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FRANÇOIS DE SALES Saint (1567- 1622) évêque de Genève, fondateur de l'ordr
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FRANÇOIS DE SALES Saint (1567- 1622) évêque de Genève, fondateur de l'ordre de la Visitation, auteur de l'Introduction à la vie dévote et du Traité de l'amour de Dieu
L.A.S. "Françs E. de Geneve", [Annecy] December 1, 1613, to "Monsieur de Pezieu" [Balthazard de PEYSIEU]| 1 page small folio, address on the back (a little crumpled, bottom of the franked letter affecting the signature).
Beautiful family letter, strongly condemning slander.
[Balthazard de PEYSIEU was the eldest son of Françoise de Disimieu, wife of François- Philibert de Longecombe de PEYSIEU| she was related to François de Sales by the marriage of one of François' grandmothers to a François de Longecombe, and François de Sales, who called her his "dearest mother", considered his sons as "brothers".
Two of Balthazard's brothers were religious: Jacques, who was Vicar General of the priory of Nantua, and Louis, quoted in this letter, a Capuchin missionary, who was killed in Brazil in 1614 on the island of Maragnan, during an attack by the Portuguese]. "My brother. I feel that you are greatly obliged to share with me the good and aymable news of the Indian brother [Louis], who, as I feel him to be farther away from us according to the distance of the place, I also feel him to be more advanced in my esteem and contentment in the glory that I have received from his humble and faithful brother of acquisition, a word of acquisition that I add for the position that I receive from his and from all your dependence. For otherwise certainly my affection seems to me quite natural in strength, vigour and perpetuity. Jay makes swimueres ample response to Madame nostre cher seur, and on the subject of her desplaysir well she does not meut particularize which he is estimating that her bearer which thinks he must be Monsieur de Rogemont tells me everything. For moy, after my first feeling, for the pain of a so precious and aymable sister, I roydis, and say that never the slander that is ashamed to mark his father was neither strong to last, nor active to enter in the ballast of people who have so little. And will never narrate, that our sister, so surr
L.A.S. "Françs E. de Geneve", [Annecy] December 1, 1613, to "Monsieur de Pezieu" [Balthazard de PEYSIEU]| 1 page small folio, address on the back (a little crumpled, bottom of the franked letter affecting the signature).
Beautiful family letter, strongly condemning slander.
[Balthazard de PEYSIEU was the eldest son of Françoise de Disimieu, wife of François- Philibert de Longecombe de PEYSIEU| she was related to François de Sales by the marriage of one of François' grandmothers to a François de Longecombe, and François de Sales, who called her his "dearest mother", considered his sons as "brothers".
Two of Balthazard's brothers were religious: Jacques, who was Vicar General of the priory of Nantua, and Louis, quoted in this letter, a Capuchin missionary, who was killed in Brazil in 1614 on the island of Maragnan, during an attack by the Portuguese]. "My brother. I feel that you are greatly obliged to share with me the good and aymable news of the Indian brother [Louis], who, as I feel him to be farther away from us according to the distance of the place, I also feel him to be more advanced in my esteem and contentment in the glory that I have received from his humble and faithful brother of acquisition, a word of acquisition that I add for the position that I receive from his and from all your dependence. For otherwise certainly my affection seems to me quite natural in strength, vigour and perpetuity. Jay makes swimueres ample response to Madame nostre cher seur, and on the subject of her desplaysir well she does not meut particularize which he is estimating that her bearer which thinks he must be Monsieur de Rogemont tells me everything. For moy, after my first feeling, for the pain of a so precious and aymable sister, I roydis, and say that never the slander that is ashamed to mark his father was neither strong to last, nor active to enter in the ballast of people who have so little. And will never narrate, that our sister, so surr
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