Correspondence with a Jesuit ON THE SUBJECT OF MARIOLATRY. BY THE REV. W. CARUS WILSON, M.A. SEELEY, JACKSON, AND HALLIDAY, FLEET STREET; AND B. SEELEY, HANOVER STREET, LONDON. MDCCCLVI. 110.d.365. INTRODUCTION. THE following "Correspondence" has arisen from a visit which I paid, in 1854, to the Jesuit College at Le Puy. In returning to England from Nice, I was tempted to diverge from the beaten track of the Rhone, partly to see the interesting volcanic district of the Ardèche, but chiefly to ascertain the progress of the Gospel, especially in some districts of which I had heard some interesting particulars. After surveying Dr. Cook's admirable schools at Nismes, with great satisfaction, I proceeded to Le Puy, where I met with every courtesy and civility from the Count to whom I had letters of introduction. He was so pressing for me to see the Jesuit College, a little way out of the town, which he spoke of as decidedly the first establishment of the kind in France, that, |