its sources, 223;
its argument, 224;
deformation, not reformation, wrought by the Council, 225;
Sarpi’s impartiality, 226;
was Sarpi a Protestant? 228;
his religious opinions, 229;
views on the possibility of uniting Christendom, 230;
hostility to ultra-papal Catholicism, 231;
critique of Jesuitry, 233;
of ultramontane education, 235;
the Tridentine Seminaries, 235;
Sarpi’s dread lest Europe should succumb to Rome, 237;
his last days, 238;
his death contrasted with that of Giordano Bruno, 239 n.;
his creed, 239;
Sarpi a Christian Stoic, 240.
SARPI, citations from his writings, on the Papal
interpretation of the Tridentine decrees,
i. 131 n.;
details of the nepotism of the Popes,
156 n., 157 n.;
denunciation of the Index, 197 n.,
206, 208 n.;
on the revival of polite learning, 215;
on the political philosophy of the statutes
of the Index, 221;
on the Inquisition rules regarding emigrants
from Italy, 227 sq.;
his invention of the name ‘Diacatholicon,’
231;
on the deflection of Jesuitry from Loyola’s
spirit and intention, 248;
on the secret statutes of the Jesuits,
278;
denunciations of Jesuit morality, 289
n.;
on the murder of Henri IV., 297 n.;
on the instigators of the attempts on
his own life, ii. 215 n.;
on the attitude of the Roman Court towards
murder, 216;
on the literary polemics of James I.,
229;
on Jesuit education and the Tridentine
Seminaries, 237.
SAVONAROLA’S opinion of the Church music of his time, ii. 320 n.
SAVOY, the house of:
its connection with important events in
Italy, i. 16 n., 38, 56;
becomes an Italian dynasty, 58.
‘SCHERNO DEGLI DEI,’ Bracciolini’s, ii. 313.
SCHOLASTICS (Jesuit grade), i. 271.
SCHOPPE (Scioppius), Gaspar:
sketch of his career, ii. 165, 208;
his account of Bruno’s heterodox
opinions, 166;
description of the last hours of Bruno,
167.
‘SECCHIA RAPITA, LA,’ Tassoni’s, ii. 301 sqq.
SECONDARY writers of the Sei Cento, ii. 313.
SEI CENTO, the, decline of culture in Italy in, ii.
242;
its musicians, 243.
SEMINARIES, Tridentine, ii. 235.
SERIPANDO, Cardinal, legate at Trent, i. 118.
SERSALE, Alessandro and Antonio, Tasso’s nephews, ii. 72.
—–Cornelia (sister of Tasso), ii.
7, 9, 15 sq., 55, 64;
her children, 72.
SERVITES, General of the, complicity of, in the attempts
on
Sarpi’s life, ii. 214.
SETTLEMENT of Italy effected by Charles V. and Clement
VII.,
net results of, i. 45 sqq.
‘SEVEN Liberal Arts, On the,’ a lost treatise
by Giordano
Bruno, ii. 156, 182.