Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The intermarriage of relatives and its consequences. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by King’s College London. The original may be consulted at King’s College London.
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![them as reservoirs of misery, and that every voice would be raised to denounce the abomination, alike at variance with the laws of nature, reason, and divine prohibition.” 4°. It is manifest that the Catholic Church exercises a most wholesome and discerning judgment in discountenancing and reprobating such unions ; and when she is reluctantly moved to grant a Dispensation, in imposing, as a deterrent to others, a large money fine to be applied—as Canon Law prescribes— to the promotion of works of piety or charity, so that repara- tion may thus, in some measure, be made for the more than probable irreparable injury inflicted on society. C. J. M. ]i ( cri-e tie jL (Ilx c^ly^ CtJTj t/Jj—U-t B I l * ( ec ^ C , Cci. (c (U f i/ tfrzc Ut<r(c tjx t V ^^4 P CU.'l v/^/tU eJ^ 'j tit ill. Cf f/7 f 'itri. ! /5//f- f t-i Ci ) b r. / Vf vt >c , •***- MUiv tr/r l L j v r, i, c( ui L it u i-^-» q >o ' t/p I V'H \L L 0 RL W it C an \f Qj. Hi a 11 f rii \f Ct t i.£Mi L Pfo^. tr ('*! -j * I'** * v K crCuitt G ^ A i/i It.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b24761710_0015.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)