The works of John Dryden, $c now first collected in eighteen volumes. $p Volume 16 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 577 pages of information about The works of John Dryden, $c now first collected in eighteen volumes. $p Volume 16.

The works of John Dryden, $c now first collected in eighteen volumes. $p Volume 16 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 577 pages of information about The works of John Dryden, $c now first collected in eighteen volumes. $p Volume 16.
them both day and night.  That which appeared most wonderful, was, that though the sick could not be served, nor the dying assisted, nor the dead buried, without taking the infection, and it was death to take it, yet Xavier and his companions enjoyed their perfect health in the midst of such dangerous employments.  This indeed was wonderful, but there was also an undoubted miracle, which it pleased Almighty God to work by the ministry of his servant, on a young man, whom at that time he restored to life.

This young man, named Francis Ciavus, the only son of a devout woman, who had long been under the conduct of Xavier, having put into his mouth, without thinking of it, a poisoned arrow, such as are used in those eastern parts, died suddenly, so subtile and so mortal was the venom.  They were already burying him, when Xavier came by chance that way.  He was so moved with the cries and lamentations of the mother, that, taking the dead by the hand, he revived him with these words:  “Francis, in the name of Jesus Christ, arise.”  The youth thus raised, believed from that moment, that he was no more his own, and that he was obliged to consecrate that life to God, which was so miraculously restored:  In effect he did it, and out of acknowledgment to Xavier, took the habit of the Society.  When the mortality was almost ceased, the saint pursued his design of the embassy to China, and treated with Don Alvarez d’Atayda, the governor of Malacca, on whom the viceroy had reposed the trust of so important an affair Don Alvarez had much approved this enterprize, when Xavier had first opened it, at his return from Japan, and had even promised to favour it with all his power.  But envy and interest are two passions, which stifle the most reasonable thoughts, and make men forget their most solemn protestations.

The governor had a grudging to Pereyra, who, the year before, had refused to lend him ten thousand crowns; and could not endure, that a merchant should be sent ambassador to the greatest monarch in the world.  He said, “That certainly that Pereyra, whom the viceroy had empowered by his letters, was some lord of the court of Portugal, and not James Pereyra, who had been domestic servant to Don Gonsalvo de Cotigno,” But that which most disturbed him, was, that, besides the honour of such an embassy, the merchant should make so vast a profit of his wares, which he would sell off at an excessive rate in China.  The governor said, “That in his own person were to be considered the services of the count his father; and that those hundred thousand crowns, which would be gained at least by Pereyra, were a more suitable reward for the son of Atayda, than for the valet de chambre of Cotigno.”  With such grating thoughts as these, he sought occasions to break off the voyage; yet he Would not declare himself at first; and the better to cover his design, or not to seem unthankful to Father Xavier, he fed him with fair promises.  For the holy man had

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The works of John Dryden, $c now first collected in eighteen volumes. $p Volume 16 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.