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50 Lasaulx, a famous professor of the University. In his writings he had now and then been very bold, and it was rumored that the Congregation of the Index thought of censuring some of his books. Von Lasaulx knew this. A few weeks before his death he made an implicit retraction of the errors he might have involuntarily committed, which was forwarded to Rome by his friends. Even some years earlier he had declared that he had never intended to contravene the doctrine of the Church, but that he feared there were many errors in his books. "If Rome would think it advisable to put my books on the Index, I should consider the verdict perfectly just, since I firmly believe that such measures are truly in the interest of the Catholic Church in our times." Four of his books were really condemned after his death.

In July, 1906, an Italian novel, Il Santo, (The Saint) by Fogazzaro, was put on the Index. The author "submitted himself." An American edition of the book had meanwhile appeared; "but the prohibition by the Roman authorities was duly respected by