Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
29 THE SUN One of These TN Probably Be the Mert MPope ce of being elected. Apart from this rather < elll will have a great chance of belr Side the tlara to see it placed ROl @ : e tingency he will only have passed besic [ 8 s than his own. % Pope would find 8t PRt 23 e l‘“::l‘i‘es?:lrmt those who put him forward as & C’,%‘;T{?::M;Egew«rfi“ ienad ¢ CALL’S Washingt on correspondent recently asked :F themaelves much mistaken If ho were olected. He accepis [he, bt - . S him because it may lead tc sk 1 ose who, of al Gibbons, at Baltimore, who was likely to suc- prevent his living in excellent intelligence with ‘those, I : : e = . represent French influence in Rome *{':r(]’}‘lrii‘ holds him nd ceed the Pope in the event of the demise of his Holi- 4 German and who was the friend of e at it 1t came : 3 7 “« i . ~ . makes much of him in a way which s st that, “Ah,” replied he, “out of fifty-eight Cardinals who are would not refuse him her support. S5 ] b 3 i i i fino Vannutelli has traveled muc it would be hard to say. But I think he will certainly e s Nuaclatures.: H ro 7, . 2 =is S traveling forms mar r [talian, as they have nearly a majority of all the Car- e niate vine enzo. ) - ” fino a cause of weakness, bec 1 be members of the sacred college. o U e e s his secret , ; & 3 3 vhich any others aspire. LI s K e correspondent has learned through private letters from von r‘,:’r;‘m{;; them since he has been a ( ardinal, it o > , 1 3 7 . of them too much if he became Pope. I have, neve 5 however, that Pope Leo's successor il in all probability 7 dinal Mazzetta, a Jesuit, is backing him up ar @ nas & > . . , g dly better than that of the tri liance, and wt y of be one f viz.: Oreglia, Parocchi, Vannu- suredly better than that of the b o Puritans & o rget the danger of chment to his relations. Cardinal Gottl. 1t Is hard to tell how the candidatur of Cardinal Got ino), Gotti, . » Rampolla, and the - chances cvorder named. igible for Pope) it is suffi- e considered * cient t nt man in the sacred college. g Lt bt o e gt 2 ot M””'W : o Tt peie Py’ Pope. He was . . Julius 11. But he knows how to Bt ‘r)"f“l‘l\‘.“lm L St b § /i - Pop f ] 25 apart from the miseries of this world like Sextus V, before he thr % p g tial that the Pope A yLED O crutches. He displaved diplomatic_qualities of the highe rder in : i P CHOM/SE to Brazi confided to him by Leo XIIL .~ . 4 S Ty % In that eountry, in addition to the conflict going on between the { ‘ g Sthorities, the onsiderable danger on account of lous authorities, the church was in considerable danger on accou Lttt discipline and of the dissolute morals which prevailed among the ont the rule D ™ stonishment of every o if episcopate. To the ¢ astonishment of every ght Shperior of the barefooted Carmelites, who har : & o an end to disorder re-establish harmony betwe powers. ther Gotti cardinal's_hat succe: able does not take much temptations for him, hed in purple he . CARDINAL // [ CAMMILLO CARDINAL- His HoLineESS \SERAFING VAMNN U & E RPorEjIEEC CAEDINAL PAROCCTHtI room—I was about to bed. He is o 7 L. S Piedmontese by « nal Camer- e : & rregnum’’ the Camer- 3 Beans L ¢ Pope, v \ the pontifical court, ap- = Js. In other words, he is the d 1 \2 3 r of the good or ca]‘ Yna g N create in ad- J {sing great weight “ardinal Domenico Svan 0 was ( thé moment of the « re ry party. By N 3 o s g 1 Ibert, a deadly enemy % i B ; RN ) thé Abbe Mas T Iy advice would have destroyed - %, NS CARDINAL phecies relating to the dif ausing his own destruction with- N PrRisco Chance has so willed it that hitk o ¢ were. couc t brilliantly came_a Jesuit 2 rgan of the S squandered Sacred ( r k -more precisely, this predictic ng Salesia terward by the J. burns the sacred r 1t him but his ‘no! h reov ‘ Cyrano de Bergerac, who has be- 1t he has been pushed vigor- s 1 larg 0. Were very powerful at the B nunciatu 1e A witk long as Leo XIII his po : importunf- that no Cardinal now | ined directly to her god- much from human natu < s nuneio, g Cardinal Svampa is R -} ) ) v e C T : )r his disgrace by osten- a ”';n“',‘,.’,’, tHe Qulrina sly 1 1z the Porta Pla prome- he i inaidst r members of the Sacred bl T T RE b ge, W when they met him -on R AL maTa: e Y u ) 3 Delphic utterance N v e is likely to be in Tty garded T TR the « > . . a8 2alling on Saraing ficed for Card led a ¢ - : : dinal en Cavdinal Baroceh] rdinal Rampella. . -l > = 5 e S . Cardinal Mariano Rampolla del Tindar one of the most A e 3 C r faria Par iis y than Cardinal Oreglia, having * the pleiades of * abile.” T v of his chara disdain- ¥ d )W ha itation of being very “‘intransi- ful of the little by which v i s ns concernin~ the supremacy of re- dissimulate thel tion. He a s of the church, but in his youth seigneur” who i on tt H was d in more (han one seditious add, without false modesty, t m t 1vement started In the province of everybody knows that he is w ext co : rish prie »arishioners, a move- and that he neglects nothing th h e ¥ b a danger to the unity X rs past he h P organiza C errors of ing continuaily and spinning obable contrition its “« attendant he w nouemer t of the excessive < filling his present office he was his participation in_the religious ich is so short a distance from peace to an archdlocese r with political authdr- relation® between the Senator of Rome is replaced ro¢ is really invested with the > usurping regime; of settling the two powers, and of being in thorities of the monarchy, con- i inal Parocchi plays his difficult 10 his tact, skill and high character. All superior man. He has as much wit as learn- > ki everything, theology, = history, nt, and astonishes those who ap- edge as by the graces of his mind. 1 te the magnificence of Leo X, the ge- .0 XIIT and, if necessary, the heroism of Plus 10se who remember his early days think that e who know the rigidity “upon which he S the incarnation of “intransigeance.” Per- potheses. Qardinal Sgrafinoe Vanmnutelly. Cardinal Serafino Vannutelli is looked upon as a serious “Papabile,” for he is the only one among the candidates, with the exception of Cardinal Svampa, who has allowed himself to be distinctly put forward as in favor of conefliation between the Papacy and the monarchy of Savoy. If at any moment during the next conc the tr lance group should obtain the upper hand Cardinal 4 X prided 1 [ haps the trutl AR O AL VINCENZO, VANNUTEL LI ( CARD (N AL PIETRO CEEE S Ly Tas he many supp v devoted ud reefs, to shun obstacles pathies of those w flattering his enemie stature of Ledochoski them the full grandeur of his hatred, end in the fon of the defeate at the V. d its s with fear at the idea of F implacable in his hatred a large numbe nd without m in his Tk mab be one of these. T have not vet exhausted the list of “Papabil are mention a subtle diplomatist and a gre: Capecelatro, Archbisaop cf Cap Macenni, manager of the “Obol 2 Sarto, patriarch of Venice, a prelate of the prejudices, but capable of writing hard t ready done many times, and Cardinai Ferr enough enemies to he regarded as-dangerot 1 will not carry my nomenclature any further all probability be found among those whom I classing them in order of probability. Chance p sults of the voting and in the manner in which the factions of the conclave form, disintegrate, coalesce, fight and reunite from day to day, from hour to hour, from minute to minute, and that so rapidly and ‘so unexpectedly that the tiara has often been known to fall to a Cardinal who had not even heen mentioned before the constitution of the conclave. Moreover, it will not be long before all uncere tainty is at an end, for, as.I have already said, every one is convinced at the Vate ican that the reign of Leo XIII is drawing to a close. C. CARLTON, Many the Cardinals t Lisbon, The Pope-of to-morrow will in 1st cited, -2 AyS. too large A part in the re