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Cambilhom, Johann · 1610

or soldier, he lets the gatekeeper get him a soldier’s habit; with this he parades through the city and streets, and sees how he can settle into a public brothel to revel, dance, and jump.
Soon he dresses himself as an honorable citizen, wanders about like a banished Lutheran or Calvinist, and hears what one is accustomed to judge and say everywhere, both in cities and villages and elsewhere, about them, the Jesuits.
Soon he comes dressed up with beautiful cloaks, golden chains, rings, rapiers (as can be seen in the following figure), and such magnificent attire, like another doctor, pretending that he is a Papist, and is intent upon how he might find himself with prominent, rich people, and under a pretense of goodness, seduce their children and make them Jesuits, saying well what a magnificent estate it is to become a Jesuit, and what highly favored and