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348, on the part of the Congress, to take measures for restricting Novitiates under a certain age, and thus gradually to reduce the number of Convents, by fixing, for each, a minimum of resident monks.

Abolition by any sweeping act, such as that which produced such fatal effects in Spain, is not, I think, to be apprehended; but the present state of the Convents affords great facilities for moderate reforms, only forty-seven Convents, out of a hundred and fifty, containing more than Twelve friars, and thirty-nine being already reduced to less than Five.

It is much to be desired that the Congress may persevere in the prudent course, which it has hitherto pursued; for, in the States, unfortunately, the cause of reform has fallen into the hands of men, who, irritated at the abuses which have been committed under the cloak of religion, are inclined to attribute to the creed the faults of those who professed to teach it, and wish to fly, at once, from superstition to atheism. Throughout the Bishoprics on the Western Coast this feeling is very prevalent, and in Jalisco especially, it is a favourite axiom of the liberal party, that, until the present Church