eighteen volumes. $p Volume 16 by John Dryden
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is only the author of the new Italian Life, who has not followed the
common error, in relation to the age of St Francis Xavier: for the rest of them not precisely knowing the year and day of his birth, have made him ten years older than he was; placing his nativity about the time when the passage to the East Indies was discovered by Vasco de Gama. But Father Massei has taken his measures in that particular, from Father Poussines, that judicious person to whom we are owing for the new letters of St Xavier, and who has composed a dissertation in Latin, touching the year of our apostle's birth. He produces, in the said treatise, a Latin paper, written in all appearance in the year 1585, and found in the records of the house of Don Juan Antonio, Count of Xavier. That paper,--wherein is treated of the ancestors and birth of the saint, and which very probably, as Poussines judges, is the minute of a letter sent to Rome, where Dr Navara then resided, to whom it refers you,--that paper, I say, has these words in it: _Non scitur certò annus quo natus est P. Franciscus Xaverius. Vulgo tamen invaluit, a quibusdam natum cum dici anno millesimo quadragintesimo nonagesimo-sexto_: which is to say, the year is not certainly known, in which Father Francis Xavier was born; but it is generally held, that some have reported he was born in the year 1496. But it is to be observed, that these words, _Non scitur certò annus quo natus est P. Franciscus Xaverius_, are dashed out with the stroke of a pen. There is also a line drawn over these other words, _Natum eum dici millesimo, quadragintesimo, nonagesimo-sexto_: and this is written over head, _Natus est P. Franciscus Xaverius anno millesimo quingentesimo sexto_. Father Francis Xavier was born in the year 1506. There is also written in the margin, _Natus est die 7 Aprilis, anni 1506_. He was born |
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